Mozart the music processor

Mozart the music processor
Original author(s)David Webber
Initial release9 November 1994
Stable release
16.1.5 / September 2024; 1 month ago (2024-09)[1]
Written inC++
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
Available inCzech, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Welsh
TypeScorewriter
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.mozart.co.uk

Mozart the music processor is a proprietary WYSIWYG scorewriter program for Microsoft Windows. It is used to create and edit Western musical notation to create and print sheet music, and to play it via MIDI.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]

The program was named after the composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.[9]

  1. ^ "Release notes, Mozart 16". Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  2. ^ Chad Criswell. "Mozart Music Notation Software Review". MusicEdMagic. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  3. ^ "Shareware scene: Mozart". PC Plus. No. 105. July 1995. p. 373. With Mozart much of the drudgery of preparing new music is eliminated. You can cut and paste sections of music and transpose notes and it automatically aligns notes in parallel parts. You can add the full range of note accents, rests and other symbols to your music with treble bass alto and tenor clef options as well as triplets and other multiplets. For lyrics and comments you can add text in any installed TrueType font. ... In use, it's immediately noticeable that Mozart has been designed to be a practical tool for serious work, but anyone with adequate musical knowledge should soon find it as easy to use as a word-processing package.
  4. ^ "Mozart". Computer Life. No. 9. December 1995. p. 10. One of the very best shareware music notation packages we've ever come across. If you'd like to produce your own sheet music you must try this out.
  5. ^ "Intelligent programming". Classical Music. No. 680. 31 March 2001. p. 43. [Mozart] offers many of the features of its more expensive counterparts, such as providing score templates, part extraction, playback which observes dynamics, supporting transposing instruments, the ability to import MIDI files and a wide variety of musical symbols.
  6. ^ "Feature: Making music with your PC". PC Home. No. 113. 2001. p. 45. ISSN 1351-5373. Mozart is a music processor designed to work just like a word processor, but for the printing of sheet music. It's not a music sequencer, as it's intended primarily for the production of sheet music, but on systems with sound – particularly MIDI – the music can be played either with straight classical rhythmic interpretation or in a swing style.
  7. ^ "Mozart 4.1". PC Format. No. 168. December 2004. p. 115. Mozart 4.1 acts like a word processor for music. A music processor if you will. Built-in features enable you to compose your music in the correct notation with characters and icons available to print out for use in the real world. If you're a playwright writing a play in Word, you don't have the option of having the software act out the play for you. With Mozart 4.1, however, a full synthesised orchestra is at your fingertips, ready and eager to play the music. You can compose, edit, assign instruments, and save in the universal Midi file format.
  8. ^ "Mozart – a top quality music notation program". QA Education. No. 63. Winter 2010. p. 29. Mozart 10 is now available from www.mozart.co.uk. Mozart is a top-quality music notation program which delivers print-out and instant play-back for anything from a single melody line to a full orchestral score, at a fraction of the price you would normally expect to pay for such state-of-the-art user-friendly software. Features include: fast, intuitive note entry via the computer keyboard; multiple staves; lyrics; percussion; tablature; comprehensive instrument data base; strict adherence to music syntax; instant transposition and much, much more. Mozart comes with a comprehensive help system, and a step-by-step tutorial manual and full internet support.
  9. ^ "About the author". Retrieved 28 July 2021.