I will mention that Forscore and Newzik (which is what I use) both have a ‘half page’ turn feature, where you can advance and see the top half of the next page while seeing the bottom half of the first page. I find this is useful for practicing around page turns (that way I don’t have to press the pedal right at the page turn to see the next page). However, it’s clunky for performance, as it means you’re using the pedal twice as much. Anyways, it took me a while to realize this feature is available, and I definitely make use of it.

    I started using ForScore as well just a couple months ago and use it with my iPad Pro - I was able to train it to turn pages using facial expressions - or really it trained me but it works well. I just don’t like having to pay $10 a year to have the ability but I guess all things considered it’s worth it

      danno858 I just don’t like having to pay $10 a year to have the ability but I guess all things considered it’s worth it

      I haven't looked into this but is it a subscription app to use facial expressions?

        Sgisela I will mention that Forscore and Newzik (which is what I use) both have a ‘half page’ turn feature

        I'm going to look into this today and see if I like it! It may solve some issues like trying to turn pages while doing una corda and I can just turn it during a break.

        twocats yes it is. $9.99 a year. But you can try for one month at a time for I think $2.99. I tried it for month and was hooked. So I bought a one year subscription

          danno858 what's it called? I may look into this at some point, but not at the moment, weeks before my workshop.

            danno858 oh I see, I do use forScore but I had to look pretty hard to find the subscription upgrade for Pro which has gesture support. I'll look into it for the future, can certainly think of worse things to spend $10/year on!

              twocats I kept having bad luck with a Bluetooth pedal. So I decided to try forScore because I read somewhere it worked well with face gestures.

              What’s nice too is I can save sheet music I buy with the Henle app in pdf format and then upload into forScore.

              Confession time...
              I use forScore to add fingerings very neatly to my scores.
              Then export as PDF.
              And then PRINT them and put the pages on my music stand to play. 🙄


              Make a joyful noise...
              Jane - expert on nothing with opinions on everything.

                Jane I still use paper as well. But I like the auto page turn function so much

                Jane I use forScore to add fingerings very neatly to my scores.
                Then export as PDF.
                And then PRINT them and put the pages on my music stand to play. 🙄

                Hahaha! My fingerings are scribbled not so neatly in. But if I think it doesn't look good enough, at least it's easy to cleanly delete and rewrite! 🙂

                • Jane replied to this.

                  twocats
                  I use the numbers from the annotation stamps palette. It's tedious but looks nice once it's done.

                  @Dan - most of the pieces I print out are 4 pages or less so I can kinda put them all side-by-side on the music rest. No page turns is easier than easy page turns!
                  Although I also printed out a 10-page piece I was working on last year.

                  Here's an example page:


                  Make a joyful noise...
                  Jane - expert on nothing with opinions on everything.

                  Pallas
                  A few things I need to scribble free-hand, like the red line in measure 71 reminding me to take the D with the right hand. Although I used the stamps to add the "m.d." next to the note.

                  As a hint - if you're lining up numbers vertically for a chord, the ruler tool in forScore can help the alignment.


                  Make a joyful noise...
                  Jane - expert on nothing with opinions on everything.

                  Thanks for this thread! I've been buying big anthologies of sheet music such as https://www.halleonard.com/product/50601558/the-giant-book-of-intermediate-classical-piano-music for sight-reading practice, and the page turns are a real bummer. Prior to buying my most recent anthology I spent some time researching digital sheet music but it got complicated so I gave up and just ordered the printed book. This thread has inspired me to take the time for research so I can transition to digital before I need to order more sight reading material.

                  I'm locked into the Apple ecosystem so I will either use my old iPad Pro or more likely get a new one. forScore looks pretty good as it uses iCloud for storage, but twocats's note about having to crop every page when importing is giving me pause. These books I'm using for sight reading have hundreds of pages! I don't want to resize them all! Does newzik also require cropping? What about other apps? Is this issue somehow specific to Henle sheet music?

                  Thanks!!

                    rogerch the Henle exports have an empty space border (I guess actual paper pages also do) as well as a line of text at the bottom with the Henle source info. I could definitely still read it without cropping but I want to minimize the dead space if possible. You could always do a gentle crop on one page and then "copy to all". In my case I really want the crop as tight as possible so I have to do it manually.

                    I think the 12.9" iPad is a decent size but if they come out with a bigger one, I'd definitely be tempted to upgrade... depending on the price tag 🙂

                      twocats Thanks twocats, that is helpful! I should quit doing internet research and asking questions and try out some of the apps on my current iPad to see for myself. 🙂

                        rogerch happy to help! I think most apps have a free trial 🙂

                        Sgisela ‘half page’ turn feature

                        I tried this today and it was helpful to practice a page transition! I would never use it to play through a whole piece though.

                        It's worth mentioning that there is a huge library of scores on IMSLP, including critical editions such as the Bärenreiter Neue Mozart Ausgabe. There's also a growing number of scans of first editions and composers' manuscripts.

                        I've cropped thousands of pages with ForScore: it's no big deal. I've set up a gesture (press and hold with three fingers) which brings me directly to the crop screen. ForScore immediately and automatically crops away any empty margins. It's usually fine like this, but if I want, I can adjust it manually. Staying in the crop function, I go through the score and crop each page in turn, then save the whole piece. It's a matter of seconds for each page.