Troubleshooting NoteWorthy Composer: Fixes for Common Issues

From MIDI to Sheet: Exporting and Printing in NoteWorthy Composer

NoteWorthy Composer (NWC) remains a lightweight, approachable notation editor for composers who want fast entry and clean printable scores. This guide walks you through turning a MIDI file into printable sheet music in NoteWorthy Composer: importing, cleaning up the notation, exporting, and printing with tips to get professional-looking results.

1. Importing a MIDI file

  1. Open NoteWorthy Composer.
  2. Choose File > Import > MIDI File.
  3. Select your .mid/.midi file and click Open. NWC will convert MIDI events into notation; complex MIDI performances may produce dense or fragmented notation that needs cleanup.

2. Initial cleanup after import

  • Set tempo/metadata: Update tempo, title, composer, key signature, and time signature via Score Properties so the score prints correctly.
  • Remove unnecessary tracks: Use the Track Manager (or View > Track List) to mute or delete tracks that aren’t needed (e.g., percussion or controller-only tracks).
  • Merge/split voices: Imported MIDI often places notes across multiple voices. Merge voices where appropriate or split polyphonic passages into separate staves (e.g., left/right hand for piano).
  • Correct note durations and articulations: Fix any odd durations, tied notes, or misplaced articulations created during conversion.
  • Quantize rhythm (if needed): If the MIDI was performed with expressive timing, quantize to the intended rhythmic grid before or during edit so notation reads cleanly.

3. Re-assigning instruments and staves

  • Use Score > Staff Properties to change instrument names and clefs.
  • Create additional staves for accompaniment or separate parts: Insert > Staff.
  • Ensure MIDI channels map to the correct staves if you plan to export MIDI again.

4. Notation polishing

  • Beams and tuplets: Adjust beaming and tuplet brackets to match standard engraving practice.
  • Dynamics and expression: Add dynamics (p, f, cresc.) and expressive markings to improve playback and readability.
  • Slurs and articulations: Place slurs, staccatos, accents where appropriate.
  • Layout: Use Page Setup and Staff Spacing options to avoid crowding; break measures manually if a line looks cramped.

5. Exporting options

  • Export as MIDI: File > Export > MIDI File — useful if you’ve edited parts and want a cleaned MIDI for playback or DAW use.
  • Export as WAV/MP3 (via print-to-audio or external MIDI synth): NWC’s native sound is limited; for higher-quality audio export, route exported MIDI through a higher-quality synth and render to WAV/MP3.
  • Export as Graphics: File > Export > Export as Image to save single pages as PNG/BMP for embedding in documents or web.
  • Export as MusicXML (if available via plugin/third-party): NoteWorthy Composer doesn’t always offer native MusicXML export; if you need MusicXML for other notation software, use an intermediate MIDI-to-MusicXML converter after exporting MIDI, then import into your target app for better fidelity.

6. Preparing to print

  • Page Setup: File > Page Setup — set paper size, orientation, and margins.
  • Staff and system spacing: Reduce or increase staff spacing so staves fit logically per page. Use Format > Staff Spacing or similar menu options.
  • Hide unused staves: Ensure empty staves are hidden or removed to prevent blank systems.
  • Add rehearsal marks and page breaks: Insert manual system/page breaks to control where lines end and pages turn (Format > Manual Breaks).
  • Proofread: Play back the score and visually scan each page for collisions, missing accidentals, or misplaced markings.

7. Printing

  1. File > Print Preview to confirm layout and page breaks.
  2. Choose File > Print and select your printer.
  3. If printing for performers, consider printing parts: remove other staves or export each part as a separate file before printing.
  4. For high-quality presentation, print to PDF (select a “Print to PDF” option) and check the PDF before sending to a printer or sharing.

8. Tips for better-looking sheets

  • Consistent fonts: Stick to NWC’s standard music fonts for clarity; avoid mixing fonts.
  • Measure spacing: If a measure contains many small durations, slightly increase staff spacing to prevent collisions.
  • Reduce redundant rests: Clean up unnecessary rests to enhance readability.
  • Use repeats and codas: Replace repeated measures with repeat signs and use codas/D.S./D.C. to shorten printed length.
  • Separate parts for ensembles: Create individual part layouts with only relevant staves and print those for musicians.

9. Troubleshooting common issues

  • Imported MIDI sounds messy: Quantize and simplify note groupings, then re-voice as needed.
  • Accidentals missing or wrong: Manually correct via note properties and ensure key signature is set correctly.
  • Layout overflow: Insert system/page breaks and adjust staff spacing; hide unused staves.
  • No MusicXML export: Export MIDI, then convert MIDI to MusicXML using a converter (e.g., MuseScore can import MIDI and export MusicXML).

10. Quick checklist before sharing

  • Title, composer, and metadata filled
  • Key and time signatures correct
  • Parts/staves assigned and unwanted tracks removed
  • Layout reviewed in Print Preview
  • PDF exported for distribution

Following these steps will take you from a raw MIDI performance to clean, printable sheet music in NoteWorthy Composer. If you want, I can provide a short checklist PDF-ready page or specific step-by-step instructions for exporting parts for an ensemble — tell me which one you prefer.

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