Create, playback, and print sheet music for free. MuseScore is cross-platform, multi-lingual, open source music notation software. It features an easy to use WYSIWYG editor with audio score playback for results that look and sound beautiful. It supports unlimited staves with up to four voices each, dynamics, articulations, lyrics, chords, lead sheet notation, import/export of MIDI and MusicXML, export to PDF and WAV, plus online score sharing.

Most elements in MuseScore are laid out automatically but can also be positioned manually. The capabilities of MuseScore can be extended via plugins, and the growing repository on musescore.org contains many plugins submitted by users.


Musescore Appimage Download


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MuseScore includes a set of sounds that reproduce common instruments (as defined by General MIDI) without taking up a lot of disk space or memory, but you can also substitute any SoundFont you prefer for a wider variety of sounds or for more realism.

MuseScore can import and export MIDI and MusicXML files, and it can also import from Capella and several other programs. MuseScore can export to PDF, PNG, and other graphic formats, to WAV and other audio formats, or to Lilypond for an alternative layout and print option.

MuseScore is available as an AppImage which means "one app = one file", which you can download and run on your Linux system while you don't need a package manager and nothing gets changed in your system. Awesome!

The MuseScore AppImage also can be updated using AppImageUpdate. Using this tool, MuseScore can be updated by downloading only the portions of the AppImage that have actually changed since the last version.

If you would like to have the executable bit set automatically, and would like to see MuseScore and other AppImages integrated into the system (menus, icons, file type associations, etc.), then you may want to check the optional appimaged daemon.

Diagnosis

I ran mscore in the terminal and observed the output. It logged something along the lines of "Error: MS Basic soundfont not found" (cannot recall exact wording). Turns out that the /usr/share/mscore-4.1 folder was missing a sound/ directory which usually should contain the soundfont required to play back any notes.

Just wanted to post this solution here; it seems like something might have gone wrong on one of the MuseScore updates, since the playback did work previously. Maybe an update deleted the sound directory?

I don't think we really need to update the archwiki because the problem will be resolved pretty soon. Whenever the packager has time to re-compile it.

I posted the solution here and on the musescore forums thought, as a temporary workaround. Anybody who has the problem and googles it should be able to find the posts.

A command named musescore is not created thus the which-command you used was useless in this case. dpkg will not give you any clue either because you didn't use dpkg to install it. The installation also created some symlinks to the appimage named mscore-portable and musescore-portable.

And using which musescore also does not yield results because the AppImage is not in a directory defined in the PATH, nor is the filename of the executable binary, i.e., the binary is MuseScore.AppImage and not musescore.

I've looked at similar posts but none can seem to solve my problem. My laptop is 32 bit, the Linux is aarch64, the file is armhf. I've tried the same with both the 32 and 64 bit versions from musescore.org/download but nothing seems to work.

Check which architecture you're using. The command uname -m should give you something like x86_64, i686 or arm64. According to the MuseScore homepage, there are MuseScore AppImage packages for i686, x86_64 and armhf. The authors of MuseScore don't seem to offer AppImage packages for other architectures than those three.

Alternatively you can use the project's personal package archive (PPA). Check which exact version of Ubuntu you're using by looking for DISTRIB_CODENAME in the file /etc/lsb-release. This should be something like bionic, focal or groovy. Look at the PPAs website whether it offers packages for your version. The available versions are listed in the "Published in" dropdown. If the PPA offers packages for your Ubuntu release, you can add the PPA to your repositories and install the package musescore as described on the PPAs homepage.

Just got a chromebook today as a Christmas present to myself, with one of my main intentions to get into composing music. I have been struggling all day finding a simple way to install the program on my new laptop. I watched the most popular youtube video (which seems to be now outdated), and followed all instructions in the article posted on musescore's website, and still don't seem to be getting where I need to. Not the most tech savvy, so any explanation "dumbed down" would be an extremely big help, as I'm not quite sure what else to do or where else to go. Thanks so much in advance!

I've downloaded both files in the post on the musescore website thread into the Linux folder, but when trying to open the APPIMAGE file that contains the musescore program, it's telling me the file type is not supported, despite me following all of the steps. Am I overlooking something?

I ran MuseScore-3.6.2.548021370-x86_64.AppImage with no problems in Ubuntu until I upgraded to 22.04.1 LTS. Now I get a screen message every 15 seconds saying, "MuseScore not responding." My options are "force quit" or "wait." If I do nothing the message clears within 5 seconds, but it pops back up in another 10-15 seconds. If I click "wait" the message clears immediately, but it returns as previously described. MuseScore-3... is then unusable.

If there is no user activity at all, the message does not appear. Additionally, if I initiate the playback of a music file in between messages it keeps running in the background even when the message appears stating that MuseScore is not responding.

A post on the MuseScore forum described the same problem in the same environment. He went on to say updating to Jammy messed with his video drivers. Everything was fine after he upgraded his video drivers. I did likewise, and confirmed the upgrade, but the problem persists.

I only tried launching the MuseScore notation file after loading MuseScore via the icon that's now in the Show Applications list after doing an install using ./MuseScore-3.6.2.548021370-x86_64.AppImage install.

However, I've just discovered that if I right click on the MuseScore notation file and select "Open with MuseScore 3.6-portable," also made possible by the above install procedure, the file loads and runs correctly without producing the "Not responding message."

I have experimented a bit with AppImages and found that all of the ones that I have tried, worked out of the box with a bog standard Devuan install, so I can confirm that everything necessary is in the official repos. A little tip, the AppImage that I have found so far with the largest amount of dependencies is the AppImage version of MuseScore musecore.org. I think the dependency issue is just a matter of not cutting into the bare metal, when doing a spin, or maybe including a disclaimer with a list of possible dependencies needed for running AppImages

I knew nothing about AppImage, so went and had a look. VLC would play some music but failed with a video. Anyway I tried MuseScore and it wanted PulseAudio. It would run, but would not play the notes, so I tried it with apulse, as in :-

Strange. Perhaps I make MiyoLinux too minimal? Like Geoff 42, I've never even tried an .appimage until seeing this thread. Perhaps it's something in my minimalist approach in how I build Miyo that's leaving out certain libraries needed for .appimage to work. I have an idea of what to change, but whether that will work or not...hmmm...

I haven't checked the jessie repos, but I do know that musescore is available in the ascii repos...but that doesn't help the current Miyo-i3 situation which is based on jessie. I'm so sorry for your trouble.

No worries I always use the latest MuseScore AppImage partially because I sometimes run into dependency issues, partially because MuseScore has a MIDI issue that has been dogging them for a long time, that they don't seem to be able to stamp out. Sometimes when playing a score, there is a lot of static/feedback noise that makes it unbearable to listen to what you have written, which kind of is the point of MIDI playback in the first place

I then double clicked the .appimage. The open terminal showed me the initial error. I was missing libvorbis something-or-other. That's what was throwing me off a few days ago, because it was showing something like libvorbis.so.3 (don't quote me on that). When I searched previously for those items from the list you provided, I was searching for libvorbis.so.3...that's why nothing was showing up for me when I searched the other day.

3. Double-clicked the .appimage, and got another error of a missing dependency. This happened 3 more times (a total of 5 times). Each time, I searched Synaptic for the leading verbage of the missing dependency. Here's what I installed in addition to the libvorbis item(s).... 2351a5e196

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