User:Rallisonr/sandbox

About
The MEI XML schema is a community-supported comprehensive markup language created for the purpose of representing music notation documents for academic research and preservation. It was conceived of by Perry Roland in 1999 when he identified the need for a flexible, -how it differs from other music xml-. MEI has close ties to the well established markup language for text, Text Encoding Initiative's (TEI) TEI Guidelines, which define an XML format for the semantic markup of text. MEI uses the One Document Does it all (ODD) programming language to transform documents described in MEI into.

ISMIR Paper
The Music Encoding Initiative as a Document-Encoding Framework by Hankinson, Roland, and Fujinaga, 2011.

This paper, presented at the 12th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (ISMIR 2011), serves as an introduction to MEI. http://ismir2011.ismir.net/papers/OS3-1.pdf

MEI Tutorial
MEI1st is a set of tutorials created to explain the structure of an MEI document and how to encode musical notation in MEI. While the tutorials are meant for those new to MEI, a familiarity with xml and its core concepts would aid in one's understanding. http://music-encoding.org/support/MEI1st

Mailing List
MEI-L is MEI's official mailing list. The list is open to anyone who would like to subscribe. The archives of the mailing list can be viewed without subscription. See http://music-encoding.org/support/mailingList for information on how to do join or view the mailing list archive.

Edirom
The Edirom Project has developed a collection of free, open source software tools that allow users to create and publish digital editions of a music score, otherwise known as a Digital Music Edition.

MerMEId
This system, which has been named Metadata Editor and Repository for MEI Data (MerMEId), serves as an authoring tool for thematic catalogues, as a database holding work- and source-related information during the preparation of scholarly editions of music, and provides the output for thematic catalogues both online and in print. http://www.kb.dk/en/kb/nb/mta/dcm/projekter/mermeid.html

Lost Voices
Lost Voices is an online resource that uses MEI and a host of other tools to present a set of sixteenth-century polyphonic songs. The content of the printed songbooks is presented as digital editions available for display and download, a searchable database of page images, is linked with commentaries that provide insight and context into the works. For a fuller description of the project, see the MEI Community Projects page (http://music-encoding.org/activities/projects) or the resource itself http://ricercar.cesr.univ-tours.fr/3-programmes/EMN/duchemin/index.htm.

LibMEI
LibMEI is a C++ library for reading and writing MEI files. http://ddmal.music.mcgill.ca/libmei

MEIse
MEI score editor

Neon.js
Neon.js is a browser-based music notation editor written in JavaScript. The editor can be used to manipulate digitally encoded early musical scores in neume notation. Neon.js will serve as a component within an online optical music recognition framework. The primary purpose of the editor is to provide a readily accessible interface to easily correct note pitch and position errors made in the process of optical music recognition. By making the editor easily accessible online, the task of correcting OMR errors can be distributed amongst many people to accelerate the creation of ground-truth data and errorless symbolic music collections. Neon.js can be used to create new musical scores, or to correct errors from automated transcriptions in an optical music recognition (OMR) workflow.

SIMSSA
Single Interface for Music Score Searching and Analysis

mei-incubator
External module development for the Music Encoding Initiative https://code.google.com/p/mei-incubator/

SibMEI
A Sibelius Plugin for writing and reading MEI files in Sibelius https://github.com/DuChemin/sibmei