Je découvre, c'est un format en effet très intéressant et complet (je n'ai pas vu pour les micro-tonalités mais quand je vois ce que j'ai vu, ils n'ont pas fait les choses à moitié). Il semble vraiment orienté musicologues, chercheurs et bibliothécaires plus que pour l'échange entre logiciels. Aucun ne semble l'intégrer, peut-être des plug-ins d'export. Il existe une conversion MusicXML -> MEI mais il faut que le MusicXML soit dans un format précis. Le MEI peut contenir plusieurs morceaux complètement indépendants, exemple : tout un collectage, toute l'oeuvre d'un artiste... (c'est le "Tune Book" du format ABC). Ils ont des logiciels d'éditions, mais l'un pour l'aspect partition, l'autre pour les méta-données (source scannée, performance audio/vidéo...) https://musescore.org/en/node/24208 Quote:While MusicXML was conceived out of a need by the sheet music publishing industry to easily exchange digital sheet music, MEI was conceived by music researchers as a storage and exchange format for their work on sheet music manuscripts. Andrew Hankinson (one of the MEI developers) explains it this way: To be sure, MEI and MusicXML share some similarities. Both of them encode music notation (notes, staves, rests, clefs, etc. etc.), and both of them are expressed in XML. However, they are guided by two different philosophies. MusicXML is an interchange format that seeks to represent music notation in a way that is independent of any one particular software. Its real strength is that you can export a file from Sibelius and import it into Finale with little to no loss of information or layout. While MEI could also be used as an interchange format, it is a superset of the functionality available in MusicXML. It contains nearly all of the same functionality in terms of notation and page layout. However, beyond this it can also encode information about the notation in a structured and systematic way. MEI supports notation systems outside of the standard Common Western Notation. Currently MEI supports mensural notation (Renaissance-era music notation) and earlier neume notation (notation from the middle ages). |
| |