OK... took me forEVER to put this up. So so sorry.
Using InDesign, and a vectorized font pallet simply drag neume glyphs onto the canvas. An all right brain, mainly artistic way to set chant and it is very fast and simply intuitive.
Three tutorials on YouTube can be seen here: 31 minutes of powerpacked fun! (well, not really, but the tagline sounds good)
No, the neumes are free on the web. You can choose from different flavors, or design your own, or adjust the ones you pull into the app.
Free font faces out on the internet include Caeciliae, Gregorio, Festa Dies and maybe more. I would have to check with the owners of the fonts to see if they would allow me to distribute the font pallet I already created since they are the intellectual property owners of those fonts, but it is relatively easy to create the pallets yourself. You just type in all the glyphs and then go to
That's nice. Gregorio works, and makes very nice chant scores, but you could use that to maybe make custom chant art even (kind of along the lines of the front cover of SEP, or something like that).
Francis, you're approach is essentially the same method I use for the scores of the propers posted on the Sacred Music Page of the Institute of Christ the King. However, I've found it helpful to build pallets with extensive variations on each neume rather than reconstructing medium complexity neumes every time.
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