ScoreVivo Specifications

When you submit your work for publication, please also provide the specifications that will appear with your product.

Example

Pachelbel’s Canon is the most famous piece of music by German Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel. It was originally scored for three violins and basso continuo and paired with a gigue in the same key. This piece is arranged for violin, cello, and an optional harpsichord.

Specifications

Price:
$8.00
Title:
Canon In D
Composer:
Johann Pachelbel
Arranger:
Your M. Name
Tempo/Style:
Larghetto, Slow
Length:
6 to 7 minutes
Parts:
4 parts
Difficult:
Easy
Instruments:
3 Violin
1 Cello
1 Harpsichord (optional)
Description:
Provide three to five sentences describing your composition or arrangement.
Listen:
You are encouraged to provide an audio version as an MP3.
Price:
Please make a suggestion. ScoreVivo has the final word.
Title:
The full title of your composition or arrangement.
Composer:
Full name of the computer (consider referencing www.wikipedia.org).
Arranger:
Your full name. If you are the composer, this will be omitted.
Tempo/Style:
For Tempo, select one to three of these pre-defined options that best describe your entire piece. Optionally, add one or two Style words in English if the traditional Italian Tempo phrases do not suffice.

  • Largo: 20-54 beats/min
  • Larghetto: 54-66 beats/min
  • Adagio: 66-76 beats/min
  • Andante: 76-108 beats/min
  • Moderato: 108-120 beats/min
  • Allegretto: 120-132 beats/min
  • Allegro: 132-160 beats/min
  • Vivace: 160-176 beats/min
  • Presto: 176-200 beats/min
  • Prestissimo: 200+ beats/min
Length:
A range in whole minutes.
Parts:
Your recommended number of parts (exclude optional parts).
Difficulty:
This is relative. Here are guidelines.

  • Easy: Elementary, limited range, up to 8th notes, as much as three sharps or flats
  • Intermediate: Junior high, up to 2.5 octaves, 16th note rhythms, simple ornamentation
  • Moderate: High school, early college, increased demands on interpretation, rhythm, keys, range, and technique
  • Difficult: College, conservatory, technically and interpretively complex
  • Advanced: Extremely difficult, perhaps extended techniques and nontraditional notation
Instruments:
Name the instruments and the recommended quantity. If some are optional, indicate that too.