Welcome to the blog where I share techniques that help you work faster and more efficiently with Sibelius, so that we can do less and do it better.
Deck the Clocks: Efficient Time Tracking with Stream Deck
With a Stream Deck in hand, you're ready to tackle one of mankind’s greatest questions: What did I actually spend my time on? Many people working in the music business are freelance knowledge workers, so there is a pressing need to bill for time. This is where my practice of time tracking began.
Window Wonderland: Setting Up Project-Based Finder Spaces with AppleScript
Getting from mundane tasks, emails, and the general frenetic pace of everyday life into a state of hyperfocus that allows you to concentrate on the project at hand is an art form in itself. There are many booby traps and siren songs pulling you away from the task, making you feel like you're on an escape room-style hunt for the right clues.
Bussed Transport
If you’ve ever found yourself juggling an audio file or stems while working in Sibelius, you’ve probably experienced the frustration of hitting ‘space’ only to activate the play function in the wrong application. Then, switching to the other app to hit ‘space’ again, you realize you’ve now got both apps playing simultaneously.
The Maestro Conducting
6 to 8 cups of coffee in New York, the average American single-person household spending on food for 2-3 days, and according to this list, a lot of good stuff, and most importantly, not even two months of a Sibelius Ultimate subscription.
It’s also the cost of Keyboard Maestro.
Templates 102: The Parts
After configuring the score settings, we now shift our focus to the individual parts. Choose one to begin.
Appetizer Menus Minipost
As a serious automator, your primary focus should be to use your mouse as little as possible. This is both because it is a potential source of tendonitis and because it can be the slowest and weakest link in the precision chain.
Templates 101: The Score
If this blog is about doing less and having more time for making music, cultivating a habit of creating and maintaining a template can streamline the process of setting up each score. It's about consistently approaching tasks in the same manner every time you start or finish a project, thus only needing to do them once.
The Wonderland of Export Automation
If Homer tripled his productivity by making two of three letters in the word 'yes' redundant, you can imagine the epiphany I had when the Stream Deck was released. Actually, nothing changed for me.
The Plugin Mechanic
Ever since driving my first car with automatic transmission, my life has not been the same. The best thing is that I never worry about which gear I am in and what I should switch to. The process takes care of itself. Rarely in life such things happen that are easily identifiable to instantly make life instantly much better.
Keypad Shortcuts
In front of me is a laptop. It’s small, handy, and has 54 keys. Most of these are letters and numbers, while some are special characters and others serve specific functions.
In total, they give me quick access to 54 commands in Sibelius. Pressing ‘I’ opens the ‘Add or remove instruments’ dialog, while ‘W’ toggles between parts and score. Other keys open galleries: ‘T’ opens time signatures and ‘K’ opens key signatures. Some keys don't do anything... yet.
Execute Commands
With hotkeys used for the ribbon, we can now focus on where to take advantage of shortcuts. My main point is to look for uses of shortcuts in gallery items that are often used. If you, like me, are tired of dragging ye ole mouse all the way to the top-left corner of the screen after hitting Q, you will be happy to implement this strategy
Hot Rods and Hot Keys
When Homer Simpson was working from home, he found himself answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ DOS-prompts all day. Homer is not the type for careful consideration, so he opted to choose ‘yes’ every time. After a couple of days, he hesitated in a fit of celebration, only matched by a group of cheerleaders chanting, ‘Give me a Y, give me an…’ and before he had pressed the E-key, DOS had accepted his answer. Homer’s profound epiphany was this: He had tripled his productivity.
What’s on the Word Menu?
When you’re writing music, the last thing you want to think about is technology. You want the least amount of friction from thought to paper. Automating all the steps in between will get you closer to that, and in this series, I’ll show you how I’m implementing automation in various ways to write efficiently. Starting with this first post with a geek-level of 1, which means it only takes you a couple of tweaks inside Sibelius to shape up.