| Site Map |
| These are the scores I produced with
MOZART, |
To download MOZART scores (.mz files), right-click them and select "Save Target As...".
You can of course also get the MOZART scores by downloading the .ZIP files,
or you can open them in the free MOZART Viewer
as described below.
[Home] Scores: [J.S. Bach] [Carmina Burana] [Christmas] [Haydn] [Other Mozart] [Nozze di Figaro] [Serail] [Other] [Parodies] [Popular] [Threepenny Opera]
Note: The ZIP files contain the .mz, .txt, and .mid files, not the .pdf
files as they cannot be compressed by much. The ZIP files have been
produced with WzZip 1.1 build 6224,
the command line adjunct to WinZip.
The WzZip documentation isn't quite clear on this, but it does indeed support file comments (parameter: -c);
it just doesn't have any method of showing them, nor does WinZip proper. ZipCentral (seel below) does.
I formerly used PkZip (DOS) 2.50 to zip these files,
but it doesn't deal with long NTFS file names. For zipping with a GUI I recommend
ZipCentral: it's the only one I know to display file comments.
The .pdf files can be viewed/printed with freely available PDF viewers like
GSView or Acrobat Reader.
Most of the scores have been produced with PDFCreator.
I produce the MIDI files so they sound OK on my soundcard, a SB Live!, with the soundfont Merlin Gold V2.15. To get a satisfactory MIDI playback on your system, you'll probably have to adjust the volume balance between the various instruments.
David Webber also provides a free MOZART Viewer so everyone can view and print (and listen to) scores written with MOZART. Under NT5.x (Windows 2000/XP), this viewer -and MOZART itself- can also be used to open the MOZART scores on this site directly: just enter the score's URL in the Open File dialogue, e.g. http://home.swiftdsl.com.au/~mbednarek/nozze/nozze00.mz !
More free classical sheet music is available at Free Classical Sheet Music Guide (beware of pop-ups and pop-unders).
September 2001: I re-designed all the tables of my MOZART files,
utilising Microsoft's Tabular Data Binding. Although only Internet
Explorer currently supports this concept, I still chose this method because
I think it's a very elegant way of displaying a database in HTML, providing
very simple access to useful functions like filtering and sorting the database
records. As a positive side-effect, it will also display dates in the users'
own country settings; unfortunately, this is not true for the display of
numbers: they will not show with locale-specific grouping symbols.
If you
can't see the contents of these table, you have to click on the link at the
top of the table which will display a simple list of files.
May 2007: I have now re-designed the tables to display fixed header rows and a scrolling area for the content. The tables and the scrolling area will adjust to the browser's window size. I also enhanced the sorting capability of the table. As before, a simple table can be seen via the link at the top of each table.
Last edited: 30-Aug-2006 18:12 +1000