Download Piascore - Smart Music Score App 6.4.3 for iPad & iPhone free online at AppPure. Get Piascore - Smart Music Score for iOS latest version. More than 3,000,000 musicians are now using the Piascore. Encore forScore is a universal app for iPad, Mac, iPhone, and iPod Touch. The small-screen experience is built around Reflow, our innovative technology that transforms standard PDF pages into easily readable content on any device. You can combine PDF using any PDF program. (Win) Combine/merge PDF files in Windows? (Mac) Mac OS X v10.6: How to combine PDF documents using Preview. 2018-03-20 Press Release Piascore’s Music App Hits the 10 Million Downloads Mark 77% of downloads from overseas users, most from the United States 2017-09-16 News Piascore 6 was released; 2017-08-11 News Piascore Ver. 5.1 was released; 2017-03-26 Press Release Piascore, Inc. Releases “Metronome by Piascore”. Whether you plan to use your Mac for school, work, entertainment or everyday use, the right software can make your life easier and more productive. From business and office software to music, photo and video editing to finance and tax software, you can create, edit, organize and discover new ways to get things done.
Perfect for getting started with PDF sheet music. Avoid if you need flexibility. App:piaScore
Available for:iOS
Price: Free (but in-app purchases)
Website:http://piascore.com/ There's no doubt the developers behind piaScore looked very closely at forScore working with their app. Most things, from feature set to screen layout to the 'extras' to the app name, is similar in piaScore. So, how is this possible? After all piaScore is a free download from AppStore, while forScore is $10? As I said, most things, from feature set to screen layout to the 'extras' to the app name, is similar in piaScore. Just a little worse. Not as polished. And unfortunately not as stable.
If that's worth the $10 is up to you, but then you should also account for the piaScore Full Upgrade, which is required for linking music, camera capture, recording, sharing scores and some other features.
To be fair, piaScore has added a few unique features such as a very useful YouTube search and a quite cheesy midi playalong (in proprietary scores bought from the piaScore sheet music web store). And remember, the comparison is with forScore, which is probably the best music reader app there is for iOS. So, if you don't need the in-app purchases, you can get a really good music reader for free.
Verdict:
Perfect for getting started with PDF sheet music. Avoid if you need flexibility (other file formats, automatic book indexing) and gig-quality stability.
piaScore - 3 stars - The Music Reader Review (Tested: piaScore version 4.0.22 on iPad)
For an app like this the giggability rules. And the iGigBook is great at the gig!
Piascore For Mac Download
App:iGigBook Available for:iOS, Android
Piascore For Macbook
Price:
Piascore For Mac Computers
$15
Developer:Black & White Software Website:http://www.igigbook.com/
Looking at the feature list alone, iGigBook is probably the closest competitor to the Fakebook app. Actually, up until recently not even a direct competitor, as Fakebook is Android only and iGigBook natively ran on iOS (as suggested by the name). It is now available for Android as well, which makes this side by side comparison possible.
Both music readers have great PDF support, including automatic indexing of collections, Real Book compilations and similar. Both apps also sport transposable chord charts, actually with an almost identical set of a thousand or so jazz tunes.
(...side by side screenhots of iGigBook and Fakebook with chord charts...)
However, here the similarities stop. In Fakebook the huge chord charts library is built-in and included in the purchase, the iGigBook requires registering to the my.igigbook.com website. While Fakebook allows you to import other chord charts in several formats like iReal B, iReal Pro, ChordPro, abc and text, the iGigBook only handles PDF. Also, initially PDF import and indexing in iGigBook can be quite confusing, so I really recommend reading the users manual. That being said, once the initial setup is done the PDF import works very good. Books in the public domain download with a single click, while other real books require a proper http download link. If you have your PDF files stored locally, again please read the manual... Now, I'm happy to report that iGigBook shines at a gig. Page turns are really quick and the set and gig list editors works well, even though the concept is unnecessarily complex. After a while you'll find your way around the app and can use the song search e.g. when taking requests (strangely enough song search and composer search are different functions). Bluetooth pedals and keyboards works as expected. Though exclusively a tablet app, iGigBook runs only in portrait mode. In most cases this makes sense, but on smaller tablets I sometimes prefer to show half-pages a little larger in landscape. (This is also nice when using your phone as a backup or always-in-the pocket song reference. There is an iGigBook Mobile version for iPhone, but this is an extra $10.)
The iGigBook app's iOS heritage clearly shows in the look and feel on both platforms. Some parts are beautifully designed, but the main impression is decidedly non-Android and a little odd on the modern styled 5.0 Lollipop. The Android version also lacks some of the more advanced features of its iOS sibling, and it still seems a little unstable (though I actually had crashes on both platforms).
Verdict: Of course, for an app like this the giggability rules. And the iGigBook is great at the gig! However, it is quite messy to set up and the competition is tough. So, as I have the choice, on the iPad I prefer forScore (even though it lacks transposable chord charts), and on Android I have my trusty Fakebook (which does everything I need).
iGigBook - 3 stars - The Music Reader Review (
Piascore For Mac N
Tested:
Piascore For Mac And Cheese
iGigBook version 2.66.2 on iPad and Android tablet)