Sibelius is a
scorewriter program. Named after
the
Finnish composer
Jean Sibelius, it was created by
a specialist company Sibelius Software Ltd which was founded by
British twins Ben and Jonathan Finn, and first launched (under the
name Sibelius 7) on the
Acorn Archimedes computer in
1993. Since then, it has grown to become the world's most
widely-used scorewriting package, currently in version 3 (for
Microsoft Windows and
Mac).
Cut-down versions of Sibelius have also been
released for Acorn computers (Sibelius 7 Student, Sibelius 6 and
Junior Sibelius), and more recently for Windows and Mac (Sibelius
Student).
The launch of Sibelius significantly heated up
the 'home and professional scorewriter' market, previously
dominated (particularly in the USA) by
Finale.
Sibelius has also made inroads into the online
music publishing market with its free score reader and
web browser
plugin,
Scorch, allowing publishers and
individual users of Sibelius to securely publish their music on
the
internet. Printed music can be
scanned into Sibelius using a separate program called PhotoScore,
and music can be played back at high quality and burned to CD
using the optional program Kontakt Player Gold.
Popular belief has it that the name 'Sibelius'
was a pun on the inventors' surname of 'Finn'. However, the
inventors maintain that while this may have been the reason, they
can't really remember.
The program plays a brief passage from one of
Jean Sibelius' symphonies when it is started up (which symphony is
quoted depends on the version of the software).