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The Demise of Personal Composer Files πŸ™

May 20, 2025 | Musings

Welp. It had to happen eventually. I’m sorry. Truly. Here’s the synopsis of the tl:dr verson:

No new Personal Composer files will be added to this site in the future.

Existing ones will stay until further notice, though there’s no guarantee they will work on current/future operating systems.

Dorico files will be posted from now on and can be opened/transposed using the free Dorico SE program found here.

Here’s the long version:

Personal Composer, the notation software I used since the DOS days, (yes, I’m that old) closed up shop in 2014. That’s over a decade ago. Using software that hasn’t been updated in a decade is one of those β€œdo this at your peril, you fool!” things.

I tried in vain to find a program as user-friendly, so when Finale (which I own but rarely use because it’s one of the world’s least user-friendly programs) closed up shop recently and offered us all a discounted switch to Dorico, I gave it a try.

It has its quirks, but I like it. It’s full of a bunch of bells and whistles I don’t need, but it does what I want.

Dorico offers a freebie called DoricoSE, which (they claim–fingers crossed) will transpose Dorico Pro files, so I’ll post these from now on. Making transposable files available *still* gives me indigestion. It’s just full of pitfalls… accompaniments that growl… accompaniments that tinkle… accompaniments that become just plain dull in other keys… ***shiver*** … but hey, I love you guys so transpose away. Just be careful.

Since the documentation for Dorico SE is available from the Steinberg siteΒ I won’t go into its mechanics here. It is, unfortunately, a little more complicated than Personal Composer was. Ah, progress.

The .pc files will stay until further notice, but if there’s something you just can’t live without, I suggest you download it, transpose it to your liking, and print it for your files. (Print it to PDF. Store it on your computer. Save a tree.) I can’t guarantee how much longer these files will continue to work as operating systems evolve.

I guess you could call this the end of an era. Just don’t call it the end of the prehistoric era.Β I’m that old, I just don’t like to be reminded. πŸ˜‰

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