The growth of music on the Internet has been prodigious, including music for worship. Hundreds of sites feature songs and sheet music for listening, viewing and downloading. Recent technologies allow the secure distribution of scores, giving worship leaders and church musicians more resources than ever before. Publishing sheet music on the Internet is not a new development. For several years, church musicians have posted scores as graphic or PDF files, often with accompanying sound files. This is an effective way to distribute sheet music, but standard PDFs and graphic files are static images and can require considerable storage space. The file formats themselves are not secure -- anyone can freely download and distribute them. Publishers and composers concerned about copyright protection cannot use these formats for publishing their music.
Over the last few years, music notation software and digital
rights management companies have developed viewer/player formats that are
interactive
Music publishers, distributors and retailers are now using online distribution to supplement their traditional "hard copy" sales. Publishers are finding that digital delivery is ideal for several types of music, especially guitar and vocal song sheets, handbell music, keyboard music, choral works and instrument parts. Publishers are also realizing significant economic advantages -- the costs of production, storage and distribution are a fraction of traditional publishing's costs. These savings can be handed down to the musicians and worship leaders who purchase the music. Church musicians and publishers also benefit from expanded catalogs and increased availability of music. Once a score is created and posted it will probably never go out-of-print. Publishers can increase their offerings by publishing music online that would be too expensive (or risky) to print traditionally. Music for niche markets, special occasions and seasonal events can be instantly available anywhere in the world.
As catalogs of digitized scores and lyrics increase, publishers and distributors are making it easier and faster for worship leaders to find good music. Search engines enable anyone to locate music for any group, style or service. Music ministers can search for music according to the liturgical calendar, the requirements or skill level of a particular ensemble, a particular Biblical passage or a lyric. (For an example, see Church Music Now's search engine on their new website, www.churchmusicnow.com.) Once a piece is located, it may be transposed to the singer's favorite key before being purchased and printed. Or if a particular instrument is not available, another one may be instantly substituted.
Internet publishing is not just for publishers -- individual
church musicians and worship leaders are also taking advantage of online
distribution. David McKay, a worship leader and writer in
Used by permission of Technologies for Worship Magazine, www.tfwm.com

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