FORTE Basic: Quick Start Guide for BeginnersWelcome to FORTE Basic. This guide walks you step-by-step from installation to creating your first score, covers the main features you’ll use most often, and offers practical tips so you can compose and print music quickly and confidently.
What is FORTE Basic?
FORTE Basic is an entry-level music notation program designed for composers, teachers, students, and hobbyists who need a straightforward way to create, edit, and print sheet music. It includes common notation tools—note input, dynamics, articulations, lyrics, and basic playback—packaged in a simpler interface than professional notation suites.
Getting Started
System requirements and installation
- Check that your computer meets the minimum OS requirements on the FORTE website (Windows or macOS versions vary by release).
- Download the installer for FORTE Basic and follow the setup wizard.
- Launch FORTE Basic and register or enter your license key if required.
Creating a new score
- Open FORTE Basic and choose “New Score” or use a score template.
- Select an ensemble or instrument (solo piano, lead sheet, choir, etc.).
- Set title, composer, time signature, key signature, tempo, and number of measures.
- Click “Create” to open the score workspace.
Workspace Overview
The main areas you’ll see:
- Toolbar: quick-access icons for file, edit, playback, and common notation tools.
- Palettes/Inspector: dynamic panels for note durations, articulations, dynamics, clefs, and text elements.
- Score view: the main page where notation is entered and edited.
- Mixer/Playback panel: controls for instrument sounds and volume if available.
Familiarize yourself with tool icons: note values, rests, ties, slurs, and selection/mouse modes.
Entering Notes
FORTE Basic supports multiple input methods:
- Mouse input: select a note duration from the palette then click staff positions to place notes.
- Computer keyboard: use shortcuts (e.g., numbers for note lengths) — check the Help menu for the exact mapping in your version.
- MIDI input (if supported): connect a MIDI keyboard and play to record notes directly.
Tips:
- Use the “Note Input” mode (or similar) to prevent accidental edits while placing notes.
- Hold Shift/Ctrl (or Command) with click to select multiple objects for batch editing.
Editing and Formatting
Selecting and moving
- Click to select single items; drag to move. Use marquee select to select several measures.
- Cut/copy/paste measures or bars using standard shortcuts.
Changing pitch and duration
- With an item selected, use arrow keys or the inspector to change pitch.
- Change duration by selecting a note and choosing a new note value from the palette.
Articulations, dynamics, and text
- Drag articulations (staccato, accent) or dynamics (p, f, crescendo) from the palettes onto notes or staff positions.
- Add lyrics by selecting the note and choosing “Lyrics” — type and press Space to move to the next note.
- Use the text tool for titles, rehearsal marks, chord symbols, and expression text.
Working with Measures and Repeats
- Add or delete measures with the Measure menu (or context menu on the staff).
- Insert barlines, repeat signs, and voltas (first/second endings) via the barline or structure palette.
- To transpose sections, select the measures and use the Transpose function to shift by interval or key.
Playback and Mixer
- Use the playback controls to play your score. The program highlights measures as it plays.
- Adjust tempo using the tempo marker or transport bar.
- Basic instrument sounds can be assigned per staff; use the Mixer to set volume and pan if available.
- If you have a virtual instrument (VST) or external MIDI device, route the score playback to it for higher-quality sounds (if FORTE Basic supports external MIDI routing).
Printing and Export
- Print directly from the File menu. Use Page Setup to adjust margins and paper size.
- Export options commonly include PDF and WAV/MIDI. Export MIDI to import into other DAWs or notation programs; export PDF for sharing printable scores.
- For lead sheets, use condensed formatting (one staff) and enlarge chord symbols if needed.
Useful Shortcuts & Workflow Tips
- Save often and use versioned filenames (song_v1, song_v2).
- Use templates for recurring ensembles or formats (e.g., piano-vocal-guitar).
- Learn basic keyboard shortcuts for durations, copy/paste, and undo/redo—these speed up notation dramatically.
- For complex editing, copy the passage to a new score and experiment without risking the original.
- Check quantization settings when using MIDI input to avoid unintended rhythmic values.
Common Problems and Quick Fixes
- Note input not working: ensure you’re in Note Input mode and no other tool is active.
- Playback sounds off: check the Mixer, tempo, and instrument assignments; verify MIDI device connections.
- Layout issues (crowded systems): increase staff spacing or adjust note spacing in layout settings; remove unnecessary lyrics or condensed markings.
- Missing fonts/symbols: install the included music symbol fonts; restart the app.
When to Upgrade
FORTE Basic covers essential notation tasks. Consider upgrading to FORTE Home, Premium, or another advanced notation program if you need:
- Advanced engraving controls
- More instrument libraries and higher-quality playback
- Extensive score layout options and advanced part extraction
- Advanced MIDI editing or musicXML import/export fidelity
Quick Example: Create a Simple 8‑bar Melody (step-by-step)
- New Score → Solo piano → ⁄4 → 8 bars → Create.
- Select quarter note, click middle C in measure 1; continue entering a simple melody.
- Add dynamics (mf at bar 1), slur over bars 1–2, and a crescendo to bar 4.
- Enter lyrics under the melody using Lyrics tool.
- Play back, adjust tempo, then File → Export → PDF to save the printed copy.
Final tips
- Start simple: build confidence with short pieces before tackling longer scores.
- Use templates and save custom ones for repeated formats.
- Explore the Help documentation and any tutorial videos provided with your FORTE Basic version.
Good luck composing—once you’re comfortable with the basics above, you’ll be able to produce clean, playable scores quickly.