Introduction

Dorico First Steps

Product
Dorico
Version
5.1
Language
English
Document type
Webhelp
ft:openMode
fluidtopics

Welcome to this First Steps guide, which we have created to help you get started with Dorico by taking you through all the steps necessary to create and prepare a short piano piece, followed by an extract of a blues song.

We hope that the principles and techniques you learn as part of this guide help you become familiar with common operations and feel more confident when working on your own projects.

This guide introduces you to the following:

  • The user interface and its most important parts

  • The different modes in Dorico and their functions

  • Setting up a project

  • Writing music and adding the notations required to produce a short piano piece and some additional common notations in a separate piece

  • Laying out and formatting pages, including adjusting notations such as beam grouping and stem directions

  • Playing back music and adjusting playback

  • Printing and exporting

The piano piece used in these tasks is Dora Pejačević’s “Walzer-Capricen No. 2”. In the Webhelp First Steps guide attachments , you can find a PDF of the full piece for your reference.

Within a relatively short duration, this piece contains many notations common to most musical styles, such as dynamics and articulations, as well as notes in multiple voices simultaneously, chords, and cross-staff beaming. Other common notations not included in this piece, such as lyrics and chord symbols, are in a separate section at the end of the guide.

Note
  • This guide describes inputting notes with the default preferences of selecting the duration before the pitch, and specifying accidentals, rhythm dots, and articulations before inputting notes. Although Dorico supports the inverse of those input settings, we recommend using Dorico’s default preferences so you can follow all the steps in order.

  • Screenshots in this guide show Dorico Pro. Tasks are possible in all product versions unless stated otherwise.

  • You can access relevant documentation from inside Dorico by clicking help buttons . These buttons are shown in many dialogs and in the contextual help overlay, which you can show in the project window by pressing F1 (Windows) or Cmd-/ (macOS) or clicking Show Help in the toolbar.