I can't help, but just wanted to say this is something I'm legitimately curious about.
For a friend.
⚓ Dedicated to the discussion of digital piracy, including ethical problems and legal advancements.
I can't help, but just wanted to say this is something I'm legitimately curious about.
For a friend.
Also, I asked my sister, she wasn't much help, but maybe this helps:
So classical, popular, lead sheets (melody with chord symbols)-I don't know anything about pirating. But there isn't "one" piece of sheet music usually-"Sheet Music" if it's some popular/rock etc..:there may be a gazillion arrangements-if it includes voice then basically it is just covering the "orchestration" of the piece-but one might want to look for "easy piano" (which has a ton of variance in "level" as there is no solely adjective standard) or "primer" piano-there are a lot of regular people that arrange tunes. Classical music might be "free" but the "arranger" Wouk add fingering, phrasing, dynamics....especially beginning music. "Urtext" is a German edition that has a lot of classical music as "originally" notated..
Apps are great to learn basics/cheap to free-but "pirating" may not super relevant anyway as there is so much available-but it's a pretty (too) broad of a question...
Also just realized I'm replying to a reddit bot lol