Latest Scores

Published on 22nd Aug 2021, Summertime is an invigorating, jazz score for jazz band composed by Rose-Marie Williams & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Flute, Trumpet, Marimba, Piano, Acoustic Guitar, Drums .

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Published on 14th Jun 2026, When Good Things Turn Bad is an dramatic, classical score for solo composed by Rose-Marie Williams & arranged by for Piano.

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Published on 14th Jun 2026, Arioso by Bach is an gentle, classical score for orchestra composed by Johann Sebastian Bach & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Trumpet, Cor Anglais, Violin, Viola, Cello, Double Bass.

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Published on 14th Jun 2026, Arioso by Bach is an gentle, classical score for brass band composed by Johann Sebastian Bach & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Trumpet, Tenor Horn, Trombone, Tuba.

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Published on 14th Jun 2026, Arioso by Bach is an gentle, classical score for quintet composed by Johann Sebastian Bach & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Flute, Clarinet, Vibraphone.

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Published on 14th Jun 2026, Arioso by Bach is an gentle, classical score for duet composed by Johann Sebastian Bach & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Flute, Piano.

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Published on 9th Jun 2026, Il Silenzio is an gentle, classical score for orchestral composed by Nini Rosso & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Trumpet, Flute, Clarinet, Cor Anglais, Violin, Viola, Cello.

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Published on 9th Jun 2026, A Butterfly Followed Me Home is an cheerful, classical score for solo composed by Rose-Marie Williams & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Piano.

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Published on 5th May 2026, Siciliana from Trumpet Concerto in Ab by Telemann is an gentle, baroque score for duet composed by Georg Philipp Telemann & arranged by Timofei Dokshitser for Trumpet, Piano.

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Published on 28th Apr 2026, Adagio from Sonata Pathetique by Beethoven is an gentle, romantic score for solo composed by Ludwig van Beethoven & arranged by Ludwig van Beethoven for Piano.

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Published on 19th Apr 2026, Foolish Games is an sad, contemporary score for orchestra composed by Jewel Kilcher & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Trumpet, Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Piano, French Horn, Trombone, Tuba, Violin, Viola, Cello, Voice.

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Published on 14th Apr 2026, A Giraffe Followed Me Home is an cheerful, childrens music score for duet composed by Rose-Marie Williams & arranged by Rose-Marie Williams for Trumpet, Clarinet, Trombone.

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Terms of Use
Updated July 11 2026

The government has been lying to us about AI and copyright

Themes:When machines rule the world!

Published 26th Jun 2026

Tech bros want us to pay for their free lunch

This post (originally published on August 30 ,2025) has been re-dated & published with updates due to changes in government policy revealed by a whistleblower. The first notion I had that the music ...

What life is really like for living composers

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 23rd Jun 2026

Here's what I learned from analysing my visitor data

Getting positive feedback as a living composer is not easy. Most avenues for sharing new compositions or arrangements are closed to us, buttressed with stern warnings against self-promotion. Sharing o ...

Introducing Free Piano Solo Booklets

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 25th May 2026

I'm introducing booklets to make my piano music easier to find and use.

If you're here for the first time, I'd like to welcome you to my site and my music. During the lockdowns, I wrote a large number of original compositions, many of them for solo piano. My int ...

Introducing New Trumpet Arrangements

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 12th May 2026

Check out my growing list of new trumpet arrangements

The aim of these arrangements is to extend the repertoire for trumpet at a rate of one every week or so (and play my favourite music!). These arrangements are divided between public domain classics an ...

Leveling the playing field using Musescore and Braille Music

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 17th Mar 2026

See the music world through the eyes of the blind

I also introduced direct access to Musescore files of every score. This big change came about after I was asked about providing Musescore files on Reddit to a vision-impaired user.This seemed a f ...

My debut trumpet EP - what went right, what went wrong

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 29th Jan 2026

The adventure of my first cover song EP, from recording to getting them onto the streaming platforms.

Today marks a huge milestone in my musical endeavours. I have released my first trumpet recordings. I've also published the backing tracks created for each track on YouTube so other musicians can ...

Interview with Music Industry Pro

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 23rd Oct 2025

Find out what it takes to break into and survive in the Australian music industry

As a requirement of my TAFE course in music performance I have interviewed industry professional, Michael Chambers to share knowledge of what is important to get right when you're entering or survi ...

Musescore has been emptying my bank account

Themes:When machines rule the world!

Published 4th Sep 2025

Crazy charges from Musescore have cost me a fortune

Musescore is a website built for storing and sharing musical scores created with the free software of the same name. The software makers have no ties to the score-sharing site apart from sharin ...

Going viral on TikTok and no idea why

Themes:When machines rule the world!

Published 26th Jul 2025

A look at what happens when you go viral on TikTok

I've only recently gone back into doing my music. A couple of years into my composing efforts, I'd gotten distracted by other things. A few weeks ago I decided to check back into my distributor's das ...

The Story Behind Bin Chicken Banter

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 16th Jul 2025

The Bin Chicken is as Australian as Bluey. I wrote a piece to honour their place in Australian culture.

I recently released an album of brass band/ensemble pieces, including the track titled 'Bin Chicken Banter. Considering much of my audience is from outside Australia, I thought I should explain what a ...

The Story Behind Antarctica

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 10th Jul 2025

This blog post follows the story of my piece Antarctica from duet to chamber orchestra.

If you are at all familiar with my scores you may have noticed that there are usually several arrangements of the same piece. Writing for the general public chamber groups is very much a hit and mis ...

The difference between mixing and mastering

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 5th Nov 2023

An overview of the different roles in making music

I haven't blogged for a while so I thought I'd get back into things with a blog post about the difference between music composition, production, mixing and mastering. These terms are closely related b ...

A look at the benefits and questions raised by composition competitions

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 30th Jun 2022

Composition competitions, are they worth it?

As a fledgling composer I have had the joy of experiencing many things for the first time over the past 18 months. One of those things is entering composition competitions. Not long after I beg ...

How realistic orchestral tracks are made

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 10th Aug 2021

A basic intro to how composers create realistic orchestral music without an orchestra.

Since I published this blog post, I have gone on to write and produce multiple tracks for orchestra as well as several commissions for chamber groups for members of the local Amateur Chamber Music ...

732


A look at the benefits and questions raised by composition competitions
Published 30th Jun 2022

Composition competitions, are they worth it?.

As a fledgling composer I have had the joy of experiencing many things for the first time over the past 18 months. One of those things is entering composition competitions.

Not long after I began composing I set up a Twitter account dedicated to music (as opposed to the political journalism account I established a decade ago which has several thousand followers). I remember wondering if I'd ever gain any followers and whether other composers and musicians would accept me. What would music Twitter be like?

18 months later and with only a couple of hundred followers I can say that I have found it an invaluable resource. Twitter is where I heard about Score Relief, a competition run for the first time in 2021 to generate support for music industry workers impacted by the pandemic lockdowns.

Score Relief is run by The Cue Tube, a platform which provides resources and opportunities for screen composing (writing music to film). Each year The Cue Tube chooses a cause to support through Score Relief. This year the competition supported In Place of War, a global organisation that uses creativity in places of conflict as a tool for positive change.

I found out about Score Relief in the last week or so before entries closed. I had literally just moved house and was completely exhausted but I'd been curious about writing for screen for some time so I didn't want to miss such a wonderful opportunity.

A hugely popular competition, Score Relief received a deluge of entries with the 2022 competition receiving over one thousand. In events of this scale (and perhaps most composition competitions), it is unrealistic to assume your entry is going to get an award, and finding out about it at the last minute meant I was on a tight deadline.

I had also never scored anything for orchestra. Composing for large ensembles requires working with unwieldy electronic scores- though I am learning that it is possible to use a different approach to mine and just record the audio live (from a keyboard) then tweak it using software and leave out the score-writing step altogether!

This occurred to me only yesterday during an industry zoom event organised by AMCOS where an award winning Australian screen composer, Sean Tinnion took us through how he created the soundtrack for a feature length documentary. The trailer is well worth watching but please be aware the documentary is about animal abuse and footage is confronting.

Score Relief did require an actual score though, with specific instrument parts because the prize was a live recording of the winner's entry by a professional orchestra, an experience most aspiring composers can only dream of!

Ultimately I didn't have to finish scoring all the parts because as the deadline approached I got word that only the video was required for initial judging. While I did have a lot of the scoring done, I wasn't about to force myself to complete it unless required, given the looming deadline.

I am grateful that I did score as much as I did for the orchestra however because it started me on a journey I now feel I would be lost without. My finished entry is below and I think it works well. As you can see we were required to write the soundtrack to this fabulous animation. Keep in mind that some of the sound effects (including the clapping sticks between the scenes) came with the video and we were under strict instructions not to change them.

Writing about it again more than a year later makes me realise what incredible fun screen writing is and that my reward for participating in the competition was getting a taste for orchestral writing. I shudder to think about not having gone on to write the pieces I have which mean so much to me.

The second competition I also found out about in the last weeks before entries were due and it was of a very different kind. Each year Orpheus Music (an Australian publisher of recorder music based in Armidale) runs a competition requiring compositions to address very specific criteria. Last year it was for a recorder sextet and this year it is for an eight part recorder ensemble.

Most of us are familiar with the type of recorder used in schools but this competition gave me the opportunity familiarise myself with the full range of recorders, some as tall as trees!

The 'golden-age' of the recorder is said to be mid 17th-mid 18th century, though there is still fascinating new music written for the instrument, particularly since the introduction of the contrabass & sub-contrabass recorders which have a unique sound.

Unfortunately the only recorder sounds I had to work with came from my notation program, Musescore and I found that the quality of the virtual/sampled instrument sounds provided something of a limitation to what I could write that I could be confident would sound good.

I initially wrote this piece which I called Morning Walk but after trying it with other woodwind instruments decided it sounded much better played by other instruments.

With only a fortnight to the deadline I decided to try something with more of an early music feel as I thought that would suit the Musescore recorder sound better. I came up with Apart and Together which I've had a lot of fun with since, scoring it for other instruments. My favourite is probably the brass quintet :-)

The prize included a publishing contract with Orpheus Music but after struggling with the Musescore imitations of recorders I decided I wasn't upset at having lost that particular reward. That is not to say that I didn't learn from writing those two pieces.

Apart and Together has a different feel from most of my music so I think what I've gained most from the competitions is that being forced to write to specific requirements allows me extend myself in ways I wouldn't, if left to my own devices.

What makes a competition worthwhile probably depends on how your investment is balanced with perceived rewards. I do think it's important to choose them wisely for that reason. Neither of the competitions I entered had an entry fee but many do. I write music quickly and I don't mind deadlines so spending only a few days on each entry seems like a good investment given I find them useful learning experiences.

On the other hand, I have had very little time to slow down and focus in on the qualities that specific audiences would be looking for. Now that I have my website built and my journalism work under better control, I look forward to focusing more on the needs of specific instruments, the qualities specific audiences are looking for and also building a community around my music so that I can engage more directly with musicians and audiences.

Share your question or comment and Rosie will respond here.

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The government has been lying to us about AI and copyright

Themes:When machines rule the world!

Published 26th Jun 2026

Tech bros want us to pay for their free lunch

This post (originally published on August 30 ,2025) has been re-dated & published with updates due to changes in government policy revealed by a whistleblower. The first notion I had that the music ...

What life is really like for living composers

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 23rd Jun 2026

Here's what I learned from analysing my visitor data

Getting positive feedback as a living composer is not easy. Most avenues for sharing new compositions or arrangements are closed to us, buttressed with stern warnings against self-promotion. Sharing o ...

Introducing Free Piano Solo Booklets

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 25th May 2026

I'm introducing booklets to make my piano music easier to find and use.

If you're here for the first time, I'd like to welcome you to my site and my music. During the lockdowns, I wrote a large number of original compositions, many of them for solo piano. My int ...

Introducing New Trumpet Arrangements

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 12th May 2026

Check out my growing list of new trumpet arrangements

The aim of these arrangements is to extend the repertoire for trumpet at a rate of one every week or so (and play my favourite music!). These arrangements are divided between public domain classics an ...

Leveling the playing field using Musescore and Braille Music

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 17th Mar 2026

See the music world through the eyes of the blind

I also introduced direct access to Musescore files of every score. This big change came about after I was asked about providing Musescore files on Reddit to a vision-impaired user.This seemed a f ...

My debut trumpet EP - what went right, what went wrong

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 29th Jan 2026

The adventure of my first cover song EP, from recording to getting them onto the streaming platforms.

Today marks a huge milestone in my musical endeavours. I have released my first trumpet recordings. I've also published the backing tracks created for each track on YouTube so other musicians can ...

Interview with Music Industry Pro

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 23rd Oct 2025

Find out what it takes to break into and survive in the Australian music industry

As a requirement of my TAFE course in music performance I have interviewed industry professional, Michael Chambers to share knowledge of what is important to get right when you're entering or survi ...

Musescore has been emptying my bank account

Themes:When machines rule the world!

Published 4th Sep 2025

Crazy charges from Musescore have cost me a fortune

Musescore is a website built for storing and sharing musical scores created with the free software of the same name. The software makers have no ties to the score-sharing site apart from sharin ...

Going viral on TikTok and no idea why

Themes:When machines rule the world!

Published 26th Jul 2025

A look at what happens when you go viral on TikTok

I've only recently gone back into doing my music. A couple of years into my composing efforts, I'd gotten distracted by other things. A few weeks ago I decided to check back into my distributor's das ...

The Story Behind Bin Chicken Banter

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 16th Jul 2025

The Bin Chicken is as Australian as Bluey. I wrote a piece to honour their place in Australian culture.

I recently released an album of brass band/ensemble pieces, including the track titled 'Bin Chicken Banter. Considering much of my audience is from outside Australia, I thought I should explain what a ...

The Story Behind Antarctica

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 10th Jul 2025

This blog post follows the story of my piece Antarctica from duet to chamber orchestra.

If you are at all familiar with my scores you may have noticed that there are usually several arrangements of the same piece. Writing for the general public chamber groups is very much a hit and mis ...

The difference between mixing and mastering

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 5th Nov 2023

An overview of the different roles in making music

I haven't blogged for a while so I thought I'd get back into things with a blog post about the difference between music composition, production, mixing and mastering. These terms are closely related b ...

How realistic orchestral tracks are made

Themes:Learning new skills: performing, recording, composing, engaging!

Published 10th Aug 2021

A basic intro to how composers create realistic orchestral music without an orchestra.

Since I published this blog post, I have gone on to write and produce multiple tracks for orchestra as well as several commissions for chamber groups for members of the local Amateur Chamber Music ...