Part of our guide to making sheet music from any song.
When you make sheet music from a song, the first result is a draft, not a final copy. A note may land on the wrong pitch, a rhythm may need adjusting, or the key may not suit the player. That is why being able to edit the score matters more than getting a picture of it. An editable score lets you change the music; a flat image does not. Here is how to edit sheet music after you make it, and why starting from real notation rather than an image is what makes every edit possible.
Why editable beats a picture
A transcription is a first draft, so being able to edit it matters more than getting a picture. An editable score lets you change the music: move a note, fix a rhythm, transpose the key. A flat image, whether a PDF or a scan, does not, because the notes are pixels rather than data. The difference is the whole point. With real note data the software knows that a quarter note on the third line is a B, so it can move it, retime it, or transpose it; in an image, that same note is just a shape on a background and nothing can act on it. That is why Songscription returns an editable score with an edit mode rather than a static picture, so the result is something you refine rather than something you are stuck with. The bigger picture of finishing a transcription is in fixing AI transcription errors.
Fixing notes, rhythm, and key
The core edits are fast on an editable score. Fix a wrong pitch by selecting the note and moving it to the right line or space. Fix a rhythm by changing the note's value so the bar adds up. Add a note that was missed, or delete one that should not be there. And change the key by transposing the whole piece in one step, which moves every note together rather than asking you to rewrite the part by hand. Transposing is the move you reach for when the original key fights a singer's range or an instrument; because you are working with note data, it applies cleanly across the entire score and the spelling comes along with it.
Hands, layout, and cleanup
For piano music you can reassign notes between the right and left hand, the hand split, which decides what each hand plays and is one of the most common edits a piano part needs. Save edits like hand reassignment and note deletion before leaving edit mode rather than fire-and-forget, so a change you made is actually stored and does not vanish when you navigate away. Beyond the notes, the cleanup that makes a score readable includes adjusting the time signature, fixing note spelling and beaming so the rhythms group the way a reader expects, and tidying the layout so the page reads clearly. If the part is denser than you need, simplifying sheet music covers thinning it down while keeping the song intact.
Export a clean copy
When you are done, export a clean copy in the format that fits where it is going: MusicXML to keep editing elsewhere, MIDI for a DAW, or PDF to print and share. The order matters. To edit a PDF or a scanned page you first need the editable source, since the image itself cannot be changed, so you make your edits on the real notation and export a fresh PDF rather than trying to alter the picture. MusicXML is the format to choose when you want to carry the notation into another program intact, and what is MusicXML explains why it preserves the notation where a plain image cannot. The full set of options and when to use each is in the music file formats guide. Because Songscription returns an editable score with an edit mode for exactly this, you are refining real notation rather than redrawing a picture.
Get an editable score, not a picture
Upload a song and get notation you can actually change: fix notes, transpose the key, reassign hands, then export PDF, MIDI, or MusicXML. The free tier is enough to make your first score.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you edit sheet music after creating it?
Yes, as long as you have an editable score rather than a flat image. A transcription is a first draft, so being able to edit it matters more than getting a picture. An editable score lets you change the music: fix a wrong pitch or rhythm, add or delete notes, transpose the key, and tidy the layout. A flat image (a PDF or a scan) does not let you do any of that, because the notes are pixels rather than data. Songscription returns an editable score with an edit mode for exactly this.
How do I fix a wrong note or rhythm?
In an editable score you select the note and change its pitch, or change its rhythm, directly on the staff. You can also add a note that was missed or delete one that should not be there. For piano music you can reassign notes between the right and left hand (the hand split), which decides what each hand plays. Save edits like hand reassignment and note deletion before leaving edit mode rather than fire-and-forget, so the changes stick.
Can I change the key after transcribing a song?
Yes. In an editable score you change the key by transposing the whole piece in one step, rather than rewriting every note by hand. That moves the entire song up or down to a key that suits a singer's range or an instrument, and the note spelling moves with it. Because you are working with real note data and not an image, the transposition applies cleanly across the whole score.
Can I edit a PDF of sheet music?
Not directly. A PDF is a fixed image, so you edit the editable source and export a fresh PDF rather than changing the PDF itself. If all you have is a scanned PDF, editing it directly requires converting it back to notation first, so you have real note data to work with. The clean workflow is to keep an editable score (MusicXML to keep editing elsewhere, or the original edit mode), make your changes there, and export a new PDF to print and share.
The fastest way to start is on a song you want to play. Upload a recording with Songscription and get an editable score you can refine.
