You actually can export chords from Cubase to Dorico in two ways. One way is to show the chord track in the score editor and then export the xml to Dorico. The other way is simply select the chords from Cubase and drag and drop them in the play tab of Dorico 🤯(not many know this)
Thank you so much for doing this video! Yesterday I purchased Dorico. (I previously owned, but was never quite happy with, most of the other big-name Notation Apps.) My first impressions of Dorico were so favorable that (even though I have a big investment of time, and learning curve ascent, in Ableton Live) I purchased the simplest version of Cubase to see if the "integtation" (for which you lobbied in your fabulous video) between Dorico & the DAW would make it "worth it" to consider changing DAWs. Into this state, your video fell like proverbial manna to Moses's exiles from Egypt. I cannot thank you enough! Please keep up the super-valuable presentations! I liked, subscribed, and requested notifications, so I don't miss whatever you do next. A rather-old newbie!
Thanks so much Martin for the kind words! So glad you found value in the video. :) I've really enjoyed working with both Cubase and Dorico, I hope you do too! I definitely have more videos planned for both programs, so stay tuned!
Great, video. Thank you. I'm also still using Dorico 3.5. It perfectly suits my current needs. I think most of the additional features from version 4 might confuse me.
Fabulous video. I only wish that you could change notes on the Dorico staff line and play it back through Cubase to reflect all of the changes. By the way which version of Dorico are you using?
Thanks for a really well organised and informative video. I am wondering though why you chose to do a MIDI export instead of MusicXML export (when the latter is a notation format). Is it because MusicXML does not keep velocity information (and you wanted to keep that)?
did you need to reinput all your dynamic markings? how do you remember where to put them? also in cubase did you just play the notes on your keyboard and then quantize them before you exported them?
Dorico is a separate product, with multiple versions - for a 2 track piece I think you can use the free version. For larger pieces, you would need to find the version that fits your budget and needs. You might also take a look an MuseScore 4 - which is free - and being worked on to improve it even more.