ScoreMus is a vertical platform for composers, choirs, artists, and sheet-music uploaders, with a core goal of helping users “discover, earn, organize, share, and perform” choral and instrumental scores. It brings score/solfa management, collaboration, event ticketing, wallet withdrawals, notifications, and content moderation into one system, positioning itself more like an industry SaaS product for music creators and small performance organizers.
The materials show that its core areas include Scores, Solfas, Events/Tickets, Wallet & Payouts, Notifications, and Profiles. On the score side, it supports uploading, management, publishing, versioning, quick previews, collection/style/language categorization, and duplicate detection. For collaboration, it provides choir-oriented features such as rehearsal coordination, voice-part assignment, and shared scores. On the monetization side, it includes digital score revenue, purchase records, revenue sharing, payout preferences, and payout history. The events module is promoted as supporting event creation, ticket pricing, ticket sales, check-in, and revenue analytics, but the documentation also states that the “Events module is currently disabled,” so this should be confirmed carefully before launch.
The page clearly supports free registration, but it does not disclose plan pricing, subscription tiers, platform commission rates, payout fees, or ticketing fees. The documentation mentions Subscription settings, potentially non-refundable platform fees, revenue-sharing rules, and payout runs, suggesting it may use a subscription plus transaction commission/revenue-sharing model. However, there is not enough public information to assess the overall cost.
ScoreMus has a relatively clear permission design, including regular authenticated users, uploaders/artists/choirs, reviewers, admins, and super admins, with menus and features controlled through permissions. On security, it supports email verification, 2FA, password and session management, data export, account deletion, KYC/document verification, DMCA takedowns, and content licensing policies, giving it basic platform governance capabilities. However, it does not disclose enterprise-grade compliance certifications such as SOC 2, ISO 27001, or GDPR.
Its strengths are a clearly defined vertical use case and a closed-loop workflow covering score uploads, collaboration, ticketing, and payouts. The documentation also provides basic operating and support processes, with a stated target response time of within 2 business days for standard tickets. The downsides are opaque pricing, inconsistent status for the events module, only vague references to third-party integrations such as Email/SMS/WhatsApp, and no public information on APIs or private deployment. It is better suited for composers, independent musicians, small choirs, and performance organizers to trial. Larger ensembles or educational institutions should request a demo, fee schedule, data compliance details, and service terms before procurement.
Access from China is unknown, and the platform does not disclose payment channels, RMB settlement, or the availability of domestic SMS/WhatsApp. Teams in China should first test network access, registration, payments and payouts, and notification delivery. Alternatives can be selected by use case: for score collaboration, consider MuseScore, Flat.io, and Noteflight; for ticketing, consider Eventbrite or China-based ShowStart and Piaoxingqiu; for team collaboration, combine WeCom, Feishu, and cloud storage.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on scoremus.org official site.
scoremus.org is an Unknown SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach scoremus.org directly.