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by rednum
2069 days ago
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This seems a bit similar to Melodics[1], except open source and it actually uses the standard notation. I know how to read music and started taking classical lessons as an adult. Some time last year a friend recommended me to check out Melodics. It has 3 instruments: keys, pads (finger drumming), drums. I've played pads for few mont;hs, that was good, I've felt it improved my timing and rhythm skills quite a bit. Then I switched to keys. I didn't really like that; it felt like I'm mindlessly repeating whatever is on the screen instead of internalising music. OTOH, when playing pads it felt that something stays in my head after playing. So I guess this may be useful to some people. For me it'd be more interesting to have some sort of memory trainer - I play something on screen few times, then I replay from memory and app shows me a diff maybe? Or when I'm learning a piece, it would give me a challenge "play bars 21-25 both hands" or "play bars 19-23 left hand only". [1] https://melodics.com/, I'm not affiliated in any way |
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I just opened this and spent 20 minutes trying to play 4 bars I wrote a year ago in MuseScore. I am definitely a noob at playing, hahaha. I always figured being able to play in real-time isn't of much value, but I'd like to be able to improvise and use a piano to enter notes when composing at least, and then I saw some of Lionel Yu's videos and bought a keyboard... (https://www.youtube.com/c/LionelYuPiano/videos)
I definitely appreciate the auto-replay, simultaneous note count limit, waiting until you hit a key (both at the start and mid-song if you're slow), and scoring.