Learning to play an instrument can be a very costly exercise in tenacity and perseverance for people with big fingers or hard ears; but we already know that it is never if happiness is good. These three applications serve to introduce us to certain facets of the musical world. Although they do not teach you how to play a specific instrument, they will provide you with some basic concepts that every good musician must handle.A couple of days ago we proposed some applications with which to make music without prior knowledge. Today we bring three new apps for you to take a look in case you want to take it more seriously.
The first of them, NotableIt has a fairly simple design, it is a perfect application if you want to learn to identify sounds, both individual notes and chords (sharps and flats), scales and different keys that will be mixed depending on the degree of difficulty you choose. It also incorporates an "insane" (or "madness") mode with which you can test your ear without the help of any kind of score or graphic representation of the sound.
Yamaha Note Star is an application to read sheet music taking advantage of the capabilities of a digital player such as iPad. It incorporates the hands-free mode so that you can put your tablet on a lectern, adjust tempo and note size to your liking so that the score runs with greater or lesser speed, while the music plays.
Even when you are starting to play an instrument, tuning is a basic matter. String instruments go out of tune relatively frequently (whether you play them or not), especially when the strings are new. There are several ways to tune them, the most elementary is by ear, although there are also devices specifically dedicated to that task. In addition (of course) you can also use your iPad, specifically an application called n-Track Tuner. It's very easy, you make a sound with your instrument and the n-Track Tuner tells you how far you are from the note you are looking for.
