Graham Percival wrote:
On Mon, 15 Sep 2008 12:21:38 -0500
Tim Litwiller<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What I would like to find is some kind of program that would play a
note or tone and she would try to sing that note or tone back into a
microphone and then it would continue to the next note
On Mon, 15 Sep 2008 22:06:00 +0100
Nick Bailey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'd be a bit careful about teaching absolute pitch accuracy. I'm not
> a musician, but it is a common mistake by us engineers and computer
> scientists to consider individual notes important.
Relative pitch accuracy
On Mon, 15 Sep 2008 12:21:38 -0500
Tim Litwiller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What I would like to find is some kind of program that would play a
> note or tone and she would try to sing that note or tone back into a
> microphone and then it would continue to the next note when she hits
> it. J
Nick Bailey wrote:
We did some work on Rosegarden which might interest you:
http://www.n-ism.org/Papers/Nick_Bailey/icmc2008_19ETrehearsal.pdf
The software described in that paper was for training expert musicians
to sing microtonal songs which have more than 12 divisions of the
scale suc
We did some work on Rosegarden which might interest you:
http://www.n-ism.org/Papers/Nick_Bailey/icmc2008_19ETrehearsal.pdf
The software described in that paper was for training expert
musicians to sing microtonal songs which have more than 12 divisions
of the scale such as Graham Ha
This is not specifically on the topic of lilypond but my daughters love
of singing and trying to help her learn to sing is one of the things
that got me interested in lilypond in the first place.
She loves to sing and I would love to help her learn to hear when she
hits a pitch. We are 2 hours