Haven't transcribed music for almost a decade but here I am, a whole 19 bars of fucking bullshit. link
If anyone can help me transcribe the tenor/baritone part, please let me know...
It seems that your comment contains 1 or more links that are hard to tap for mobile users. I will extend those so they're easier for our sausage fingers to click!
Here is link number 1 - Previous text "NOT"
^Please ^PM ^/u/eganwall ^with ^issues ^or ^feedback! ^| ^Delete
I made a copy on website called flat.io . Press the play button to make the website play out the sheet music (if you're on mobile, make sure your ringer is on).
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I cannot read sheet music. Can someone explain to me how those notes correspond to the meat placement on the minimap as well as the room? I mean, I see 9 notes in the music and only 8 meats circled/placed?
And then >Note how the first 5 notes ascend one line/space at a time, and then the next line and space are skipped for the final 3 notes at the top.
How did he know to skip like that? Is that what the sheet music does with the notes as well? Or is he just mimicing the placement of the meats in the dungeon and guessing?
Edit: Found guitar sheet music for Amara's Wish and I can see clearly on this that the first 8 notes do indeed match up. https://flat.io/score/5e8e4addd59cef3f6a82bff8-amaras-wish The piano sheet music screenshots in the google doc were just way too blurry to read.
I really hate to be that guy, but this post makes me so angry. You've clearly just taken the sheet music from the YouTube video of Stravinsky's Septet and copied it. But that doesn't work because the music in Petscop is different from the original.
Not only does your version not match what is played in Petscop. Your copy doesn't even track the original version because you haven't taken the transposition of certain wind instruments into account. Those are the Clarinetto in La, and Corno in Fa that you see to the side there. Did you even listen to the Petscop version while you did the transcription? That's kind of required.
This post got me worked up, so I went ahead and did an accurate transcription myself. Have a listen: https://flat.io/score/5b597d8a99e5875f418b04bd-stravinsky-septet-mvt-2
It should be note-for-note accurate with Petscop 7.
If anyone was wondering what Meiko's song sounds like, here you go. :)
I actually put this together when I saw the spoilers, and I thought [it'd be a lot more melancholy...Then I read the chapter and couldn't stop laughing at the strange mix of the melancholy song and Meiko's screeching delivery.](#s)
And I also had a little fun and tried to jazz it up a little, so if you're curious, give this version a listen. Heads up, I have no idea how to compose music, lol.
It sounds like some sort of B or C part for "Over the Rainbow." Attached is a recreation I made to help figure it out. I know it's kind of far fetched, but around measure four-five it sounds the the "rain-bow" lyric. Maybe some sort of medley containing Over the Rainbow?
I transcribed the clicking into a music tab. It fits neatly into two bars of 4/4.
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https://flat.io/score/5bd9fc07fe521733f2863404-petscop
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I couldn't find this exact rhythm anywhere though. I first looked at Stravinsky's music, since that's the only named composer we have, but there is nothing. I still firmly believe that it's from a piece of music. There are just too many connections with music in Petscop for it to be arbitrary.
I used to try to play along with Ultimate Guitar backing tracks (Pro feature I believe) but a short while back I made the decision to purchase Guitar Pro and even though a bit pricey (not expensive, just a lot of money in an age where subscriptions and ad/data collecting sponsored software is almost the norm), and it's one of the best decision I've made.
The vast amount of available GP files, the quality of the instruments, the controls in terms of tempo, looping selection, metronome, tuner and whatnot. And that's just on top of the tabbing/sheet music functionality that I had so far only practiced on Flat.io. Gives me access to the drums/other score parts, and allows me to adjust the volumes to hear the bass stand out without having to settle with weird MIDI sound approximations.
Or lets put it like this; Since I purchased Guitar Pro, the amount of Internet usage during my practice with a computer has become almost zero because before I had to jump between browser windows to have song tabs, the track, etc with all the distraction that having an open browser window can lead to.
Now I just spend the entire session in GP, making it essentially distraction free. Even to switch to another song, or experiment with a lick/riff, is done within the program. I might need to look something up/download a GP file occasionally, but it has lowered distractions and enabled a much more efficient offline practice.
Also I try to take down notes as I go along with any question marks that pop up so I can google them later, which is also a bit of a change from how I did it originally where I essentially looked up answers on the fly, never really getting into a flow.
PS. I'm fortunate but I understand not everyone can spend €70 on a software like Guitar Pro. There are some free options, the most notable one being MuseScore, but I don't have any experience with it although it can probably do more or less the same things as GP.
My goal was to finish the piece on my birthday today. I like to consider it a present from Bach.
I want to add a bass pedal section, but I thought I would stick to the guideline as a two part invention:
https://flat.io/score/5930855c783e290d1e6514f1-invention
Also, I like to add Greek mythological themes to my music. I enjoy listening to it while observing this painting:
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/0b/c3/73/0bc373867a6776bf394dd7d2cd93f8d6.jpg
Maybe first try playing 8 quarter notes, then play that same thing but twice as fast. That basically makes them into one full measure of eighth notes. Also try getting a grasp on the counting, switch between "1 2 3 4" (quarter notes) and "1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &" (eighth notes). Be sure to keep a consistent tempo as well.
You can check out this guide I whipped up as a reference, it should be somewhat helpful.
Not an app but you can use https://flat.io/ to write out the specific music. The UI is a tad clunky but generally easy enough to use. I hope that helps, if you have any questions if be happy to answer them.
if u want to hear what it sounds like (first two lines cuz i don't understand last line and im not a musician)
On the world of Psycho-B-Gone, a theme song is more of a diegetic sound than it is on most worlds. Most heroes have one, which generally flares in the background when they're doing something important. The Five-Man Band have a few which have latched onto the heroes like remoras and are refusing to let go.
Nikita Malikov has her own theme song, or rather a short motif. It's meant to be in the style of Russian hard bass, though I certainly haven't made it what it sounds like in my head.
Mina Harker, as a form of parody of the classical vampire (think Lady Margolotta from Discworld, though a little more serious and heroic), enters a room to the sound of Bach's Toccata and Fugue.
Harry Colter, as a gunslinger of y'ore, has a bewildering variety of low, slow acoustic guitar music accompanying him. It's never the same music twice, unless it's a known piece like The Good, The Bad and The Ugly which often pops up during Mexican standoffs (and which he really dislikes because he thinks it's overdone).
Paladin, as a pastor and power-armoured knight, particularly likes Sabaton songs.
HAL-9000, as a rehabilitated artificial intelligence with probably too much power over orbital bombardment systems, has a Spotify playlist of robot songs that they like to listen to while they work. It includes nearly the entire soundtrack of The Imitation Game.
Me upon realizing there's an untapped market of converting our world's religious tunes to Bookverse ones: if there aren't any hymns, I'll just have to sing them myself!
That's right, I'm so starved for content that I sung a twist on a hymn I liked growing up; I present to you "Hymn of the Seasons." The lyrics are shown on-screen alongside the music, so feel free to give it a listen - and if you'd rather not listen to me singing into my iPhone, I wrote up the sheet music + lyrics on Flat.io, so you can check it out there as well :D
I'll comment on this with some extra trivia ^^
Love the arrangement! That was a really smooth transition to the second tune. In the tag I don’t feel a very big sense of resolution. I jotted down a bit of a reharm here I mainly just changed the last few chords but it’s just an idea, you don’t need to take it.
This is what I threw together in 5 minutes on flat.io Please do tell me if it sounds good, I actually wanted to play it myself on tenor sax
here's just the intro if you want it! https://flat.io/score/5cf51f8983e70749f571de39-say-yes-to-mchgan?sharingKey=0cbaf219dda0052ca407672661168dbf001d973a65c5061ef4d8bff9108eb36e18230e21bd3f55c0130a8ca4b1c0d5eb83260dc384201e7077b837041c63dd19 lemme know if the link doesn't work !
Hey, thank you for your advice. I think I got what you were talking about I made a melody and repeated it with an added harmony, does it work alright or did I mess up somewhere along the way?
I mean, if you read the page about the notation method, it's pretty straight forward.
You use that to interpret the notes as... well... notes and make the association from there.
I'm terribly non-musical, so I took the round-about route of manually translating it into standard staff notation and plugging it into https://flat.io/
Once I hit play, I recognized the tune immediately -- all it took was 30 mins of me bashing my head against my desk trying to put a name to it -- and bingo.
MuseScore, Noteflight, flat.io, are all free. The latter two are online. LilyPond is another program, but I haven't tried it and have no opinions about it.
The standards if you're paying are Finale and Sibelius. Dorico is comparatively new, but I've heard good things about it.
I don't recognize the tune off hand, but here are three suggestions:
a) Ask your teacher to help you play through it IF this is a pedagogical approach that is appropriate for you at this stage;
b) Break it down slowly. First figure out the correct notes one at a time. I assume you know how to read all the notes in terms of what pitch they should be. (If not, tell us which measure[s] is/are the issue.) Practicing your scales will help with reading the pitches. Once you have figured out the pitches for each note, practice the rhythms by clapping them against a metronome at a SLOW speed. Perhaps 1/4 note = 60. Then, when you have the notes and rhythms down, put them together.
c) To learn how to read music, it is best NOT to listen to a recording until you have tried b) above first. If you get to a point where you really cannot proceed, find a composition program like flat.io (free edition), and then type up and playback the music.
Here’s a link in case you want to check it out! Waltz No. 1
Here you go: https://flat.io/score/5e84dbc784e7897dac8154a9-shab-abed-atab-shb-aabd-aatb
I just did the intro and the verse, seems like the song sticks to that fairly consistently so should be enough to get you going?
Odds are whatever finger speed you train outside won't really translate that well, you'll mostly be faster at what you trained. (Point in case; I type about 90 wpm, and it sure doesn't hurt my fretting and walking technique but it really doesn't translate to it either, I've still needed to train those essentially from scratch. One would think pushing keys and pushing frets would be the same thing.)
In other words, you get good at what you practice. So just try to push yourself/your speed while playing the bass, doing scales and metronome exercises specifically to push speed for instance.
Away from the bass my personal belief is that time is better spent on ear training or other supporting skills to the playing.
To try out speed with a metronome I recreated two tabs a while back, one of a Billy Sheehan exercise and one of an exercise video posted by /u/bassiclessons, although I think I might have fudged something at the end, don't remember but shouldn't affect the goal.
(Ignore the finger numbering from the video that is written in the Sheehan tab.)
I do songs in Rocksmith to get a feel for them and if they're interesting/good enough to play I go look up the tabs (preferably a combined sheet music/tab score) and start marking of the different parts and training them from the tab, focusing more on seeing the structure and note relations (again, this is where a sheet is a very nice visualisation of the notes' direction/the intervals).
I find that when I play a song from within Rocksmith that I haven't already built a mental understanding for I'm essentially doing a direct screen reading to finger coordination attempt but not really absorbing/gaining understanding of the actual song. (Slightly exaggerated, but more or less true.)
After spending som time just noodling based on the tab, I go back to Rocksmith and try out the parts I've been fiddling with in Riff repeater. Sometimes it's just a phrase, sometimes it's almost the entire song, depending on the structure/complexity.
I sometimes also recreate the tab from Rocksmith in Flat.io just to gain a better understanding of it, not necessarily the complete song, just the sections I focus on. (Like this I made for The Trooper).
I feel it helps me focus on practicing specific parts and experiment with tempo and notes in an easier way, and when I feel comfortable I return to Rocksmith to try it out. Then rinse and repeat.
I just made a quick copy of the sheet and added how you'd normally see the rests written down, which you can find here.
The sheet as you linked it seems to be that way to get the counting across, especially when you play between both hands. The notes and counting are correct, but omitting most rests only leads to confusion.
What they mean by the 1 on _?, I have no idea.
I've made some pretty basic sheet music for Obstacles on guitar. I'd recommend watching youtube tutorials and building sheet music from there for guitar. Piano is a nightmare though
For Obstacles, give this a go
about what? did you refer to one of your earlier works like you are some household name level of composing genius and we are supposed to know about it? i assume you're talking about this which still suffers from all the problems everybody on this thread has talked about so far. I don't see any sense of precise development of ideas only someone playing with a notation software.
I showed it to someone and they want to make a short video composed of a set of similar pieces.
I thought I would share another work, if you're interested:
ok, I'm not very educated on scoring music, but tried to translate dynamics as closest as I played it ... some bars and notes are a bit different, for simplicity, hope this helps: https://flat.io/score/61683498fe0f5e0012bd3106-am-study-no-1?sharingKey=71bd6a2382f3fa378d424cd76aa3d2529da4e732ceb7ff21c9e2271f2f63710292357cf2b7b9d50d4873c27c41b7ac150d3d69c9bc8360734887e91b6b7270aa
Ty ty lel, here's the original sheet music... ig it had some interesting bits (https://flat.io/score/5f528a08a8237664d67499ff-oh-look-a-random-butterfly)
Also i guess i'll link my soundcloud so u can see how much i improved (https://m.soundcloud.com/embrace-da-meme)
MuseScore is free. The program is, though if you want to post on the website I think you have to pay. Noteflight and flat.io are free too, but from the feedback, MuseScore is better
https://flat.io/score/61808c181b62ca00121eb3bf-perfume-full-arrangement
here is the sheet music for guitar, bass and drums
Oh, nice! I do mostly pop stuff, but here's an orchestral piece I've been working on: AإKAT - Sophie's Garden
I have more covers to come and eventually I'll complete Philly Nice.
Sheet music I made in order to play this
Credits to Ismael Terrazas on Flat.io for their transcription of this song
Wow, how does it work? Can the AI generate sheet music or did it tell you the notes but you put it in? I tried creating a song with AI a few days ago, by giving prompts to AI Dungeon griffin and having it tell me which notes to put in each measure. It was a little bit tedious and the result was kind of chaotic but it was also really fun lol. This is the link if you want to see what I got.
For instance this was another thing I've come up with, as opposed to the previous one, this came up with the mindset you talked about: you can clearly see motifs, sections and variations. And now it's stuck there 😅 One day. Probably with the help of someone.
working on writing it down because i have way too much time on my hands here
ay man just sent you an email with the transcription. I used a site called flat.io which allows you to transcribe music and play it on the site to make sure it sounds like what you're trying to write.
I've been using flat.io. I forget what's included/excluded from the free version, but I've been able to transcribe piano pieces from youtube lessons with it. You create an account and your scores sync across devices.
https://flat.io/score/5f3598312b445909723bb7c5-unus-annus-code?sharingKey=6e5c5392ec64b465363761f7db59e047a2354e7593ba0168cc5a6e610fe2eed19c630edb5caedd53743849993012e4d34f064d8af6d5e6d749afe986b4fe5bd3 This was in today's video for anyone confused. Sorry if there are any mistakes, but I'm pretty sure it would sound awful regardless! Lol
I’ve played piano for around 11 years and I’ve taken the ABRSM theory exam a year or two ago;
I want to learn composition styles similar to genres in this playlist for example: (soft rock, slightly r&b):
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4L7riS7aqmWEfbPS6pCVF2?si=uD-0-bmWSiatM2sQls-Y6w
One of my tonal compositions:
I’m not sure on what concepts I should know, etc
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
heres my chaotic tchaik-sibelius mash up duet hope yall enjoy also all feedbacks are welcomed :p
I made adjustments according to your feedback, if you don't mind to give me some more feedback: https://flat.io/score/5edf2ddb30c9240914e97225-first-species-counterpoint?sharingKey=23ac50483077f0caf4781c8f2138d73310d1b42fb54a8f101e92381e448da48d9651881b10e0a4182844318e1db7a4e2ea452f29e26a4f25dd472cbe46998e64
I transcribed Shosta's Waltz No. 2 to Flat.io, mostly for my own aid but it might help someone else too: https://flat.io/score/5d9a86e690bf09351996fdb0-waltz
(Also if there are any mistakes just comment and I won't hesitate to update it. 😬)
Not late at all! Should've mentioned this in the post but I kind of expect anyone and everyone to give their recommendations here at any point in time :)
Paper Tigers is a really good recommendation! I believe someone here asked for that sheet music a while ago and I transcribed just the intro for it at the time, so I should probably complete that at some point now :P
Unfortunately not what you asked for, but I really enjoyed this bass cover of "you should see me in a crown": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYoL3-anz14
As I'm currently trying to write/read sheet music I made an attempt at transcribing it when I first heard it, but never fully completed it, so the tempo/rests might be a bit wrong, I'm very new to this, but it's playable at least. =) I set it to public if you want to check it out, but of course it doesn't help with your actual request but might be useful if you like Billie Eilish in general.
Awesome!
I've seen it played two ways in the second part where it goes two extra notes; either finish with D - C - D - C - B as plucked notes or D - C ~ slide to D ~ C - B.
Try both if you haven't!
I actually made a tab/sheet for it a while back to try my hand at writing notes, so you can check it out here if you want to.
I saw you saying you play on A+E, the above just uses the A-string but just transpose fret 2,3,5 of A to frets 7,8,10 of E and you'll be golden. =)
This is a song I wrote called Ekvivalentnost, I’m not sure if it’s what your looking for, but is slower, and uses lots of pedal.
Hey! I managed to put the solo into sheet music! It's for alto sax. Here's the link to it:
https://flat.io/score/5b6479dd49dae01cb16f8a06-feels-pretty-good-sax-solo
It's a little rough around the edges (first time writing sheet music) but the notes, rhythms and stuff are correct! I'm sure you can play it exactly like the song!
This isn't exactly it, but it's basically something like this: https://flat.io/score/5b5ba7ac62a14c370554f97b-matilda-thingy
What you described is exactly how it works. It would be great if someone collected all these common licks on one site :)
In this case, the important features that give this lick its sound are: 1) walking bass line between the D and Gm chord (bass notes walking up : D, E, F, F#), 2) Right hand middle note following the walking bass line, but a 3rd above it -- so F#, G, G#, A. 3) In the right-hand, keeping the 'D' note on the top for every chord.
For the future, /r/transcribe is a great place to ask for stuff like this to be written out.
I was practicing reading music by watching this synthesia video of the medieval theme from Chrono Trigger and writing down the notes on Flat.io. Here is the end result, if anyone wants to learn how to play this beautiful song.
I haven't quite read through your post, but I threw together a short piece utilizing some of the ideas I was referring to. Action is better than words, after all.
Here is the link: https://flat.io/score/5ac44065f49de86cc69b592f/edit
So...the initial chord is a Cmaj #11 #15
Because of how I'm structuring these extensions, when I proceed to the next chord I am assuming the center of the chord is already perceived as changed.
So...let's assume we were just playing a B minor chord as our tonic.
So our next chord is a standard Em 13 chord, performing a subdominant function.
Now let's assume the center changed to a D major chord.
So now our next chord is an Ebmaj #13 # 15, performing the function of the Neapolitan.
Now let's assume the center changed to a D minor chord.
Now our next chord is an A13 b9 b11 (played in 2nd inversion), performing a dominant function.
Let's assume the center changed to a G diminished chord.
The next chord is a Gmaj #11. I know...it's a bit of a shift.
Let's assume the center changed to an F# minor chord.
We repeat the F# minor in its root position as a standard 13th chord.
At this point I just copy the same pattern as earlier.
The last couple measures were sort of noodled together by ear resolving to an Em9 chord (without a 7th).
Here is my submission:
https://flat.io/score/59d33dfec23c93626e5ec552-perennial-tears
From my understanding, the poem is referencing unmarked graves of soldiers fallen in battle. I like to imagine the initial, expressive part of my piece as a call to awaken the dead. The part immediately after evokes a thrashing dance of skeletons, and the later collapse into consonance is meant to express solemnity at the tragedy of their fate.
I think music is always more enjoyable with something visually interesting, so here is a picture that accompanies the piece:
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/cc/03/a4/cc03a41c2e5b392414d073736b37eec0--rain-drops-dew-drops.jpg
I've played for 10 years but have never composed. Never taken a music theory course either.
Here's my submission.
It's inspired a bit from the last couple of pieces I learned to play for piano - Chopin's Op. 9 and Liszt's Liebestraum.
Reminds me of something I actually heard in a dream (yeah, I'm a nerd) awhile back.
I tried to put it down on a free music program, you can listen to it here: https://flat.io/score/584a0506e6f57224db6d9d04-sanctum
The droning low tones should be continuous, not stop and start like they do, it was just a limitation of the program used. But you can hear that Kylo's theme and the Imperial March pair very well.
I've been working on a few more: https://flat.io/score/588033e74edc286465c185c5-variation-challenge
"C" was going to be entirely chromatic, but I wanted to have a jump at the end. It's not too out of place, but it does go against my self-imposed rules.
"D" is really different from the aria(?) melodically and harmonically, but it is loosely related. I'm not sure about the arpeggiated baseline, but I love how the second measure's bass sounds and I wish the others fit as well.
All in all, I'm not as confident in these as my first one, but I feel they have potential. Any ideas?
The last video I posted was this one which demonstrated how using the Flux and 1/4 function you can squeeze 128 separate notes into the Volca Keys' 16 step sequencer by increasing the "bit rate".
This sequence only contains 56 separate notes but in order to place the notes properly there is some finesse needed that I demonstrate. I have once again written the music out using FLAT.IO which is a website that allows you to create public scores and share them. The Score for the sequence is here
At best it's good for getting people who are newbies with notation. But that is the demographic. Anyone who knows how to notate well or professionally will not be nethused. This is not a denegration but just a fact. flat.io is still good but really for beginner-inetermediate students.
Hi, I realize this post is from like a year ago, but I still have transposed the violin part to flute as half of the duet. I took the arranged piece from Domani Tomlindo on Flat and edited it so it was only the violin part. For the first little section of it, I raised it up an octave so it was playable on the flute. then of course it gets too high for it to stay like that so I kept it be. The transition from up an octave to back to normal is a little choppy, but I think it was the best possible spot to do so. There is also a low b at the end, which of course some flutes aren't able to reach down to, so you can adjust that if needed. Here's the link! https://flat.io/score/61eb99e79169ce0012454f28-final-duet Hope that helped :)
i totally agree, although i've found some nice arrangements on musescore, i think your best bet is use a sheet music composition site like flat or musescore (if you can afford the subscription price) and just transpose whatever part works best for you.
Good news and bad news. I don't have tablature for it, and it's not the original, BUT I do have some pretty accurate sheet music for the entire song here. Focus on the acoustic guitar track and skip to measure 780, hope this helps! ^-^
It's because despite my 10 years of piano lessons, I am not that great at writing sheet music... Honestly, I just played it by ear (literally) and then decided to try to put it on sheet music, after learning about Flat.io for the first time. I've figured out how to play pretty much all the music from Seasons 1 and 2, and some of the music from Season 3. None of it is really properly put out on paper, though. It's pretty much all in my head. You are absolutely right, the 6/8 time signature makes a lot more sense. Thank you!
Actually, here is a link to a little sheet music thing i put together that might help since you can hit play and hear the notes I'm describing!
https://flat.io/score/61e0f9f2cd972400135d4886-chains-change?sharingKey=62cb80b7fd294b392d7506dc5b5f314cdf62ab512052685f3afdda7acfa7368182b83bfad1a1ac31bd5e5fb79bc6ff82d0d8d780e63280f1e96d631161413679
Yeah, my bad. I deleted it because i found a score for that particular song! Sorry about that. I even transcribed it to flat.io.
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Here you go.
>For sure! This is the first time that I write a tab, so it partially represents what I play. What do yo think about make it together? https://flat.io/score/61dbe6077480bc0012d2e6fb-el-jardin?sharingKey=e32ba85c54cb624194ebf2b870073adbed390c021285ff9e64fc904fe7b102141f36896fd18ccd756f483b895967cc08f6087de4067ab95de4587c2ee2ebb6bf
Check out flat.io https://flat.io/ It's a website and an app that let's you write sheet music with all sorts of instruments and tools. I used it when I was teaching myself how to read sheet music and I found it really fun and easy to navigate
Here’s kind of what it reminds me of. Can someone tell me what this is? my composition of the music is heard
I don't browse for MuseScore scores online, I only use Desktop Software, but if I'll need to edit something in absence of a Desktop I would use something like www.soundslice.com or flat.io web apps - they can import MusicXML files exported from MuseScore even in Free plans. In order to export back to MusicXML they require a paid plan though. I don't know if it is possible to do export/import from/to MuseScore online collection to/from MusicXML or not. If it is, then with help of paid third party web app such as soundslice or flatio score editing without leaving iPad is possible. Not so quick of course but at least this is already available.
For MuseScore developers I think it's better to keep improving original Desktop MuseScore software because it is the only free powerful scoring software we have right now (correct me if I'm wrong) while wep app certainly would be less powerful and still requiring lot of efforts to develop and maintain Safari/IE and web-browsers compatibility.
Lucky for you I had nothing to do so I gave it a shot. I've never made sheet music before so uh, good luck! I really couldn't tell what the hell was going on with such abysmal audio quality so I literally had to pause and look at which keys were depressed...so if anybody wants to edit this I can add you as a collaborator if you make an account.
You said you don't have the skill to play anything but hopefully you at least have the basic knowledge of theory (that is very useful for digital composition) and know which note is which on the keyboard. And if you wanted to learn piano, that should mean you have a piano, if not just use a virtual one. I recommend using flat.io as it has easy tutorials on how to use it and it has a keyboard visual. This website also has an app if you prefer that. Also, if you want to learn the piano, you'll need at least a little commitment. You may think you don't have the required skill, but you definitely have the space for learning if you are dedicated.
I don't have an actual recording of this song, but I remembered how a section of it went, and I recreated it on a music creating website. I think the string section mostly played this melody.
This is a Christmas song that played two or three years ago at a symphony I was at. It may be a remix of a normal Christmas song, but with parts added. I'm not sure. I think the cover of the album it's on is mostly blue. I'd be eternally grateful for whoever knows what song this is from.
I do in fact have a couple main melodic ideas, it's the problem of introducing them. as for how i've written it thusfar, it's how I learned: write the music with the melody in mind, then bend the melody to fit what you written. also, i meant to put the material in there too, here it is: https://flat.io/score/6165b596a680140013718901-meanley-s-1st-symphony?sharingKey=06e327b268a51b85de313a7df11ccf835352b8d49a5c40ede3d58171fb3e6b009720b0a9cd4e8a3635dd565eb478e32bff480cdde07ceecee582aee9c6b894d6
For things that are rhythmically complicated, I'll put them into a song on flat.io so I can have a reference at any tempo I want/repeat parts as needed, etc. You can create songs with tabs if you don't read standard notation.
You can also use a metronome with subdivisions if it helps the counting. Or build the actual drum pattern for a part in a drum machine
My guess is that we both should improve our ability to play with a metronome when we're not playing WITH the metronome, but there are options while we're working on it.
The link for the piano sheet music.(For free no joke.)
https://flat.io/score/6136dfdad8de9e0012788b53-accumula-town-furret-walk
Just in case pianists in r/pokemon and r/Furret wanna play it and post it here lol
20k upvotes and I'll play it!
The link for the piano sheet music.(For free no joke.)
https://flat.io/score/6136dfdad8de9e0012788b53-accumula-town-furret-walk
Just in case pianists in r/pokemon and r/Furret wanna play it and post it here lol
20k upvotes and I'll play it!
It’s just a piece of music I arranged for Flügelhorn/Trumpet
There's this for free, which in turn is an attempt at transcribing Samuel Fu's arrangement. Mothra's Song is not the best for piano if you're going to stick with the actual notes instead of adjusting things.
Currently the grid layout if fixed but with the next version (early Sept) will come modularity. This will enable you to have multiple cameras, screen share, flat.io for collaborative notation sharing and the ability to change the size of each to fit your needs!
In the next version we'll be charging per student to allow for low income teachers to not have unmanageable expenses before they even start getting students in. We'll also be give the first lesson with students away for free as lots of teachers give free trial lessons.
That being said we have a month free trial on the current version which will get refreshed once the new platform is live!
The piano also come in multiple sizes but we're figuring out how to utilise the space most efficiently. What is the use case for this: is it possible to look at a smaller section of a piano? Just so we know what problem we're trying to solve for you :)
https://flat.io/score/6112e606186aa50013745819-ddlc-music-room-chalkboard
This is the notation all down for anyone curious, the last note could be a c# but I kept it natural since the notation didn’t say otherwise.
Evening monyets! Need help identify a Malay song I heard recently, I manage to get the chorus part and transcribe it, the lyric is like "aku ingin cinta sejati" something something. Thanks in advance!
He said there's none, but the official arrangement (half a step lower) by Idogawa is here, and a comment has a link to a flat.io score that for its claim to be accurate, is not.
I want to make a turn-based RPG, but since I don't yet have a computer to make the game on (only a Chromebook), I've been planning the story and writing the music. Here are 3 of my favorite tracks so far.
Growing Tension (Regular Battle)
Btw I'm gonna do another video if this vid reaches 100 sharps!
The next video I'm gonna use is related to Flat. Flat is a platform that use can make music. This is my account I've been using for 1 year: https://flat.io/hao\_hoe\_chin
If what you're talking about is scoring, I think your best bet is MuseScore. Back in the day I used to use Flat.io which is fine, I guess, but they limit the number of scores you can create (that shouldn't bother you until you reach 15 scores but I say just save yourself the trouble and learn MuseScore).
Anyway, if I'm not mistaken, MuseScore lets you listen to synthesized versions of all the instruments. It sounds pretty bad but it is useful for developing harmony and hearing how stuff sounds at a basic level.
Also if you're into paying you might be interested in Sibelius. I have no experience with it but people say it's good I think.
Thanks. One of the things that strikes me, going back to the original, is that hardly any two elements are rhythmically quite in sync. Not a complaint -- it's part of what gives that style life. Pretty different from the flat.io playback.
Seems like a shame not to do something with the original snaky bass line!
https://flat.io/score/5b4a999580f6e3295b8a25a3-black-hole-sun seems to be similar to the official ones ($5 at sheetmusicdirect, also available at jellynotes). Some mistakes like missing ties and using ties where notating with a different rhythmic value but readable
Thank you!
I definitely encourage you to do that. Learning and recording this was fun.
Here is the sheet music as reference if you want
Further notes: I managed to find "The Last Unicorn" (by America) written up on flat.io for the guitar. But it was the only version of the sheet music I could find that fell within the range of a 12 hole ocarina. Since it was written for guitar and I had to go through and pick out the primary notes for the melody based on my own familiarity with the song, there may be some parts that, to those with a better ear than mine, don't sound quite right. Apart from that, on the whole these tabs keep pretty true to the melody, with the rhythm based on the full lyrics (rather than just instrumentals).
If you have changes to suggest, please feel free to recommend. Otherwise, hope someone out there enjoys this!
This is a boss battle theme for a game that I want to make.
I'm asking this for another person to whom I want to gift a new ipad pro 12.9. Where is the sweet spot on the storage options? This won't be their only device and they have a number of options for long-term storage, but for working storage, I want to make sure I get enough that they will not be frustrated and have to spend too much time managing storage for their active work. I'm leaning toward 256G or 512G; although the extra $200 to get to 512G might be better spent on other accessories. Aside from procreate, this person also spends quite a bit of time using music composition tools (flat.io at the moment) and has an interest in animation tools.