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- Speedy Note: Tenor Clef Vs. Fingering Strings
Speedy Note: Tenor Clef vs Fingering Strings Usage & Stats
Speedy Note: Tenor Clef teaches you to read the Tenor Clef (C Clef) in an interactive, fun and competitive game environment. Great for beginners to advanced, children or adults. Master the six levels and you have mastered the Tenor Clef! Compete with yourself or with your friends. Speedy Note tracks your scores and lets you know how you are doing.
Speedy Note also allows you to learn at your own pace – you decide the level of difficulty and when to advance to more difficult levels.
Speedy Note: Tenor Clef is very intuitive. It only takes a few moments to learn how to use (even for young children).
FEATURES:
Speedy Note is MIDI compatible. You can use your midi instrument to play the game and learn the notes. (Requires a MIDI interface connected through the lightening port or a Bluetooth LE MIDI device.)
CD quality piano sounds.
Can be used silently allowing you to practice learning notes anywhere, any time. (No need to turn down or off your device’s volume.)
You can learn either using alphabetic notation (A, B, C, D, E, F, G) or Solfege notation (Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Si).
Created by Bienelle Music.
- Apple App Store
- Paid
- Music
Store Rank
- -
The highest rated and most comprehensive fingering guide available for Violin, Viola, Cello and Double Bass (Simandl and Rabbath positions). See up to 4 notes at the same time. Decide which hand position would be best for the interval or passage. See and hear the written note, interval, or chord on the piano.
• Hand Positions: 15 positions on the Violin, 15 positions on the Viola, 16 positions on the Cello, and 12 Simandl positions or 6 Rabbath positions on the Double Bass.
• Display "beginner tape" on the fingerboard as well as string names and colors.
• Notate one to four notes in Treble, Alto, Tenor or Bass clef.
How to Use:
Pick a written note (touch the staff) and have the fingering displayed and concert pitch played on the piano.
Play a concert pitch on the piano, and have that pitch's fingering displayed and the transposed note written on the staff.
Written and concert pitches are the same for all but the double bass, which transposes, sounding an octave below what is written.
• Use the ‘Play' button(s) to repeatedly hear the note(s) being displayed.
Selecting a Pitch:
Using the Staff (transposed for the current instrument): Simply touch and slide up and down on the staff to select the note, slide to the right or left of the note for sharps and flats.
Using the Piano (concert pitch): drag in the area below the keyboard to move the keyboard, touch to play notes, touch & slide to change the pitch. When you glissando up the keyboard, notes will be notated as a raised value (sharps), when you glissando down, notes will be notated as lowered values (flats).
Use the up and down arrows to move chromatically up and down without touching the music staff or piano keyboard.
- Apple App Store
- Paid
- Music
Store Rank
- -
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Speedy Note: Tenor Clef VS.
Fingering Strings
December 23, 2024