PLEASE VOTE HERE - Future EarMaster releases
Moderator: Quentin
PLEASE VOTE HERE - Future EarMaster releases
Hello everybody,
A little poll to get to know your expectations better in regard to our future developments.
Please vote for the tuition program that you think would be most useful for you, and that you would like to place on your shelves right next to EarMaster
If you have suggestions for other possibilities, please feel welcome to mention them.
Here is a short description of each voting option:
Music theory tuition:
You know nothing or only little about music theory? You didn't have the chance/ressources to go to a music school? That program would teach you how to read notation, how scales and chords work, etc.
Piano training:
That program would train you in playing scales, chords, and improvise on the piano, or even getting to know the tones on your keyboard better.
Guitar training:
That program would train you in playing scales, chords, and improvise on the guitar, or even getting to know the tones on your fretboard better.
Drums training:
That program would train you in playing the drums, making you work on new rhythmic patterns, accuracy and tempo consistency. It would probably require an electronic drumset to be connected to it in MIDI.
Bass guitar training:
That program would train you in playing scales, chords, and improvise on the bass, or even getting to know the tones on your fretboard better.
Mobile ear training:
Take EarMaster with you on the plane, in the bus or the subway with that mobile version for mobile phones, Iphones and/or Iphones.
Music tuition for kids:
A program to teach music to the younger. For example: what instrument makes which sound, discover Major/minor, discover the staff, etc.
Violin training:
Train your skills at playing the violin
A little poll to get to know your expectations better in regard to our future developments.
Please vote for the tuition program that you think would be most useful for you, and that you would like to place on your shelves right next to EarMaster
If you have suggestions for other possibilities, please feel welcome to mention them.
Here is a short description of each voting option:
Music theory tuition:
You know nothing or only little about music theory? You didn't have the chance/ressources to go to a music school? That program would teach you how to read notation, how scales and chords work, etc.
Piano training:
That program would train you in playing scales, chords, and improvise on the piano, or even getting to know the tones on your keyboard better.
Guitar training:
That program would train you in playing scales, chords, and improvise on the guitar, or even getting to know the tones on your fretboard better.
Drums training:
That program would train you in playing the drums, making you work on new rhythmic patterns, accuracy and tempo consistency. It would probably require an electronic drumset to be connected to it in MIDI.
Bass guitar training:
That program would train you in playing scales, chords, and improvise on the bass, or even getting to know the tones on your fretboard better.
Mobile ear training:
Take EarMaster with you on the plane, in the bus or the subway with that mobile version for mobile phones, Iphones and/or Iphones.
Music tuition for kids:
A program to teach music to the younger. For example: what instrument makes which sound, discover Major/minor, discover the staff, etc.
Violin training:
Train your skills at playing the violin
Last edited by Quentin on 16 Sep 2010, 03:21, edited 9 times in total.
- Because in Music, We're All Ears... -
Mobile ear training would be awesome! Ear training is the perfect activity to do on the bus or something. Or with the right interface maybe even while driving??
Drum training or just some serious improvements to the rhythm part of EarMaster could be useful. I find that part much less useful than it might be.
In general, I think music theory is something you can learn from books, and instruments are things you should learn by practicing and taking lessons. Using a computer program seems like a gimmick.
Drum training or just some serious improvements to the rhythm part of EarMaster could be useful. I find that part much less useful than it might be.
In general, I think music theory is something you can learn from books, and instruments are things you should learn by practicing and taking lessons. Using a computer program seems like a gimmick.
+1 heremarian wrote:Mobile ear training would be awesome!
You would just fill the lack of ear training software on mobile phone because there is absolutely nothing at the moment. (Windows mobile)
Last edited by dramsenik on 20 Jul 2009, 12:07, edited 1 time in total.
EarMaster for iPhone ! Yes
Yes, an EarMaster version for iPhone would be an efficient way to perform our training
I'm using Karajan, but if EarMaster will be on my iPhone it would be better for me.
I'm using Karajan, but if EarMaster will be on my iPhone it would be better for me.
- V for Vincent
- Chord hunter
- Posts: 15
- Joined: 24 Jul 2007, 00:45
- Location: Belgium
Try Band in a Box from http://www.pgmusic.com/V for Vincent wrote:...I'd definitely buy a high quality sight reading trainer. Unfortunately, there are none as of yet.
You cannot get anything better for sight reading... This is a very complete software (with a small learning curve, depend your backgroud) and thousands (yes... thousands: Actually i have about 20 thousands from rock, pop, jazz to classical) songs to read, anything from piano, guitar, bass in any key. (accompaniment and melody)
In fact at the beginning it was an accompaniment program but it has evolved to also a composer, training, sight reading. Well in two word: a very complete package.
I think I'd probably buy the mobile device that ran EarMaster.
But I'd also love some sight reading and piano tuition features.
Maybe something that guided one through the content in Super Sight-Reading Secrets by Howard Richman?
Thanks for the Band in a Box tip, dramsenik.
I guess you've already looked over Etude Sight Reader?
Cheers,
Neil.
But I'd also love some sight reading and piano tuition features.
Maybe something that guided one through the content in Super Sight-Reading Secrets by Howard Richman?
Thanks for the Band in a Box tip, dramsenik.
I guess you've already looked over Etude Sight Reader?
Cheers,
Neil.
on iPod Touch
I would more than love to see Earmaster on my iPod Touch, I would use it every single day. You should be able to scroll though the keyboard, tap rhythm or bpm, play single note or a whole chord, change size of the keyboard, display two keyboards at once, post your results into Hole of Fame over wifi, sync wirelessly with PC, attach results to an email to your teacher, shake to vibrate... Really possibilities are limitless...!!!
Official Serbian translator
iPhone Application
would be cool. Not for practising on the train, but at a hotel room for instance. Just to keep in shape;-)