Hi Brandon,
I do not use Windows, The idea of Finale sounds interesting.
Perhaps a mac edition?
Once I find the tools, I will be putting together the platform for it,
meaning I am not basing this on my current computer infrastructure.
Thanks much,
Karen
On Mon, 16 May 2022, Brandon Hale wrote:
Hello Karen,
Built in notation would be ideal, but what you
shared which has me
interested is a program that can notetate what I sing.
If I was on Windows and
didn't care about free software, the DAW I would use
hands-down would be Reaper. It has notation built-in and is a full featured
DAW with cross-platform support. I would recommend Ardour too, but it doesn't
have notation support yet.
Finale has some form of voice to notation capabilities, maybe you can try a
free version of that and see if it works for you, if you need to use
auto-notation from your voice.
Sonic visuals? if I am correct, what platform
supports this tool?
Sonic-visualizer is what I mean. You can open audio files with
and then
enable a spectrogram view. From there, you can highlight fundamental
frequencies to find out what notes they are. I use Sonic-visualizer for many
different things, including this, and I believe there is a windows version.
Let me know if you have any other questions,
Brandon Hale
On 5/15/22 10:54 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Hi Brandon,
> Thanks for the energetic ideas.
> As shared, i am not in Linux, as I have not found an inclusive for me way
> to use the platform.
Built in notation would be ideal, but what you
shared which has me
interested is a program that can notetate what I sing.
> Sonic visuals? if
I am correct, what platform supports this tool?
> Karen
>
>
>
> On Sun, 15 May 2022, Brandon Hale wrote:
>
> > Hello Karen,
> > I mean, I think you should just go for it. You could totally record your
> > melodies, and then fill them in with a DAW of your choice. Then, take
> > what you've written to a notation software.
> >
> > If you're on Linux, maybe Muse or Rosegarden would work for you, as they
> > have notation built-in. If you don't care about notation built-in,
> > Ardour is a great DAW for recording and processing.
> >
> > If you're looking for software that will notate for you based on what
> > you've sang, I have to admit I don't know of a good one on Linux to do
> > that. Sonic-visualizer can track pitch of frequencies, so maybe that's
> > where I would start, but maybe someone else has a better solution. You
> > could always go the old-fashioned way and just dictate what you've sang
> > later, after you've recorded yourself and fleshed out the orchestration
> > around your recording. It's also good practice and can be fun and give
> > you unsuspecting results, which can be nice. :)
> >
> > Let me know if I've answered your question,
> >
> > Brandon Hale
> >
> > On 5/15/22 6:24 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> > > Hi imaginative folks,
> > > honestly, I do not have a direct Linux box itself, I use shells,
> > > because I
> > > have yet to find an adaptive workable tool...but I suppose scripting
> > > is
> > > possible.
> > > That being said, an idea in another Windows environment may work as
> > > well.
> > > what I am wondering is this.
> > > How possible might it be to use your singing voice for
> > > composing?
> > > what I mean is to sing the parts into your software of choice, then
> > > using that software to first add the orchestrations, playback etc.,
> > > then
> > > produce that music in printable form?
> > > The last task is less important for the moment.
> > > getting my pieces out of my head, and into arranging and composing
> > > form
> > > is though.
> > > thoughts?
> > > Karen
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> >
> >