My public library had a few (three?) Books with indexes of melodies for
identification. One was filled with national anthems, one with classical
themes IIRC. So the idea is you whistle a tune, write an asterix for the
first note and the u, d or r for each consecutive note depending on weather
it the melody moves up, down or repeats tje previous note. Any melodi can
be identified with this method, if you take a long enough string into
consideration.
This was in the age of dead trees, a digital, online index would be much
easier to maintain and search.
lør. 29. apr. 2023 18.05 skrev Will Godfrey <willgodfrey(a)musically.me.uk>uk>:
There used to be a website your could type in a series
of notes, and it
would
search for a match - I can't seem to find it now :(
There still is this one for played notes - might be worth a try.
https://www.aha-music.com/
--
Will J Godfrey {apparently now an 'elderly'}
https://willgodfrey.bandcamp.com/
http://yoshimi.github.io
Say you have a poem and I have a tune.
Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song.
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-user mailing list -- linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
To unsubscribe send an email to
linux-audio-user-leave(a)lists.linuxaudio.org