Could this approach be used without a midi keyboard. I like your idea. Perhaps this approach will allow the student to focus only on melody and not rhythm. Can this method be used to dictate the rhythm also? About a year ago you mentioned having what is played back to student be in another tab. Perhaps on some examples the rhythm can be copied over to the.first tab but the pitch remain middle c. Then the student corrects the notes.
Jeremiah Sent from my Samsung smartphone on AT&T Richard Shann <[email protected]> wrote: >On Tue, 2011-07-05 at 10:34 +0100, Richard Shann wrote: >> >> Looking at your example, I wonder if a somewhat different approach to >> storing the melody might be good. It could be stored as a normal >> denemo >> score, but with each note having a directive that alters its display >> so >> it doesn't show the pitch or accidental. >I have just been playing around with this: >If you execute this: > >(d-C) >(d-DirectivePut-chord-graphic "test" "CrossSign") >(d-DirectivePut-chord-override "test" DENEMO_OVERRIDE_GRAPHIC) >(d-D) >(d-DirectivePut-chord-graphic "test" "CrossSign") >(d-DirectivePut-chord-override "test" DENEMO_OVERRIDE_GRAPHIC) >(d-E) >(d-DirectivePut-chord-graphic "test" "CrossSign") >(d-DirectivePut-chord-override "test" DENEMO_OVERRIDE_GRAPHIC) > >You get hidden notes C, D, E which still play but cannot be seen. >If you put the cursor on the first note and hold down the Control key >while playing in on a MIDI keyboard the cursor will advance only when >you play the right note. (This is the Checking mode for MIDI in) > >Richard > > > _______________________________________________ Denemo-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel
