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Good Apps For Experimenting with Chord Progressions

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Comments

  • edited January 2016

    @BiancaNeve said:

    @firejan82 said:
    Changeling's alright

    Have you found a way to sync the recording in changeling with a daw at all?

    Thumbjam & Link to midi, somehow.
    In Thumbjam I tried midi notes and clock in from changeling, midi thru option enabled, (instrument muted,) notes and clock out to sir sampleton f.e., Link to midi active ... changes with a link-able app like patterning etc. (approximate experimental ; )

  • I like Guitar Toolkit. No midi out though. What it has that I haven't seen elsewhere is the ability to specify a scale and it will generate chords that are available within that scale. You can then select chords from that list to populate a chord sheet.

  • Was Firo mentioned already. I like it

  • Suggester & Chordbot together are covering pretty much exactly what I wanted. Obviously it would be better for it to be one app, but the combo is workable. I have just made a track based on my first chord progression discovered with this set-up.

    Thanks for all the suggestions peeps. I will check out some of the others too.

    FWIW GuitarCapo+ & SoundPrism are great (I have them bpth), just not what I'm looking for here.

  • Actually GarageBand may be a good choice with several instrument choices, transposition, and a play with chord qualities.

  • Garageband is like 700Mb and I don't need any of it. :-)

  • Chordbot is very capable and easy to throw a midi file out into Lyra (Auria) and work with, but I wish, wish, wish that the chord 'blocks' were drag and drop (like Trello or similar), rather than using their utterly arcane copy and paste method. Needs a spruce up chaps.

  • @SirKen, can you talk a bit about Mapping Tonal Harmony Pro, what you like about it, how it works?

  • I have used Chordweaver, yes. It is focused on a particular smaller set of genres though. Breaking up the chord progressions into melodies is actually one of the "disciplines" using it. I've used it primarily to work on modern classical pieces, which is one of the primary intentions of it.

  • @miguelmarcos said:
    @SirKen, can you talk a bit about Mapping Tonal Harmony Pro, what you like about it, how it works?

    I use it to experiment with chord progressions. I like how it has all the stuff laid out in front of me, so I don't have to jump through million hoops to quickly preview multiple chords back to back. Just as a reference, I use it along with my study of orchestration and classical composition.

    If you are interested in making electronic music, I would suggest something like Klimper which is great for picking diatonic chords quickly. Chordion and/or Chordy could be other good alternatives.

  • @MusicInclusive said:
    I have used Chordweaver, yes. It is focused on a particular smaller set of genres though. Breaking up the chord progressions into melodies is actually one of the "disciplines" using it. I've used it primarily to work on modern classical pieces, which is one of the primary intentions of it.

    Those are my interests so I'm interested. I'm just not sure how useful I'd find the chord suggestions. What would be really nice is an app that would show the chord notes (and let me revoice them) as I think chord progressions are as much voice leading as harmony. $20 is fine. $20 for an app I wouldn't use is annoying.

  • I real B! Thats the dopest chord progression app. Its so ace!

  • Did you look through the videos there @cian ? The author demonstrates how he creates melodies from the chord progressions. I've used a similar but different method.

    Also +1 for Tonal Harmony Pro for exploring progressions as well. Although it's really an analysis tool, it can indeed be used to create progressions too. :smile:

    And +1 for Navichord. Helpful for related changes - nicely visual.

  • @mgmg4871 said:
    Actually GarageBand may be a good choice with several instrument choices, transposition, and a play with chord qualities.

    But no midi out....

  • @Crabman said:

    @mgmg4871 said:
    Actually GarageBand may be a good choice with several instrument choices, transposition, and a play with chord qualities.

    But no midi out....

    If you work with logic on desktop then garageband is certainly a good choice for mobile music (you can open your garage band file in logic)

  • @pierre said:

    @Crabman said:

    @mgmg4871 said:
    Actually GarageBand may be a good choice with several instrument choices, transposition, and a play with chord qualities.

    But no midi out....

    If you work with logic on desktop then garageband is certainly a good choice for mobile music (you can open your garage band file in logic)

    yes i know that (thanks anyway) but i stopped using my Macbook (and logic) for music purpose.Only iPad these days.

  • Klimper on sale $0.99

  • edited January 2016

    Hmm. Still £2.29 if I go through the Mac, on a device it shows as £0.79 but can't be purchased because it's being "modified". Perhaps I will try later.

  • I bought it in the Australian App Store so may be many hours ahead of the timezone you reside in.

  • It's working now on device, store in iTunes still has the old price. Top tip: always buy on device :smile:

  • Charged me £2.29 even though it displayed as £0.79. I've returned it, that's not on.

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