


 | Chord Alchemy 3.2 (Demo, $9.99) | Release: November 22, 2003 | ChordAlchemy offers a rich and robust set of capabilities for looking up chords, determining what chords you are playing and hearing how they sound. | | Company: Tonal Alchemy | Size: 4848.3 KBytes |  |
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 | In-Tune Multi-Instrument Tuner 1.81 (Shareware, $15) | Release: August 3, 2002 | Tune your musical instrument quickly and accurately with this digital tuner. Uses microphone or direct electric guitar input for tuning. You can tune guitar, bass guitar, banjo, mandolin, violin, viola, cello, double bass, and other instruments using the pitch selector. Has choice of gauge and pitch graph views. | | Company: Aspire Software | Size: 650.1 KBytes |  |
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 | MusicGoals Demo 1.5 (Demo, $79.95) | Release: September 19, 2003 | ear training, sight reading, and music theory applied to piano, guitar, violin, viola, cello, and bass - MusicGoals offers study, practice, and testing to improve skills, gain knowledge of instruments and music theory, and train the musical ear. This program was designed for musicians of all ages from beginners to very advanced. Courses for each instrument are provided or custom routines may be set up to meet specific needs. Each student file maintains progress and custom settings. Scores, detailed lists of mistakes, average response time for each drill may be printed at the end of a practice session. | | Company: Singing Electron | Size: 4494 KBytes |  |
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 | Stringed Instrument Workshop Version 1.0 (Shareware) | Release: December 1, 2003 | The Stringed Instrument Workshop is built around the concept of stringed, fretted instruments. The entire program is designed to operate with user defined instruments and tunings. Its features can be divided into five distinct categories: | | Company: Mark Brooks | Size: 634.8 KBytes |  |
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 | Stringed Instrument Workshop Version 1. (Shareware) | Release: December 1, 2003 | The program is built around the concept of stringed, fretted instruments. It provides five distinct categories of features: 1) The definition of instruments and tunings. 2) Generating chord diagrams for a specific instrument and tuning. 3) Identifying chords from their fingering. 4) The diagramming of scales and boxes for modes of a scale. 5) The conversion of chord progressions from one instrument and tuning to another. | | Company: Mark Brooks | Size: 650 KBytes |  |
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