![]() ![]() ![]() Eliminate the need to sweep for frequencies I recently sat down and played with the OS X version of Quiztones the other day and had a blast.A bit of background on the app from the Audiofile Engineering site: Quiztones is a frequency ear trainer for amateur and professional audio engineers, producers, and musicians. Download and install Quiztones Ear Training for EQ Varies with device on Windows PC. Quiztones cleverly uses quizzes to engage users in training exercises. Quiztones is a frequency ear training app for amateur and professional. ![]() ![]() ** If you have any issues with Quiztones, please cancel your order within 15 minutes and shoot us in email with your device details so we can look into it! **Įmail us with any feedback/feature requests: įor 30+ quizzes, 1/3-octave EQ quizzes, source material from your music library, gain quizzes and more, check out Quiztones for Mac & iOS at. Quiztones ear training.apk free for mac#.As more come on the market, I think we'll see Apps that test our ability to hear intervals, chord progressions, keys and more. InTune and Quiztones are both very useful and effective for developing musicianship. There is still a lot of potential for ear training Apps for iOS. Even though we have many spectrum analyzers available, everyone can benefit from developing the ear more. The Pro Version has an additional section called 'Gain' that tests your ability to identify changes in gain from source material. There is a lot to practice here and the App is also easy to use and well designed. There are three choices of difficulty for the challenge, with the hardest test being able to hear a -8 dB to -10 dB cut in the mix from the source material of a frequency rather than a boost. The best part about the app is an 'EQ' section where you can play music from your iTunes library, or an assortment of music and instrument samples they provide and try to hear which frequency is boosted by the App in the mix. The intended result is to fine-tune our ability to hear an unwanted frequency spike in our mix or sound and use the EQ to correct it properly. The App intends to train mix and mastering engineers (and any producer for that matter) to decipher different frequencies from 100 Hz all the way up to 8 kHz by playing a tone and then offering a multiple choice of which tone is played. Quiztones uses test tones labeled in Hertz. There's another great App to help with ear training for music engineers and producers in mind called Quiztones. This is a very fun and useful App for all music students. The tone sounds a bit like a hearing test, but has enough overtones in it to help you figure out the direction of the pitch. The starting pitches are the same every time and I think this intonation game could benefit from providing half steps at different frequency ranges or using actually instrument samples to target specific musicians. This App is most useful to musicians who play in orchestras, concert bands, or any dynamic acoustic ensemble. I've been trying it with my students too to see what scores they get. The best score I got was 2% of a half step. You get three mistakes before having to start again. The more you get correct, the closer the two pitches become. When you guess correctly, the next two pitches given are a percentage of a half-step. Two pitches are given that start a half-step apart and listener chooses which pitch is higher or lower. The ' InTune' iPhone app developed by Wittenburg University seeks to help musicians cultivate their fine intonation skills with a simple exercise. ![]()
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