![]() That way the teacher and student can easily navigate through the song and reference points in the song that need practice. You can use either section markers such as intro, verse, chorus, bridge, etc. Time Stamps: As you are going through the song, you can stamp each section with markers.**Once a song is altered by pitch or tempo, it can be exported that way for a student** ![]() Some songs are a 1/4 step or even less out of tune due to capos and tape speeds, etc. Lastly, you can dial in a song that is slightly out of pitch. Secondly, you can change the key of a song to fit a singer. One, you can change a song that is pitched down (such as a guitar being tuned down 1/2 step) to make it easier to learn without retuning the instrument. 01 movements as you dial in the perfect pitch for the song with which you are working. You can click up or down on the # or flat button if you want to move by 1/2 steps, or you can go to as small as. Changing Pitch: Once a song is imported, you can alter the pitch.Students can measure their progress by gradually increasing the tempo 5% at a time. This is an amazing feature when a song’s tempo is too challenging. Changing Tempo: AnyTune Pro allows you to input a song from your music library and slow it down or speed it up by increments of 1%.Anytune Pro has been an amazing tool for our instructors and students in private lessons. We are constantly trying to improve our experience at Freeway Music. I might make another video later about the step trainer, which lets you repeat a loop multiple times, speeding it up a little each time (or every N times) as a tool for getting up to speed.Freeway Music - Columbia, SC’s Premier Music School Anytune Pro You can do a lot more with loops in Anytune this is just the basics of how I use it for learning old-time tunes by ear. This time it sounds pretty good to me on the first try, so I leave the points alone and just use the “add loop mark” button to add a new loop with these new start and end points.įinally, I tap on the loop points in the list to show how to go back and forth between the loops I just created. I also want to learn another part of the tune, so I scrub forward a bit and repeat the whole process with marking points and setting the A and B points and testing the loop. I can tap that later to set that loop up again quickly. This adds a loop mark to the list, with the start and end points I just set. Next, I tap the “add/delete loop marks” button, which is just to the right of the “B” button. This time it sounds pretty good to me, so I back up (with the mark navigation buttons) and set a mark point again. I dragged it too far back, so I drag it a little forward and test again. Then I drag point “A” a little backwards and play the loop again. In this case, it didn’t sound quite right to me, so I back up to the first mark and delete it, using the “add/remove mark” button, which is now in “remove” mode. Then I hit play to see how well I timed my marks. Then I tap the “enable loop” button at the lower left to turn looping on. I tap the “A” button to set that as the start of a loop, then jump forward to the second mark and tap the “B” button to set the end of the loop. Once I’ve got the part I want repeated marked, I stop playback, and use the mark navigation buttons to the left and right of the “add mark” button to jump back to the first marked point. (I did not hit it exactly right, so I end up having to adjust the loop points a little.) If I hit it right, this will give me a seamless loop. I tap it again when it gets to the first beat of the measure after where I want the loop to end. When it gets to the beat I want my first loop to start on, I tap the “add mark” button. The next thing I do is enable the loop controls. I probably could have gone a little slower. The first thing I do is use the speed control to drop it to 70% speed, because it’s a lot easier to hit the loop points accurately at lower speeds. I’m starting the video with a tune I want to learn loaded. I think the buttons are the same on the Mac and iPhone versions, but they may be laid out a little differently. ![]() So, first off, this is the iPad version of Anytune Pro+. I’ll embed the video here, and continue the instructions below that. In the loop controls, we’re mainly going to be using the “add or delete marks” button, circled in red right above the play button. ![]()
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