Has anyone been able to install the plugin? Does it work with Windows 11 Count+note+beats Plugin

• Oct 14, 2024 - 23:36

Hello everyone,

has anyone of you managed to get this plugin to work?

It would be really great if it would work.
Also counts eighth and 16th notes?

It would be great if someone could take a screenshot. How the plugin counts notes.

I found this, but i cant Install in Windows 11

https://musescore.org/sites/musescore.org/files/2023-02/count-note-beat…

https://github.com/mirabilos/mscore-plugins/tree/master

Many thanks
Frank


Comments

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

@Jojo Svhmitz
Thank you for your help,
And your effort to look at the program.

What do you think, would it really be possible to get the program to run under version 4.4?
Unfortunately, I don't know much about programming.

Do you know of another program or plugin that can add the counting times automatically?

Thank you very much
Frank

In reply to by graffesmusic

Hi @graffesmusic,
thank you very much.
I imagined the rhythm language differently. See examples
1 + 2 3. 4 e + de
Screenshot_20241014-001914.png

However, I think it would be more helpful if there were no numbers where there are no notes.
But I couldn't find another one. Example.

I think it's really great that you've added an example.
I'm in hospital here and unfortunately still have another three weeks to go. I can only communicate with my cell phone at the moment.
Otherwise I would have already tried it on my Windows 11 PC.
Thanks again for that

Attachment Size
Screenshot_20241014-001914.png 168.09 KB

In reply to by yonah_ag

Thank you very much.
I am thrilled.
On the one hand, that such plug-ins exist.
On the other hand, the great willingness to help here in the forum.

I would be very grateful if you could click on the following page.

https://musescore.org/en/node/370294

Perhaps you also have some valuable tips for this plug-in.

@yonah_ag
You could modify the Count Beats plugin to show your preferred lettering codes instead of the decimals.

Many thanks for the tip.
Is there a description of how to change this?
Is there an option field or do you have to do this via the source code?
Thank you very much

Many, many thanks!!!
Frank

In reply to by campus77

That link (https://takadimi.net/) is the description page about it. It's the page made by the creators of the system. If you can't see it from Germany, you might try using VPN software to change your apparent location. It opens with no problem for me here in the States.

The authors say that takadimi took inspiration from konnakol but is quite different and is used in a different environment (European music styles and rhythms rather than Indian carnatic music styles and rhythms). A very brief description of it can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takadimi.

In reply to by campus77

@yonah_ag
You could modify the Count Beats plugin to show your preferred lettering codes instead of the decimals.

Many thanks for the tip.
Is there a description of how to change this?
Is there an option field or do you have to do this via the source code?
Thank you very much

Many, many thanks!!!
Frank

In reply to by campus77

They sell a book:
The Rhythm Book is a textbook intended for use in Advanced high school or college-level aural skills classes. With 21 chapters and over 400 graded exercises it guides students from the very basics to the quite complex and can be used over 3 or 4 semesters in a typical undergraduate aural skills curriculum.
The book includes a variety of exercises including:
Single part
Ensemble (duets and trios)
Speak and clap
Layer exercises (with ostinato patterns)
Rhythmic poems
Rhythm written on staff notation
The files below include sample pages from each chapter for you to review. For more information on ordering The Rhythm Book or adopting it as a textbook for your courses, please email: info@takadimi.net.

In reply to by graffesmusic

Note that:
Takadimi is not a counting system. It differs in this way from the familiar “1 ee and uh” and similar methods. Counting or knowing where in the measure you are is important. It is our opinion, however, that this information should be perceived separate from the rhythm patterns. This is clear from experience. In ensembles the conductor shows the beat (or a related level of steady pulse) while the other performers perform the rhythm. We may tap our foot or move our hand with the beat, but the rhythm and the beat remain on separate levels or layers of experience. Takadimi focuses on the surface rhythm. Awareness of the beat is critical, but is carried out in another way, through conducting for example.
(from the takadimi faq)

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