I tried with polyphone but gave up. Let's say it's not as intuitive as Musescore !!!
Now, I'm going through the same lessons with my younger daughter and I still think it would help.
Anyone to guide us through this process ?
Musescore makes graphically a difference between Do♯ and Re♭ for instance, but plays it the same way.
While building the soundfont file is there a way to make musescore sing "Do" for Do♯ an "Re" for Re♭ ?
i guess you mean the Do-Re-Mi in C?
that is not very difficult, if you provide the Do-, Re-, Mi-, etc- .WAV-samples; you and your daughter dont want to hear me singing!
regards bottrop
Note that there are two general conventions of use:
1. Movable-do, where do always means the first note in a major scale
2. Fixed-do, where do always means C
There are several systems for naming notes with accidentals in both the fixed-do and movable-do systems, and different ways of handling minor scales. To make the system workable in a Soundfont, I think I'd use fixed-do, and record different voice for sharps, flats, double sharps, and double flats (in the same way that strings can have bowed and pizzicato voices, horns can have standard and muted, etc.).
That's hilarious. I had thought about the same idea to use as a keyboard tone that says the note names (c,d,D/do, Ray, mi)...And since the keyboard has 4-5 octaves typically, I thought it would be cool if the note names for each octave had a different voice (or person).
In terms of. What to sing for sharps/ flats?
Bah .= A# or Bb
GaA= Ab or G#
GI F= F# / Gb that sounds like gif like in the word gift
Comments
Interesting idea. If you can get a choir you could make it with polyphone. What about flats and sharps?
In reply to Interesting idea. If you can… by ♪𝔔𝔲𝔞𝔳𝔢𝔯 ℭ𝔯𝔞𝔣𝔱𝔢𝔯♪
Hello all !
I also found it a good idea for my elder daughter, two years ago, hoping it would help her to hear the notes sing their "own names".
Someone posted the same question several years ago.
https://musescore.org/en/node/2980
without getting an answer.
I tried with polyphone but gave up. Let's say it's not as intuitive as Musescore !!!
Now, I'm going through the same lessons with my younger daughter and I still think it would help.
Anyone to guide us through this process ?
Musescore makes graphically a difference between Do♯ and Re♭ for instance, but plays it the same way.
While building the soundfont file is there a way to make musescore sing "Do" for Do♯ an "Re" for Re♭ ?
Thanks in advance !
Bertrand
In reply to Hello all !… by Bebert
i guess you mean the Do-Re-Mi in C?
that is not very difficult, if you provide the Do-, Re-, Mi-, etc- .WAV-samples; you and your daughter dont want to hear me singing!
regards bottrop
In reply to Interesting idea. If you can… by ♪𝔔𝔲𝔞𝔳𝔢𝔯 ℭ𝔯𝔞𝔣𝔱𝔢𝔯♪
This article discusses the sung note names:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège
This section of the article covers notes with accidentals:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solf%C3%A8ge#Chromatic_variants
Note that there are two general conventions of use:
1. Movable-do, where do always means the first note in a major scale
2. Fixed-do, where do always means C
There are several systems for naming notes with accidentals in both the fixed-do and movable-do systems, and different ways of handling minor scales. To make the system workable in a Soundfont, I think I'd use fixed-do, and record different voice for sharps, flats, double sharps, and double flats (in the same way that strings can have bowed and pizzicato voices, horns can have standard and muted, etc.).
super idea !!!
please help us !
That's hilarious. I had thought about the same idea to use as a keyboard tone that says the note names (c,d,D/do, Ray, mi)...And since the keyboard has 4-5 octaves typically, I thought it would be cool if the note names for each octave had a different voice (or person).
In terms of. What to sing for sharps/ flats?
Bah .= A# or Bb
GaA= Ab or G#
GI F= F# / Gb that sounds like gif like in the word gift
In reply to That's hilarious. I had… by Adria Sorensen
C#/ Db
could be pronounced like Dec like the word DECimal
In reply to C#/ Db… by Adria Sorensen
Cis (like in Cisco) and Des (like min Decimal), yes, then you hev German notenames ;-)
In reply to That's hilarious. I had… by Adria Sorensen
As I linked earlier, there are some systems for accidentals already:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège#Chromatic_variants