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See more dataTeachers, students and professional musicians: Work on your rhythmic and polyrhythmic skills. Develop better hand independence with two lines of rhythms. From very simple to nearly impossible. Sight reading rhythms won't be a problem anymore. Customize each quiz: • Set a time signature: 2/4, 3/4, 4/4 or 5/4. • Set the number of measures: 1 to 16. • Select one or two written lines of rhythms. • Select one, two or three pads per line - pitches notated on, above, and below each line. • Set whether to include or exclude using rests. • Select the specific combination of note/rest values you want: Whole, Half, Quarter, Eighth, Dotted Half, Dotted Quarter, Triplet Half, Triplet Quarter, and Triplet Eighths. • Exclude grading note durations to better test percussionists or to focus on accuracy alone. • Listen to the rhythm as many times as you want before and after you attempt playing it. • Change the tempo between each listen or attempt. • Record up to three attempt's markings on the rhythm display. • Attempt the same rhythm as many times as you want. • Optionally visible scrolling line of current location. The Grade Book is filterable by student name. Access to the list can be password protected by entering a password in the device's Settings app. Grades include the student's name, date and time the quiz was taken, all relevant quiz settings (note values included, rests, length, etc.), and score (percentage and letter grade).
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Finally! A rhythm trainer that works both your hands. This app is great for piano players and students practicing their rhythm sight reading. Other apps just make you tap with one finger.
OK, so I am an elementary school teacher of general music. I was looking for an app that I could use in my classroom. This is NOT it! Great for adult and/or accomplished musician to practice sight reading rhythms, but to get to the level I needed I had to limit the program to 4 beats since that is where we start out, and this program doesn't have bar lines. It displays continually generated rhythms that don't fit into 4 beat patterns, nor does it display bar lines!!! Summary: great for advanced students, but not what I need as an elementary school music specialist.
Please provide landscape mode for ipad !!!!, Thank you.
This app does not create realistic rhythms like you would find in an actual piece of music. One the more difficult parts of reading rhythms are ties, where the notation spans across bars. Ties and bars aren't included.
This is a truly remarkable rhythm training and rhythm sight reading application that is unlike any other. With this app you can accurately find out how well you are able to keep time, or make a game of keeping time by comparing your "rhythm test" score to a friend's test score, using the same rhythm (if you are up to that challenge). This is a mature app with many options and configurations. The interface is simple and well thought-out, so everything behaves like your fingers expect. The graphics are smooth, easy on the eyes, and well executed. There are essentially two modes: a playback mode, and a record mode, which equate to rhythm skill practice and testing. In the playback mode the computer plays what are presumably algorithmically-generated rhythms, and renders correct musical notation of each rhythm, animated with a time bar that sweeps across the screen during playback. You can listen (and watch) a rhythm as many times as you like, so you can really get a pattern down before testing yourself. To really expand the possibilities you can choose what rhythm elements to include or exclude when the app builds the next rhythm. When you enter the "test" mode you get three chances to beat your score. As you play, by tapping an area of the screen, small diamonds appear where each note you play starts and ends. Since the computer is sub-millisecond accurate, you will be hard pressed to score 100% on most of the tests, but you get a school-themed scorecard that makes it fun to see what grade you earned for your rhythmic performance. You can also choose what rhythm elements you want to practice (i.e. triplets, eighth notes, etc.), and set it up so you can practice with one or two hands. Good luck getting more than 80% on the two-handed tests! If you want to improve your skills as a percussionist, or if you want to improve your rhythmic sight reading skills as any kind of musician, you should seriously consider this app.
Developed by Patrick Q. Kelly.
Music Theory Rhythms is ranking in Music & Education
Last update was at Noneand the current version is None.
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Music Theory Rhythms have a 2a user reviews.