![]() The ability to learn and memorize a simple 32 bar standard is an essential skill for any serious improvising musician. I have never used it, and I refuse to use it for most situations. I’ll be direct: I think the iRealBook is among the worst/dangerous musical “innovations” out there. I may have to draw on certain personal experiences to illustrate certain points, but again, the focus is not on specific individuals but on the phenomenon itself. I am not necessarily targeting anyone specific as I have seen this phenomenon all around the world in various situations. This article is not so easy to write, because certain musicians may feel offended. This didn’t start with the iPad the Real Book has been widely available for a few decades, but I feel that with the iRealBook and the use of iPads on the bandstand, we are on a very slippery slope. For anyone who is serious about music, certain essential skills should not be sacrificed for the sake of convenience. While all this technology appears to be great, I feel that this technology needs to be used with caution. This is exactly what I want to talk about in this article. Want to learn B7? Just ask Siri on your iPhone! You have a gig tonight and need to play All The Things You are in Db? No problem, the iRealBook will transpose the song for you, you can just read it off your iPad! How convenient! Today, the amount of information at our fingertips is just on a completely different and unprecedented scale. Bach had to walk miles to different towns just to learn certain things! We learned it, got back on the bus, went home to our mates ”. In his own words “ we got on the bus, trouped across Liverpool, changed a couple of buses, found this fellow, and he showed us B7. There’s a famous story from Paul McCartney (who rose to superstardom thanks to the efforts of Kanye West) who talked about learning the B7 chord by traveling far just to find someone who knew how to play it. The one before that would say “I kept wearing down my records from repeated use”. The previous generation would say: “In my day, there were no CDs, I was learning from cassette tapes”. For instance, a 35 year old musician today would tell a 20 year old: “when I was learning music, there was no YouTube, I had to learn from CDs”. I can only wonder what further innovations await us!Įvery previous generation of musician uses the same line with the latest generation: “back in my day, we had to do X to learn to do Y”. All this, thanks to various technological advancements. ![]() ![]() Other members of the forum will have other ideas for you.We live in an incredible era for musicians, where we have instant access to an incredible wealth of information that wasn’t available just 15 years ago. I use this from time to time, currently (v1.1) it is buggy but works. (I have not tested this to check it displays chord symbols and is easy to transpose, I presume it does) Using iReal b as a basis for adding the melody, exporting a song as a musicXML file (it will have the chords and main structure/form of the song), import into notation software (Finale etc.), then add the melody yourself.įinale has Songbook as an iPad app for viewing files: There is some variability in musicXML implementation so check an app can do what you want it to do (like display the chords, resize them perhaps, transpose etc. Other notation apps would import musicXML also. Wikifonia is free for users (however it pays copyright fees which is nice):įor PDF export, transposing is done on the website.īut you could use an app like SeaScore or Notion which import and display musicXML files which is the format wikifonia uses: Does such a thing exists ?As far as I know there is no app currently, and its price would have to reflect copyright fees to the composers (and lyricists.) Key change ect and a forum for sharing tunes. ![]() I am looking for an app like real book that has the melody !. ![]()
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