PG Music - The Pianist Series 64 Bit
LINK ::: https://tlniurl.com/2t9HdC
I'm delighted that the latest version of my Zoom F4 has provided me with alternative accompaniments. The standard Auto song setting now has new tunes added every week, and the best part is that you can choose whether you want the new tune as a standard setting or as a song to repeat. So just as you might choose 'Music to Listen To/Record to' in the Disc Menu of an audio CD player, here's your cue to make sure you play with an auto accompaniment. You can't beat it for convenience, but it does make some cheap songs sound even cheaper.I should add that I'm not an organ player, so am just referring to that setting as an example. And I'm not a piano player, but I do have a Roland E40. So the Roland does a very good job indeed - on this occasion. (And interestingly it does beat a humble Yamaha GRP after a couple of pints!)I've recently used a Yamaha GRP for live accompaniment in the past. I think it's quite a good instrument for live use in small venues - although you do have to be able to play well.
You can play the piano on any PC or Mac equipped with a keyboard. It's especially nice because it supports multiple monitors. You can watch the piano part on the desktop while you play on the laptop, for example. This is probably the most thought-out app I've ever used for music production. No faster, no slower, no more tweaking, just very easy piano.
You can use the * button to select any notes in the song and move them to the top of the keyboard. I'll never use it because I've played so much on my own piano that I can see where anything else is in the pattern.The piano is a three-octave instrument with eight keys per octave. On the far right of each line is a number with the range of notes. The space bar jumps between lines. The first octave is F# to F, the second is Bb to B, etc.You can adjust the tempo. I've heard a few hours of music for the piano, and the range of tempos is quite broad.
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