Decibelion is an instrument tuner but with the unique feature of displaying the note on a music staff
Decibelion
What is it about?
Decibelion is an instrument tuner but with the unique feature of displaying the note on a music staff. This is particularly helpful if learning a musical instrument as you can *see* what notes you're playing and how in-tune you are.
App Store Description
Decibelion is an instrument tuner but with the unique feature of displaying the note on a music staff. This is particularly helpful if learning a musical instrument as you can *see* what notes you're playing and how in-tune you are.
The app uses the device's microphone to detect a music note, and it shows the detected note on a music staff. With the note, it provides some visual cues about whether the note is being played in tune or out of tune so that the app's user can more effectively learn to distinguish an in-tune sound and ultimately play their instrument better. I hope the app helps someone learn the violin or guitar or something. For me, I'm learning the violin, and the app has been helping me a lot. I use the app myself.
Say good-bye to guess-work at what note you're playing on your instrument and whether or not that fingering is in-tune or not. The "music mic" page of the app shows you all the information you need. On the music staff on that page, a green fully-filled-in note means you're in-tune. A red note with only its bottom-half filled in means you're out-of-tune flat. A blue note with only its top-half filled in means you're out-of-tune sharp.
The music staff supports switching between the treble, bass, alto, and tenor clefs, and it supports displaying the note an octave higher or lower (8va notation). The key signature can be cycled through all the major and minor key signatures that are available in music theory without resorting to double sharps or double flats.
In addition to the music staff which in portrait orientation bends down and connects to the keyboard at the bottom of the screen, the music mic also indicates the note name in either simple notation (G, F#, A, etc.) or scientific pitch notation (G3, F#4, A5, etc.). The keyboard at the bottom displays the piano key to which this note maps. The middle C and the A-440 piano keys are marked with a small circle dot for reference.
The Decibelion app also has a regular "tuner" screen that can be used as a violin or guitar tuner. The tuner screen shows the detected pitch (in Hz), the scientific note name, and a tuner dial of how many cents sharp or flat. Basically just a regular instrument tuner.
Finally, there is a "math mic" screen that shows the mathematical spectrum plot of the microphone audio. This screen can be used by audio engineers or by students or teachers who are learning about audio spectra and harmonics in music.
I hope you enjoy the app, and thank you for your time and consideration!
AppAdvice does not own this application and only provides images and links contained in the iTunes Search API, to help our users find the best apps to download. If you are the developer of this app and would like your information removed, please send a request to takedown@appadvice.com and your information will be removed.