Hi there,
Is there an option that can make the notes rising from the bottom instead of falling? I am thinking of inventing a Piano Finger Sheet which describes which finger to play which key (not sure if anyone one has invented):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gFqoaXXt_s
It is like the patent "GRAPHIC COLOR MUSIC NOTATION FOR STUDENTS", but it is finger-oriented and vertical so it is even easier for eye-hand coordination. The flow is top-down because this matches English lyrics and the music sheet (i.e. higher pitches on the right). So I would like to have rising notes to match this finger sheet layout.
Thanks.
Rising notes instead of falling notes (i.e. bottom up)
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No explicit, hateful, or hurtful language. Nothing illegal.
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I would also be interested in rising notes or notes that come from the right to better approximate some kind of orientation to what is on the staff. Is this a setting that might be available in the future? Especially in sheet music mode, it would really be less of a task-switching and more of the same motion being used.
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I am also interested in this feature.
I feel dizzy after playing for a while, sometimes after an hour, sometimes it takes me about 10 minutes to get sick. Had to hide falling notes completely and use sheet music. Perhaps rising notes can help?
See similar issues on rockband/guitarhero forums: https://www.scorehero.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=797685
I feel dizzy after playing for a while, sometimes after an hour, sometimes it takes me about 10 minutes to get sick. Had to hide falling notes completely and use sheet music. Perhaps rising notes can help?
See similar issues on rockband/guitarhero forums: https://www.scorehero.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=797685
Hmm, if I had to guess, the same kind/speed motion just in the opposite direction would probably still cause the problem. Using the sheet music is probably the best answer.
Another alternative: if you press Page Down (or just pinch vertically in the falling note area if you've got a touchscreen), you can reduce the apparent speed of the falling notes. It squashes them down so more "time" is on the screen at once. It makes everything look slower even if the song's tempo is the same. So there would be less motion to cause any adverse effects like you described.
If you give that a try, does that help?
Another alternative: if you press Page Down (or just pinch vertically in the falling note area if you've got a touchscreen), you can reduce the apparent speed of the falling notes. It squashes them down so more "time" is on the screen at once. It makes everything look slower even if the song's tempo is the same. So there would be less motion to cause any adverse effects like you described.
If you give that a try, does that help?
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Squashing didn't help, I'll just stick to sheet music. The only problem is the lack of fingerings, but that's fine.