j***@hotmail.com
2006-07-09 22:55:30 UTC
Check out this new tool for songwriters and guitar players:
http://www.businesslink.com/~joseph/programs/vconsole/easyChords.htm
This was inspired in part by TabTuner.com -- and whoever made that can
feel free to link to this or even steel the idea and incorperate it
into that site.
Sometimes there's a song you'd love to play but the chords are more
difficult than you have time to master. Or possibly you want to find
another key which fits your voice better. With EasyChords, all you
gotta do is type in the chords of your tab in the input box and click
the "transpose & rank" button. This will give you a score for each
possible key this song can be played in, as well as the transposed
chords. Currently this is a bit finnicky in terms of what format it
will accept. You should put in your chords in a format where the note
is uppercase, possibly followed by a lowercase b for flat or # for
sharp, and finally an m for minor. Seperate each chord with a space.
Some examples:
Cm Gm Fm Bb Gm Fm C# D#
B E Abm E
Bb Am Gm Am
You might put in some chords more than once, if they are common in the
song, so they recieve more weighting. Once you find chords you like you
can hop over to TabTuner.com and transpose your tabs!
http://www.businesslink.com/~joseph/programs/vconsole/easyChords.htm
This was inspired in part by TabTuner.com -- and whoever made that can
feel free to link to this or even steel the idea and incorperate it
into that site.
Sometimes there's a song you'd love to play but the chords are more
difficult than you have time to master. Or possibly you want to find
another key which fits your voice better. With EasyChords, all you
gotta do is type in the chords of your tab in the input box and click
the "transpose & rank" button. This will give you a score for each
possible key this song can be played in, as well as the transposed
chords. Currently this is a bit finnicky in terms of what format it
will accept. You should put in your chords in a format where the note
is uppercase, possibly followed by a lowercase b for flat or # for
sharp, and finally an m for minor. Seperate each chord with a space.
Some examples:
Cm Gm Fm Bb Gm Fm C# D#
B E Abm E
Bb Am Gm Am
You might put in some chords more than once, if they are common in the
song, so they recieve more weighting. Once you find chords you like you
can hop over to TabTuner.com and transpose your tabs!