![]() ![]() You can quickly put in the changes to a chart for your own practice or to share with your students. There are quite a few things in this app that can help you as an educator or a collaborator. One thing that isn’t there but that I’d love to see is an option to show all of the different chords in a chart at once since I usually start my practice by going one by one individually through all of the chords and scales that the piece might use before I ever start playback. Some developers seem to forget that there are also bass instrumentalists using their apps. A big Thank You to the developers for also making these available in bass clef. These then show up from measure to measure while the piece is playing. If you tap on that, it will show you other chords and scales that would also fit and allow you to choose a different one for playback. If you tap and hold on a measure, it will show you a chord and scale that is musically viable in that spot. It allows you to see the chord and scale for each chord in the sheet as you play. This used to be an in-app purchase but is now standard. One of my favorite things is the Chord Scales. Occasionally there will be a chord or two that may not sound right to you but that is easily remedied as once you have downloaded a piece, you can duplicate it and edit it as well.Ĭurrently the only extra to buy. ![]() The forum has user-made charts that others have shared. To add new charts, you’ll either need to go to the in-app Forum and find some to download or input some yourself. When you first open up iRealPro, it will have a few exercises in it. I can also input the Jamey Aebersold exercises that I work on in iRealPro to enhance practicing those as well. iReal Pro shows me the chord changes and with an extra purchase, the standard chords and scales that go along with those. Anytune lets me slow down and play along with a recording. I usually choose the same tune to practice in both apps so that I am thinking about the same piece but in different ways. iReal Pro is the other side of that coin for me. I use a couple of apps to try and broaden my jazz horizons. Maybe even composing in it at some point. Despite the fact that I play bassoon, I listen to a lot of jazz and have always wanted to get better at playing it. It’s from the same people who made Drum School and has the same quality and attention to detail that really helps a practicing musician become better. ![]() Choose from the included 51 different accompaniment styles (Swing, Ballad, Gypsy Jazz, Bluegrass, Country, Rock, Funk, Reggae, Bossa Nova, Latin.IReal Pro is a great app.Have a virtual band accompany you as you practice Practice with a realistic sounding piano (or guitar), bass and drum accompaniments for any downloaded or user-created chord chart. Now every aspiring musician has a backup band in their pocket.” – Tim Westergren, Pandora FounderĬreate, edit, print, share and collect chord charts of your favorite songs for reference while practicing or performing. “It’s the perfect technology for a practicing musician: high-quality digital audio, mixable, transposable into any key and completely mobile. Used by thousands of music students, teachers and some of the world’s top music schools such as Berklee College of Music and Musicians Institute. ~One of Time Magazine's 50 Best Inventions of 2010~ ![]() The app also lets you create and collect chord charts of your favorite songs for reference. It simulates a real-sounding band that can accompany you as you practice. iReal Pro offers an easy-to-use tool to help musicians of all levels master their art. ![]()
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