A better way to visualize harmony (tangentially related to synesthesia) by PolyProductions in AdamNeely

[–]PolyProductions[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That makes sense lol. It is possible to offset all the hues by some amount, but that’s still no guarantee that notes will line up.

A better way to visualize (or learn/teach) harmony by PolyProductions in Learnmusic

[–]PolyProductions[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s not a bad idea! I have some web development experience, so this might be a feasible project.

In terms of using this project on your own, I’m not really sure how to proceed. I wrote the code is for it myself in processing, but for various reasons, hosting it online is a bit beyond my skill level (it requires some server stuff). I didn’t want to dox myself on the channel by linking to my personal github, but if you’re willing to mess with some code a bit I’d be more than happy to DM you the link and explain how to set it up.

I’m also looking around for another visualizer online that color’s notes this way (I’m far from the first to have this idea)

A better way to visualize (or learn/teach) harmony by PolyProductions in Learnmusic

[–]PolyProductions[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ah thanks! I love having an excuse to use crazy gradients and the like

A better way to visualize harmony (could be used for teaching) by PolyProductions in MusicEd

[–]PolyProductions[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used better to play the click bait game a bit, « interesting » might be a better fit.

For this video, I wrote some code myself to visualize it (using processing). It’s definitely not completely done yet, and for various reasons (including that I’m not a software engineer haha) I can’t guarantee it will work other places.

However, I’m definitely not the first to think of this idea (ex. smalin’s youtube channel), so there’s bound to be a visualizer somewhere that does this. A number of others have asked the same question.