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GermanyBernd2022-01-18 16:59:40 · 4yNo. 132702reply
Did you know these existed?
SloveniaBernd2022-01-18 17:29:42 · 4yNo. 132704reply
I assumed they existed, but never seen one.
They function a lot like how typing music on musescore works, it seems.
GermanyBernd2022-01-18 18:29:09 · 4yNo. 132714reply
The classical piano and traditional music notation are flagrantly cringe.
SloveniaBernd2022-01-18 18:49:59 · 4yNo. 132718reply
Congrats on posting the only arrangement that's even cringier.
Ideally, something like the Axis keyboards should be used, that's keyed for easily accessible common chords.
Similar solution is already employed on chromatic button accordions anyway.
SloveniaBernd2022-01-18 19:12:17 · 4yNo. 132719reply
further explanation
 
your jankoshit meanwhile keeps the same piano arrangement only tries to make it more regular, keeping all its flaws in the process and only introducing redundancy without improving what it claims to address
BavariaBernd2022-01-22 09:56:22 · 4yNo. 133040reply
This was Nietzsche's typewriter
GermanyBernd2022-01-22 16:27:24 · 4yNo. 133060reply
 
Triggered traditionalists detected. Having a regularly ascending sequence of tones on your keys is the only thing that makes sense if you don't want your instrument to decide for you what to play.
 
And how could anything be "cringier" than having to learn a different pattern for every scale within the same mode? Oh, I know: Pretending that the notes in C Major are evenly spaced and basing your notation on that, which leads to a completely unnecessary accumulation of accidentials in your sheet music, that might be even worse than building pianos the way they are built - which, then again, is the reason this type of nonsense notation was accepted in the first place.
 
Of course I can easily anticipate your tit-for-tat response: "HuRR, yoU're THe oNe WHo'S TRiGgerREd, lel" Indeed I am, and proudly so! Because how could a thinking man not be insulted and infuriated by a bunch of complacent ne'er-do-wells whose only strenght is being on the side of the majority?
GermanyBernd2022-01-22 18:06:10 · 4yNo. 133062reply
the janko keyboard is uber based
 
you basically get the guitar perk of memorizing specific shapes for certain sounds on the piano
SloveniaBernd2022-01-23 11:58:27 · 4yNo. 133108reply
>Pretending that the notes in C Major are evenly spaced
Let me tell you what's cringier:
pretending that chromatic scale of semitones not only is but ought to be evenly spaced.
Protip: it never should have, this leads to dissonances because by making it evenly spaced, you're sacrificing clean rational intervals.
 
And, then, ironically, you also said:
>Having a regularly ascending sequence of tones on your keys is the only thing that makes sense if you don't want your instrument to decide for you what to play.
I thought the idea behind making patterns regular was exactly that: so that you don't have to think what key you're in when you're playing, i.e. your instrument assisting you in not making mistakes.
GermanyBernd2022-01-23 13:39:30 · 4yNo. 133109reply
>so that you don't have to think what key you're in when you're playing, i.e. your instrument assisting you in not making mistakes.
 
it makes much more sense to have shapes for sounds like a dominant 7 chord or whatsoever that always stays same in whatever key you play it because all keys are the same anyway, what matters are the intervals between the notes
 
why should chords look dofferent for each key? it makes no sense
 
think of a guitar, chord shapes also stay sames for every key
 
 
>pretending that chromatic scale of semitones not only is but ought to be evenly spaced.
Protip: it never should have, this leads to dissonances because by making it evenly spaced, you're sacrificing clean rational intervals.
 
actually nvm i think you misunderstood the purpose of the janko keyboard
SloveniaBernd2022-01-23 13:40:47 · 4yNo. 133110reply
actually nvm I think you misunderstood the purpose of the axis49/64 keyboards.
SloveniaBernd2022-01-23 13:43:06 · 4yNo. 133111reply
actually let me answer:
 
>why should chords look dofferent for each key? it makes no sense
because, in fact, if you tuned your instrument perfectly, they are different.
approximating the tunings by making it into 12 equal semitones is what is incorrect.
GermanyBernd2022-01-23 14:59:01 · 4yNo. 133115sagereply
yes but this isnt about tuning it is about how ypu play your instrument
SloveniaBernd2022-01-23 15:01:45 · 4yNo. 133116reply
Exactly, and if you insist on not maintaining the legacy layout based on C-major I would much prefer to pick the one that actually makes playing simpler rather than the one that only pretends to be revolutionary and instead excessively focuses on a single pet peeve.
GermanyBernd2022-01-23 15:15:52 · 4yNo. 133117reply
From my point of view, the idea behind the janko keyboard is nice because you have to learn each shape/scale/chord/melody exactly ONCE and not 12 times for each key.
 
You probably never learned to play the piano.
SloveniaBernd2022-01-23 16:03:44 · 4yNo. 133120reply
>From my point of view, the idea behind the janko keyboard is nice because you have to learn each shape/scale/chord/melody exactly ONCE and not 12 times for each key.
If you really want to go by this idea, take it one step forward and actually make the shape such that playing scales and chords (which will be most of what you're playing fast) is simple instead of keeping legacy arrangement.
 
>You probably never learned to play the piano.
10 years of classical piano education.
 
Btw, all scales and chords are still played the same.
The only difference is which finger you start on. But when you're playing it, the sequence is the same. Just shifted.
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