Difference between revisions of "Guitar EAMIR-o"
Jclavalley (talk | contribs) |
Jclavalley (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | [[File: EAMIR_logo.png]] Using the controller of the popular game Guitar Hero®, I began writing a program that would allow the buttons of this controller to play the notes of any diatonic scale. Since, nearly all of my K-12 students play this game regularly | + | [[File: EAMIR_logo.png]] Using the controller of the popular game Guitar Hero®, I began writing a program that would allow the buttons of this controller to play the notes of any diatonic scale. Since, nearly all of my K-12 students play this game regularly, and better than me I might add, I saw the practicality of using this controller, which they all seem to know, as an interface for making tonal music. |
The first four buttons are mapped to the eight notes of any diatonic scale with respect to any tonic. The fifth button enables chord mode which enables each note to act as the root for the typical bar chord voicing found in guitar literature. The back button on the controller allows them to switch the octave designation. | The first four buttons are mapped to the eight notes of any diatonic scale with respect to any tonic. The fifth button enables chord mode which enables each note to act as the root for the typical bar chord voicing found in guitar literature. The back button on the controller allows them to switch the octave designation. | ||
Revision as of 22:29, 24 April 2013
Using the controller of the popular game Guitar Hero®, I began writing a program that would allow the buttons of this controller to play the notes of any diatonic scale. Since, nearly all of my K-12 students play this game regularly, and better than me I might add, I saw the practicality of using this controller, which they all seem to know, as an interface for making tonal music. The first four buttons are mapped to the eight notes of any diatonic scale with respect to any tonic. The fifth button enables chord mode which enables each note to act as the root for the typical bar chord voicing found in guitar literature. The back button on the controller allows them to switch the octave designation.
This project was developed by V.J. Manzo, PhD and is available here. More information on EAMIR is available here.
Hardware:
- (2) Guitar Hero X-Plorer Controllers for X-Box 360 by Red Octane
Software:
-Download Guitar EAMIR-o software for Mac and PC here
The media player is loading... Demonstration: The media player is loading...