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NOTETEST.TXT
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1994-08-23
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NoteTest 1.0
by Brent Hugh
NoteTest is a set of electronic flashcards for the beginning pianist.
NoteTest flashes the note on the screen and the student must respond by
playing the correct note on a MIDI keyboard. NoteTest is a fast moving, fun
way for beginning pianists to learn their notes and for more advanced students
to brush up on those high and low ledger lines.
NoteTest requires a MIDI card & keyboard (an MPU-401 compatible card will
probably work best, although others may work, too). CGA, EGA, VGA, or
Hercules graphics are required, as well. Oh, yes . . . an IBM compatible
computer, too, with some ram (don't ask me how much . . . 512K should do it,
or maybe less).
NoteTest won't work under Windows advanced mode. This is because the Windows
multi-media drivers hijack the MIDI card when Windows runs in advanced mode.
NoteTest runs fine in Windows standard mode (type win /s to start in standard
mode) or, of course, under normal DOS.
If, when you first start NoteTest, you get a message that says "Unable to
determine IRQ level" or "MIDI card not found", this means that NoteTest and
your MIDI card are not getting along. You might try fooling with the
configuration of your MIDI card or disabling programs that might take over
your MIDI card and not like to share (i.e., TSRs that play music in the
background or something like that). If you're using a Soundblaster or
compatible (with keyboard attached, of course), then you might have to load
special drivers to make the Soundblaster MIDI port compatible with MPU-401
(see your Soundblaster documentation for details). If none of these tricks
fixes the problem, then . . . sorry. Console yourself that at least you
didn't spend $200 on such a stupid program.
NoteTest was written because I looked all over the net to find something like
it and didn't! Note reading is fundamental to the education of every
beginning piano student. As piano studios begin to make use of computers,
NoteTest (or another similar program) should be used in every piano studio by
every beginning piano student. It is an easy and fun way to do the repetitive
drill necessary to make a firm connection between the note on the page and the
key on the keyboard.
NoteTest is better than commercial programs that do the same thing, because it
is free! Not only do you save a few bucks at the outset, but you can (legally
and lawfully) give each of your students a copy of NoteTest so they can
practice at home on their own computer and MIDI keyboard. Try doing *that*
with a commercial program!
NoteTest is designed to be pretty easy to use--just turn it on, read the
screens, and start playing back the note you see. The first screen has an
options menu (the very bottom choice) where you can change screen colors and
assign MIDI events that happen when the student gets an correct answer or a
wrong answer. I have these set up to some nice percussion sounds on my
keyboard; you may want to alter these to make some particular sounds with your
MIDI setup. These options are saved in a file called "Notetest.ini". If the
screen colors or MIDI events get badly messed up somehow, you may try deleting
"Notetest.ini", which will reset everything to the factory presets.
NoteTest is free. However, if you want a disk with a copy of the latest
version of NoteTest, a couple of other music programs I have written and/or
collected (mostly ear training software with MIDI output and input), and some
math programs I have written (fractals and stereograms)--or if you just want
to support a starving musician/computer programmer--send $10 (US funds) to:
Brent Hugh
5916 Arlington
Raytown, Missouri 64133
USA
Available in 3.5 inch HD disks only, sorry.
Internet: bhugh@aurora.cstp.umkc.edu
NoteTest is freeware, so you may distribute it to friends, neighbors, BBSs,
relatives, and even your Aunt Hilda if you want.
NoteTest is *not* designed to do anything horrible to your computer. However,
it is offered on an as is basis--use at your own risk! (Hey, what do you
expect for free?)