10 days of Improvitaping
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https://winwenger.com/essays/winsights/part-13/
Some context:
I just started playing the piano, and I started with Improvitaping. I don't know music theory. I didn't even know which keys correspond to which notes when I started.Recording from day 1:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xlCQbiORr0-6Rq_vp7gOk_v74akYpoZa/view?usp=sharingRecording from day 10:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xqLARlBjlutF2oxkCHbGe9wUh2Fm3UHd/view?usp=sharingNo masterpieces (yet), but there has been clear improvement.
Deviations from the instructions:
- I used the recording function of my digital piano to record what I played. The recording limit for it is around 10 000 notes. Sometimes I reached the recording capacity much before 30 minutes (2 of them were even less than 14 minutes).
- On some days, I did Improvitaping twice.
The audio quality of my phone isn't very good, which is why I decided to record with my piano despite the limitation. While listening to the recordings, I also recorded most of them on my phone. That is how I could share two of the recordings here.
(By the way, it would be nice if audio could be directly uploaded into posts)
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Interesting! Would you say (or have you heard anywhere) if this works for singing as well or improving speech?
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I'm not aware of anyone using Improvitaping for singing. If it works for instruments, I'd imagine that it works for singing too.
Singing can improve speech
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2996848/There seems to be very little information available about Improvitaping. If anyone here is willing to try it, I'd be interested in hearing how well it works for others.