Please Help! 1999-08-22 04:00 am Hi, I have a problom. I play guitar, and when Nothworthy transcribes guitar parts it puts them in standard music notation. Is there anyway to get it in TAB notation. PLEASE HELP!!!Thanks,-Matt Quote Selected
Re: Please Help! Reply #2 – 1999-08-23 04:00 am In more words: go to http://www.guitar-pro.com/You should be satisfied (as I find it almost as easy as NWC). This shareware (299 FRF/1840 BEF/90 DEM/101 NLG/~49 USD) exists in English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Dutch and Portuguese, so you should find *your* language, am I wrong?But I still hope that NWC will do this in a new version (2.x?). Quote Selected
Re: Please Help! Reply #3 – 1999-08-24 04:00 am Perhaps a bit off the topic, but I note that some programs, such as Midisoft, allow one to print the schematic chord above the music staff (as well as chord name). Would something like this be of interest or of help to any NWC users as a potential Wish List item? Quote Selected
Re: Please Help! Reply #4 – 2000-01-08 05:00 am So Matt did you end up figuring out your guitar problems? We hope you did! Quote Selected
Re: Please Help! Reply #5 – 2000-01-08 05:00 am yeah mate.definitely.encore and melody assistant and stuff do it.I reckon noteworthy should do it - make them more kickass.there are plenty of guitar fret fonts around, users might even be able to edit one of the fonts in noteworthy and set it to the font name, and print out a chart with the characters for certain chords.but yeah sure, either we do it or noteworthy.what do you folks have to say 'bout that idea? Quote Selected
Re: Please Help! Reply #6 – 2000-04-29 04:00 am Hey, Matt forget the tab crap and learn how to read real music notation. I'm sick of guitarists acting like such hardcore musicians but they refuse to actually study music theory...I think they're too scared that they may actually learn something..too much like homework, huh? Do you want to be a robot, or do you actually want to understand what it is your doing musically? I am sometimes embarrassed to call myself a guitarist because of this slack-assed attitude associated with many modern guitar players. Luckily, we have people like John Scofield who are real musicians that happen to play guitar. Quote Selected