Any experiences if there are any tuning apps for smartphone which are better than others, especially for brass instruments?
TIA!
I guess there's the generation gap at work. I don't live on my phone, even though I use it for more things than a lot of folks of my generation (Baby Boomers). I can have a tuner on the phone and it's useful. I also use the timer. But I don't spend a lot of time texting or playing games on it. Full disclosure: I own 3 Korg tuners and have used them as well.Burgerbob wrote: Sun Aug 07, 2022 9:49 am tunable and tonal energy are the top picks by far. I prefer tunable myself, but...
I prefer to just use a physical Korg tuner, and keep the phone away from my practice for less distraction. The farther my phone is, the better and more productive I am.
This was new to me. I've used GoodEar in the past, but this looks more useful.DaveAshley wrote: Sun Aug 07, 2022 11:22 am It's not a tuning app, but Politonus is also absolutely indispensable, IMO. Serious musicians who aren't using an ear-training app are doing themselves a disservice - ESPECIALLY jazz musicians!
Burgerbob wrote: Sun Aug 07, 2022 9:49 am I prefer to just use a physical Korg tuner, and keep the phone away from my practice for less distraction. The farther my phone is, the better and more productive I am.
I use an old phone with no sim card inside, so there is not more distraction as with an physical tuner. Also there is no possibility to load advertising.Burgerbob wrote: Sun Aug 07, 2022 9:49 am tunable and tonal energy are the top picks by far. I prefer tunable myself, but...
I prefer to just use a physical Korg tuner, and keep the phone away from my practice for less distraction. The farther my phone is, the better and more productive I am.
Snark is still the best one. You can clip it on the bell or the slide crook connection point, and the head rotates so you can see it clearly. And you can see your pitch no matter how noisy everyone is around you.LanceHandsome wrote: Tue Apr 01, 2025 8:09 pm heldenbone--
I just received my d'Addario cello/bass tuner and it doesn't appear to be chromatic. Turns out the Snark tuner I bought it to replace wasn't broken after all (just wounded), so unless the d'Addario is fully chromatic, back it goes.
I remember paying about $80 for a digital tuner. You could pay more then too. I still use an old Korg TM model that needs a squeeze now and then for it to be audible. I have TE on my phone but prefer a small Korg that clips on to the bell and runs on a single AAA battery.meliant wrote: Fri Sep 23, 2022 10:56 am I think others have recommended it already, but my favorite is Tonal Energy. It’s simple and has a ton of nice features. The only downside is the $3.99, but I think it’s worth.
iStroboSoft is great! Just like the old stroboconn tuners it helps you visualize the harmonic series. It’s totally worth the moneymuschem wrote: Sun Aug 07, 2022 10:12 am I use iStroboSoft (https://www.petersontuners.com/products/istrobosoft/) for tuning on my iPad, paired with a RØDE directional mic (https://rode.com/en/microphones/mobile/videomic-me-c). My iPad has USB-C, but RØDE also makes a version with Apple's lightning connector (https://rode.com/en/microphones/mobile/videomic-me-l), as well as a version with a 3.5mm connector (https://rode.com/en/microphones/mobile/videomic-me). I find the unidirectional mic is helpful when tuning in an ensemble, but the phone/tablet omnidirectional mic works pretty well if you're tuning in a practice room/studio.
iStroboSoft costs a bit more than TonalEnergy, but it's produced by Peterson, and I like the familiar strobe display. For drones, I use the Drone Tuner app (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/drone-tuner/id1326016622).