![]() There are forum threads around the web with old links to services that did the trick by supplying just a youtube link, however those services are now gone. This seems to be a much more promising approach giving a cleaner and workable output, however the tools I have found are in Russian, not pre-compiled, and I am not that tech savvy, let alone into linux. The other approach seems to be a tool or script that reads the visible falling blocks or highlighted piano keys in the video itself, placing notes according to the position of the falling synthesia blocks. It works somewhat, can be "played" in a mini player and "sound ok", however the midi output is visually very cluttered and unusable as sheet music as it can't tell harmonics and percussion apart from the base note, so the effort to clean it up is not worth it compared to manually entering the notes. One approach is to use some overly advanced audio editing software which reads the audio as a frequency spectrogram, and tries to replicate the audio the best it can by placing the frequencies' corresponding notes into a midi. ![]() From what I have found, there seems to be 2 different approaches that people use, but none of these are straight forward: But I wonder if anyone has been successful with a more automated way to do it. "I'm trying to learn, not mimic!"įrustrated about that I have on a few occasions entered all the notes into musescore manually. Many people like synthesia and applaud the uploader, however I prefer sheet music. ![]() When googling around for sheet music for my skill level, I very often find versions of songs or pieces that I like, but are presented as Synthesia tutorial videos where the uploader does not have the sheet music available.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |