Guess your own music in reverse - Android Apps and Games

if you always wanted to know what your favourite music sounds like in reverse or if you wanted to discover messages that can only be heard if you listen to music in reverse, you can now do it
BackMusic is a music quiz in which you can guess your own music in reverse. It can be really challenging sometimes. It currently supports two different game modes. One where you have to guess your music in reverse while some answer possibilities are presented to you and one in which you don't get answer possibilities.
It would be nice if you would try it and rate it
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=de.nilswieber.backmusic&referrer=utm_source%3Dxdadevelopers%26utm_medium%3Dforum

And please tell me what you think is good and what's not ... Since it's my first app

Related

[REQ] MUSICOVERY for Winmo

http://musicovery.com/
Hello my brothers and sisters.
Musicovery is an amazing website which enables you to pick the music genre, the year-range and the ability to pick which mood you want the music to sound like. For instance, if you are feeling sad you can pick the DARK genre, If calm you can pick calm, if you are both you can select the median.
http://musicovery.com/
Check it out, this would indeed be a interesting app. Comparable to pandora,
There is a mobile version out only for symbian. Maybe someone or the lot of you can make this happen.
Cheers
Try and find the Last.FM app for WM6. Last.FM is pretty much the same thing except it's not as 'visual' and you type in tags to find music of various genres

Music making software

I am new to this forum so please forgive me if i make any mistakes.
My main interest is in music and am therefore looking for recording and music-making software.
I have looked at Syntrax, Griff, Mixtikl and Meteor but so far am not impressed with any of them so was wondering if anyone was in the process of developing something new. I am not a programmer myself but do have a few ideas which as far as I can tell, have not yet been implemented in any windows mobile 6 apps.
One idea is for a low latency multi-track recorder that can use either bluetooth or wifi as an audio input, thereby enabling your phone to become a true multi-track recording device. The idea doesn't stop there, so if anyone is interested in hearing what else I have to say, feel free to contact me and we can discuss what is possible. I can't code such things, so would be very willing to collaborate with someone who can.
Anyway, that's it for now.
Hope to hear a reply soon!
If your interrested
Peace this Meezzofficial! I make music myself, and I'm currently on my 6 song. But as far as music software goes....I would suggest Fruity Loop. Music Maker. and Accoustica. To Meezz personally these are heavy hitters. But Fruity Loops first and hi me back!
Meezz!!
I think i've gone beyond the programmes you've suggested by quite a long margin which is why I would like to see something a bit more serious for windows mobile.
Hello everybody.
I'm a musician too and I'm thinking about some kind of musical notepad using piano roll view so you can tap any of keys on the edge of the screen to hear the notes which will be helpfull to develop the melody by ear, and then put blocks on piano roll to be able to set rhythm values and play whole thing.
Maybe I could try to write something like it but I am not serious programmer so it might take me a lot od time and effort
I think that multi-track recording on PDA is not reliable idea because it need good cpu and some serious audio card with high signal-to-noise ratio.

An excellent app idea from an artistic noob

So i was thinking, what if someone made an app which displayed an android that dances very rhythmically to music played on a device, and differently to each song played. By this, i don't mean an android that simply swings it's hips, but does flips, twirls, claps, winks and jumps, all when necessary, and keeps to the rhythm and beat of the music; the dancing would be equal to the choreography used in music videos, and would not use some cheap "dancing skills". I would make this app myself, but i have no experience in writing software. If anyone would like to use this idea to develop, please let me know, as I have no problem in restricting its development because it's my idea (if there is such a thing) but i would like to know if it is being made is so I can download it myself! Thank you all for viewing my idea

[APP]Use an Android Smartphone to play live/learn music

There are lots of apps now to enable us to play and learn music on our smartphones, which make it quite convenient for normal people get access of the hall of music, or musicians writing music anytime when they come up with ideas. Some of them focused on play the instruments and record the pieces, some focused on the theory of the music. Today, I'd like to give the spotlight to an app called Walk Band.
Walk Band is a music-related app on Android which is similar to Garage Band on IOS. It has thousands of functions for users to play/edit their music. For example, if you'd like to make a piece of the rock music, you can record your playing of drums, bass, guitars, keyboards, etc. and put them together, to become an instrumental version rock song.
However, there's one thing: We can record the instruments one by one, but how could we play multiple instruments lively without pre-recording? Or, how could we use other apps for accompaniment in just one mobile phone?
We can achieve it by using this app, VMOS. There're two ways for live or learning by one Android device.
1. Open the same app in the two systems, one for playing accompaniment and one for playing live.
2. Open different apps, one for playing songs or music from other apps, one for study its chords or other things, or make a bonus track for this song without any complicated recording/transferring things.
All you need is just one Android phone, and one free app VMOS, to enjoy tons of ways playing your own music!

Samsung has a cool sound assistant app which made me wonder why no one else is trying that.

A lot of us read on our smartphones. Whether it's a social media post or something your boss sent you to read. The key thing is we all read. Now think of coming back from your job or school after a long tiring day. You have to read something and you don't feel like it. What would help you in this situation is an app called voice aloud reader.
Simply select the text, tap share, and choose the app. It will automatically start reading the text for you. You can turn your screen off and lie down on the bed or make a cup of coffee.
This is cool. You know what would be even cooler? Some background noise.
The voice coming from a Text to speech app never sounds like an actual human being. Sometimes it's harsh, sometimes there are words we don't comprehend clearly. Adding a calm song in the background from your Spotify playlist while listening to Voice Aloud Reader makes it much better so listen to that robotic voice. Almost the same as what Youtubers do nowadays.
But there's a problem. The sound coming from Spotify will have the same amount of loudness as the sound of the voice coming from VAR(Voice aloud reader). Because they're both using the same system sound. The music would be too loud at that point and VAR will be unrecognizable.
Samsungs Sound Assistant(SA) can tackle this. It has two handy features.
• Per-app sound profile: Let's you set different sound levels for each app. You can set 90 for Spotify when you listen to podcasts and 60 for your music player.
So the music player won't be too loud and the voice in Podcast won't be too low. You won't have to set it every time you open those apps.
• Multi Sound: Spotify and Music Player both will run and play preset sounds simultaneously. You can play Mozart on your Music Player, set the volume to 20. Come back and play Podcast and set its volume to 80. This fixes the problem I've mentioned earlier in my post.
Here's the conclusion. You might think there aren't many people who listen to something and want another thing to run in the background. I can't argue with that.
Then again, you won't know something you like until you taste it. I never knew I needed it until I used a Samsung phone for a week. It grew on me and it's hard to live without it now.
I made a post about anti-flicker/dc dimming a few months ago for people with sensitive eyes like me. I saw a lot of responses saying flickering problems happens to very few people. Now I'm posting about something even rarer. I know it's a long shot but if Samsung could do this years ago, others can do it now if they try. And I'll be hoping for something like this one my Xiaomi or Pixel.

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