This session will not just be a talk, but a live demo too. What could possibly go wrong? Usually, live demos involve a lot of messing around with cables then a mumbled apology along the lines of “The internet’s not working so I can’t do most of my talk”. Not this one though! It involves software and people blowing into things.
Ian Willey from Appatta will be talking about what happens when solfège, fast fourier transforms and game design collide. For the last nine months he and James Everard have been building My Note Games, an iOS App for learners of musical instruments. It can teach you music and track your progress, in the process taking over all the boring bits of music revision and turning pieces of music into games of a sort. Ian Willey will be there with the app and some musical instruments. There will also be some nice prizes up for grabs. Audience participation is encouraged; feel free to bring along your recorder, bassoon, oboe, violin, saxophone, trumpet, guitar, piano…
Not even just for this session. We totally encourage musical people to bring instruments to Bit of Alright if they feel like it.


[…] the Blackadder intro on recorders. (It’s actually a tune originally written by Samuel Pepys.) Ian Willey from My Note Games demonstrated Baroque Band, an iPad app that helps kids learn to play a musical […]