
Carl makes a good point. Unless a tab file can be verified somehow, you really do get what you pay for. The most I ever get out of guitar tablature is a chord progression, more or less. Even then, I've seen a variety of keys and tunings suggested for the same song by different tabbers. The tab scene is a horrid little world. On 2/9/04 5:14 AM, "Carl Edlund Anderson" <cea@carlaz.com> wrote:
At 20:39 08/02/2004, Ben Kennedy wrote:
On 07 2 2004 at 12:43 pm -0500, E wrote:
Check out www.tabtrax.com.
Hmm... sounds funky. Will download and check it out sometime soon when I have the patience to deal with Windows. :)
Looks interesting, but I haven't got a Windows machine or Windows emulator either. Still, I suppose if it more or less worked, it presumably gets a drum tab into a sufficient state that one could then fine tune it into correctness. I haven't worked extensively with drum tabs (though I've used a few as the basis for DB files), but if they're anything like guitar tabs, their accuracy will vary widely :) But once you can _hear_ the thing, it ought to be possible to fix it more easily.
Cheers, Carl
-- Carl Edlund Anderson http://www.carlaz.com/
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