ChordLab 4+

Harmony Calculator

RoGame Software

    • 3.0 • 3 Ratings
    • $9.99

Screenshots

Description

Help with chord spelling, note placement and other tasks in four-part harmony.

ChordLab is a specialist tool and calculator of sorts for modern four-part voice leading. Everyone has heard these colors in the arrangements of Big Bands - the horn riffs in the Jetsons carton song for example. With ChordLab we can in a way flip through all possible permutations of these chords. More theoretical background is available in the documentation. This is not a general chord app for beginning instrumentalists. To the intermediate player, however, ChordLab can be a source of great inspiration and introduction to many new color choices.

Four-part harmony may feel restrictive on instruments capable of more than 4 voices, but for a small choir for example it is a basic fact of life. It has become a staple in modern music as well as it allows the accompanist to declutter the spectrum in a sense by playing fewer notes. Root and fifth substitutions are applied automatically when dialing up a chord in ChordLab. Simply like that. Once the quality of a chord has been set it can then be viewed and listened to in all standard and not so standard drop voicings and moved through its inversions. This is of particular importance to guitar players as quite a few voicings are impossible to play and one may be left with rather few options. Chord spelling is also the main feature of ChordLab's Apple Watch app.

ChordLab has an interactive Circle of Fifths. With it we can look up key signatures for major and minor scales as well as all other modes derived of the major scale. So it is possible for example to display key signatures for all mixolydian scales and simultaneously highlight the other degrees for that mode. Additionally ChordLab displays degree structures for a key in standard Roman numerals. This is extremely useful when putting together chord progressions. Roots of the current harmonic domain are highlighted in white and can be tapped to audit the associated chords.

The chord finder feature in ChordLab allows you to search its database for 3 or 4 note structures to determine their harmonic quality. To find a chord in its database ChordLab uses the enharmonically simplest solution and does not require you do know whether a note is called G# or an Ab. This is especially useful for guitarists that seldomly encounter chords in root position due to the tuning of the instrument.

Features include:
• Chord spelling for all common chords
• Notation and textual representation of chord tones
• Chord finder for triads and seventh chords
• Alto, bass, tenor, treble clefs, TAB and grand staff
• All inversions and standard voicings
• Virtual piano and guitar instruments
• Chord tone labeling in instrument views
• All common open and alternate tunings presets (guitar)
• Automatic root and fifth substitution

There is a lot of functionality built into ChordLab, but as with any tool it is what we make of it. If chord spelling is a term in your vocabulary ChordLab should be of interest. Or maybe you want to grow your chord reportoire. Putting music theory into words often makes it sound overly complex yet nobody would say that orange or purple are complicated. ChordLab lets you play and work with colors in a sense and shows you how to play them on your instrument. It is very a unique tool for musicians, song-writers, professionals and music students and one that you will find yourself coming back to again and again.

What’s New

Version 3.6.9

Version 3.6.9 includes some graphic updates and improves overall performance.

Ratings and Reviews

3.0 out of 5
3 Ratings

3 Ratings

mlerbs ,

What is that I want in a Chord Finder App?

This app looks promising when you read the description of what it can do.
What am I looking for?
a) An app where I can input my fingering directly on the fretboard, look up the chord by note or by position (1,3,5). Hear it, copy, export, paste and print. None ofthese capabilities are present on this version. If you’re just looking to practice and find chords you porbably already know this is your app.
It felt short of my expectations.

Jurgen B ,

Extremely Rudimentary

Agree with another reviewer. Promising by the description, but once installed is lacking in so many areas it is utterly useless for anyone needing to go beyond the basics in theory. This app may be for an absolute beginner in music theory, but if you are hoping for more, pass it up and look elsewhere.

munchero ryan ,

A digital chord book, not a tool

I was under the impression from the screenshots and verbose feature list that this application would allow you to construct chord progressions--that is, a sequence of chords that you could cycle through. However, the musical staff you see only contains a single set of notes across multiple inversions. Most of the screen hardware seems to be dedicated the displaying these different inversions and their fingerings for guitar or piano.

My main complaint is that you can only really work with one chord at a time. Sure, you can change the root or the chord type, but if you wanted to hear how several chords played in sequence sound, you are out of luck. Each chord must basically be dialed in manually. I was hoping for something that could construct even the most basic of chord progressions.

Other negatives:

-Extensive use of drop-down menus, yet no interactivity with the musical staff
-The history feature only stores the notes of the chord and not even the inversions. It is also unclear what one must do to commit a chord to the history window, which it turns out only stores 16 recent chords.
-The chord finder is cumbersome, helpful if you know the notes of a chord and want to know the name of it, but does not inspire chord discovery as I hoped it would
-Circle of fifths is not very interactive-- clicking on other chords relative to your current chord only changes the root note of the chord. So say you have C minor selected and you see F Major is your IV chord. When you move the wheel to F, it selects F minor instead of F major, since all it does is shift the root note. There is definitely a lot of wasted potential here.

I realize now that this application is really just a chord lookup app, but I was mislead by the description's emphasis on 'harmony'. Though the overly verbose description would have you believe that this is an incredible creative tool, it is really little more than a very expensive (at $12!) and simple chord-finder, with no more features than you could find on any old chord-finding java applet web site. I wish i wasn't the first person to review this :P

App Privacy

The developer, RoGame Software, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

Data Not Collected

The developer does not collect any data from this app.

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

Supports

  • Family Sharing

    Up to six family members can use this app with Family Sharing enabled.

More By This Developer

EarTester
Music
ScaleMaster LE
Music
ChordLab
Music
Quincy
Music
Senet Deluxe
Games
Almond
Music