I've tried Scaler 2 for chord progressions but it's hard for me to get something more original out of it.
Do you guys think it's a good tool?
Or should I not bother with it and do music theory instead?
I have to disagree here. I have a fair bit of music theory under my belt, and I still love Scaler, since it helps break me out of the chord progressions I tend to otherwise gravitate toward (the "suggest" function is really helpful here).yellowmix wrote: Thu Oct 27, 2022 11:07 pm If you learn music theory you do not need it. In fact, it may hamper your ability to learn it.
+1 Pretty sure that was a big part of its intended purpose.hyperdeath666 wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 11:19 pmI have to disagree here. I have a fair bit of music theory under my belt, and I still love Scaler, since it helps break me out of the chord progressions I tend to otherwise gravitate toward (the "suggest" function is really helpful here).yellowmix wrote: Thu Oct 27, 2022 11:07 pm If you learn music theory you do not need it. In fact, it may hamper your ability to learn it.
Scaler 2 is reliable workhorse. It'll make piloting chord progressions and different scales much much faster even if you already know music theory. It's not about replacing the need of music theory. It's about streamlining the experience of testing things out with music theory.isuckatproducing wrote: Thu Oct 27, 2022 6:14 pm Hi,
I've tried Scaler 2 for chord progressions but it's hard for me to get something more original out of it.
Do you guys think it's a good tool?
Or should I not bother with it and do music theory instead?
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