

Simply turn on n-Track next to your instrument (whether it is guitar, bass or any other string instrument) and play each string.
#FREE TUNER GUITAR ANDROID#
My score: 2 (a "Change Tunning" button typo didn't help).Tune your guitar, bass or other instrument with n-Track Tuner, a nifty tool for iOS and Android devices to tune your guitar. Store reviews: 3 of 5 stars - 7,800 ratings (for all versions). Store reviews: 4.4 of 5 stars - 45,900 ratings. Follow the technology and transitions reporter on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram: leclairmitch. With novice skills on the bass, I could never turn away extra help. If I missed any quality apps, I'd love to know. No matter their abilities, musicians need not spend money for a usable tuner. Like calculators, notepads and flashlights, hand-held guitar tuners face an ample replacement with smartphone apps. It felt a little gimmicky, but for a bit, I enjoyed tapping along with the traditional "Scarborough Fair."
#FREE TUNER GUITAR FREE#
The included metronome was a nice touch, however.Īmong the three apps that required pitch-matching and detected no sound, I'll mention Guitar Free with Songs, because it had a neat game-like, play-along element. Gibson Learn & Master w/ StudioShare detected my highest string with an open pluck, but the app in whole was too heavy. I did have to use the 12th fret, but the app seemed to detect frequencies accurately, and the display was simple. Guitar Tuner Free - GuitarTuna impressed me too, though it required using the 12th fret with my bass and was a relatively heavy 13 megabytes. Tuner - gStrings Free also worked well, picking up open strings and allowing instant adjustments. Along with multiple choices of stunning display visuals (the free version limits a user to eight), the app hosts options for changing the sample rate, reference frequency and more - though much of it was beyond my musical knowledge. PitchLab Guitar Tuner (LITE) was exactly what I wanted. (Moving your non-strumming hand from fret to tuner knob doesn't allow real-time adjustments, but I found it to be more annoying than debilitating.) Many apps recognize notes from a six-string guitar but not a bass bumping up an octave lets the app pick up the note. If you're tuning a bass guitar, you may need to play strings on the 12th fret instead of open. Some had iOS equivalents, and vice versa. (I played trumpet and guitars for about 10 years, but I have a weak ear for pitch.) All five Android apps detected sounds, and all five worked with my outdated 4.0.4 operating system. Three iPhone apps were like this, dropping their value in my eyes. They don't detect sounds through a microphone they simply play a note, and a user matches it with an instrument's strings. Some apps advertised as a tuner, or that appear in search results, are note-playback tools. "I can probably find a free tuner app that will work," I thought.Īfter searching for the most popular guitar-tuning applications and testing five on both my old Samsung Galaxy S II with Android and Apple iPhone 6 running iOS, I can confirm: Free tuner apps can work well. I recently retrieved a neglected bass guitar from storage and discovered my hand-held tuner was gone.
