![]() ![]() It also has a tone generator, and you can change the pitch to any frequency. Its display shows the frequencies of your notes and how many cents you are from the target, and the color of the note changes from red to yellow to green as you approach the correct frequency. It’s a chromatic tuner, and can tune to any note, but the pro version also has a strobe tuner, a spectrum analyzer, and more. ![]() InsTuner-Chromatic Tuner with Tone Generator (or itsįree Lite version) has a slick interface, and gives feedback with a needle in a circular dial. ![]() InsTuner has a lite and a pro version, but the extra features on the pro make it worth the $4. But it also has a metronome, solfège notation, and an in-app purchase lets you upgrade to features such as a sequencer, pitch pipe and more.ĭon’t let Cadenza’s minimalist design fool you. You can adjust the pitch from 410Hz to 450Hz, which is, perhaps, limited if you want to use this for an instrument playing baroque music, which could be at 392Hz. The bottom triangle moves around a bit, even when I play a tuning fork, and there’s no sort of indication, other than the alignment, that you’ve reached the correct frequency. It doesn’t display much else, though, other than a simple scale of the number of cents that you’re flat or sharp. Instead of a needle, it has two triangles that align when you’re at the right frequency. However, I question its accuracy when I play an A-440 tuning fork, the app finds it hard to settle on what frequency it is, and bounces around a lot.Ĭadenza ($1) has a different type of display. You can optionally display frequencies, and in pitch pipe mode, it can play tones at various frequencies for you to tune to. It displays a horizontal scale that moves beneath a cursor, as well as a note wheel, and I find it quite easy to use.Ĭleartune boasts of a lot of cool features, but I often couldn’t get a clear response. CleartuneĬleartune ($4) is a chromatic tuner that lets you set the desired pitch, choose from a number of temperaments, and use a variety of different types of notation (standard notes, solfège, etc.). But if you just want a free, easy-to-use tuner, this might be exactly what you need. It’s got some additional features as well, including some alternate tunings, a metronome, and a simple chord library. It also displays the precise frequency of the note you’ve played, and the number of cents you are away from the target. It wiggles less, and I find it easier to use than Guitar Toolkit. Gibson Learn & Master with StudioShare (free) offers a similar display: A needle that wavers back and forth as you zero in on the right tuning. Gibson’s free tuning app shows the precise frequency of the note you’ve played. ![]()
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