Timeslicer Reviews

Timeslicer Reviews

Published by on 2020-01-28

🏷️ About: You can think of a two part polyrhythm as two sets of accents on a fundamental pulse common to the two rhythms. If you’d like to think of polyrhythms that way, wowβ€”are you ever lucky to find this thing! You can feel and count these smaller even beats instead of just trying to feel the fractions directly.


       


Overall Customer Experience 😎


πŸ˜ŽπŸ‘ŒπŸ”₯ Positive experience
71.1%

πŸ™„πŸ’…πŸ«₯ Neutral
17.8%

πŸ‘ΏπŸ€¬πŸ˜  Negative experience
11.2%

~ from Justuseapp.com NLP analysis of 48 combined software reviews.



Read 3 Customer Service Reviews πŸ‘ΏπŸ€¬πŸ˜‘πŸ˜ πŸ’’πŸ˜€

4.9 out of 5

Great app for polyrhythmic training!

2022-06-13

As a professional drummer, I wish I had something like this growing up, and am grateful to have it now. It’s a really great way to hear, visualize, and actually get the feel of the correct hits in your hands and fingers.

Finally

2022-07-14

Simple to use, not bombarded with ads, just thank you. I will definitely follow what you guys come up.

Amazing app!

2022-08-15

A recommendation: make the tempo scale to the higher polyrhythms



Is Timeslicer Safe? πŸ€—πŸ™


Yes. Timeslicer is very safe to use. This is based on our NLP (Natural language processing) analysis of over 48 User Reviews sourced from the Appstore and the appstore cumulative rating of 4.9/5 . Justuseapp Safety Score for Timeslicer Is 86.4/100.


Is Timeslicer Legit? πŸ’―


Yes. Timeslicer is a totally legit app. This conclusion was arrived at by running over 48 Timeslicer User Reviews through our NLP machine learning process to determine if users believe the app is legitimate or not. Based on this, Justuseapp Legitimacy Score for Timeslicer Is 100/100..


Is Timeslicer not working? 🚨


Timeslicer works most of the time. If it is not working for you, we recommend you excersise some patience and retry later or Contact Support.



How was your experience with Timeslicer? Post a Review




Features

You can feel and count these smaller even beats instead of just trying to feel the fractions directly.

* As the maker of this thing, we feel the need to point out that tapping in lockstep to clockwork is perhaps not the most musical of human activities.

Keep the beats orange to bump up the combo counter and continue your streak.

They work just like the practice beats, except that your max combo gets saved for next time.

You can set the sounds and rhythms and tempo of the beats you'd like to practice.

You can think of a two part polyrhythm as two sets of accents on a fundamental pulse common to the two rhythms.

The preset exercises are just a set of beats and sounds we especially like.

Then listen, watch, count, feel.

You can even set it up to hear that underlying pulse, if you want.

Timeslicer shows you all these counts in action.

They go from dead simple to verging on the complicated.

Still, we sometimes like to try to prove to ourselves that we could do it indefinitely, if we really wanted to.

When you think you have it, tap along on the buttons at the bottom.

  Customer Service/Support
Developer:
Christopher Gross