Home Concert LogoHome Concert Xtreme

$99.00  Your Price $94.00


Available on CD-ROM or as electronic download.  Please specify which version you would like during checkout under "Optional Instructions."

Home Concert Xtreme is an intelligent, interactive environment for learning, practicing, and performing music. Just load your musical score (in the form of a Standard MIDI File), connect your MIDI instrument, and start to play. Home Concert Xtreme stands ready to work with you!

Home Concert Xtreme's patented technology provides features that meet the needs of:

students at all levels Home Concert Xtreme Screen

music hobbyists

professionals

Here's how it all works:

Load a Standard MIDI File into Home Concert Xtreme, choose one or two tracks to be displayed in notation, and start playing your MIDI instrument. Based on the settings that you choose, Home Concert Xtreme will:

determine your location, tempo, and dynamic expression musically coordinate the accompaniment tracks to match your playing "turn your pages" intelligently

In other words, you are the soloist and Home Concert Xtreme is the conservatory-trained conductor, orchestra, and page-turner!

Home Concert Xtreme has most of the features of TimeWarp's earlier product, Home Concert 2000, plus a lot more! With Home Concert Xtreme, you can now:

enjoy new graphics and an improved user interface take advantage of more sophisticated score-following options use more advanced MIDI options add dynamics, articulations, clef changes, and fingerings to the score selectively quantize, set default tempos, and make other edits to independent regions of the score record and save multiple performances create playlists (not yet implemented in the Windows version) and more!

Home Concert Xtreme is compatible with thousands of commercial and free MIDI files as well as MIDI files that you make yourself. In particular, it is compatible with the MIDI files that coordinate with the most popular piano teaching methods as well as dozens of piano concerto MIDI files

Home Concert Xtreme System Requirements  

Before getting technical, in plain English:

Home Concert Xtreme Home Concert Xtreme is our flagship, score-following product. It is currently available for Macintosh OS X 10.3 or later and Windows Vista, XP, 2000, ME, and 98SE.

NOTE:

Home Concert Xtreme for Macintosh works on the new Intel-based Macintosh computers.   We officially support Home Concert Xtreme for Windows only on Windows XP and Vista. However, the program appears to work well on Windows 98SE, ME, and 2000. If you run one of these earlier operating systems, you may want try our Home Concert Xtreme Demo to test how well it performs on your computer.

The details:

The Glass Apple Logo (1998 – Present)

500 mHz (or faster) Macintosh G3 or better computer running OS X 10.3 (Panther) or later 128 MB of RAM (256 MB or greater preferred) a computer monitor:

with 1024 x 768 resolution or greater displaying thousands of colors or more

USB or Firewire MIDI interface (or MIDI keyboard with direct USB connection) and any necessary MIDI drivers MIDI keyboard

NOTE: The size of the notation and the number of measures that can be displayed on the screen are limited by the resolution of the monitor and the size of the Home Concert Xtreme window.

Windows

800 mHz (or faster) Windows computer running Windows Vista, XP, 2000, ME, or 98SE 128 MB of RAM (256 MB or greater preferred) a computer monitor:

with 1024 x 768 resolution or greater displaying thousands of colors or more

USB or Firewire MIDI interface (or MIDI keyboard with direct USB connection) and any necessary MIDI drivers MIDI keyboard

NOTE: The size of the notation and the number of measures that can be displayed on the screen are limited by the resolution of the monitor and the size of the Home Concert Xtreme window.

Home Concert 2000 Home Concert 2000 is our previous score-following product and is available for older computers. Almost any PC (running Windows 95/98/ME/2000) or Macintosh (running OS 7.1-9.x) to which you can attach a MIDI instrument will do just fine. The faster the computer (to a certain extent), the better the performance will be, although this isn't even relevant for most computers built within the last few years.