
The next step following the song being written to paper was to transfer that to the computer. More specifically, a digital audio dashboard (music creator) program called Fruity Loops. It normally does a pretty good job of imitating music if you know how to use it well. I'm still new to it, so my music sounded a bit shaky. Nonetheless, it turned out pretty good. An interesting thing about Fruity Loops is how EXPENSIVE the program is. Just the base program itself isn't bad, but the way they get you is by making you pay for all the plugins and peripherals. This basically means every single utility you use costs money in some way, so it's almost impossible to make a song for free.
But, all money costs aside, I was able to start my work in Fruity Loops. I started out by figuring out the exact letter note for each note I used in my song, using the Japanese scale we created as a reference point. EFABCE was the letter scale we used. From that point, I just found each letter in all 6 or 7 ocataves (different levels of pitch) that were located in the Fruity Loops piano role, placed a marker at each one for easy reference and started work from there. It was a long process, but once the preliminary work was done, everything else came pretty easy.
After a few days of work, getting the whole song together, keeping the continuity and rhythm, I was finally finished dabbling with this song.
I named it "Kaede no Odori" or Dance of the Red Leaf.