Tonic Sol Fa Notation Software

Tonic Solfa Composer Software. MagicScore OneTouch Composer is the first music notation software for Windows tablets all over the World. Tonic sol fa app - Notation Composer is a music composition software designed by Notation Software, Inc. It gives the user the possibility to create musical notes and play them later. Creating notes: the software is mainly designed to write the musical score.

  1. Tonic Sol Fa Notes
  2. Tonic Sol Fa Songs
  3. Tonic Sol Fa Albums
  4. Tonic Sol Fa Notation Writing Software
  5. Tonic Sol Fa Music

Here’s a great opportunity for UK teachers to find out about tonic sol-fa in class teaching: “Kodaly in the Klassroom”is a weekend course (14th – 15th May) set up under the auspices of the British Kodaly Academy. The website says that the course is suitable for

Tonic Sol Fa Notes

“Anyone interested in classroom music teaching (preschool and primary). There is no need to be a music reader. This workshop is also suitable for instrumental teachers who want learn the Kodaly principles. Very useful for “whole class” teaching.”

Tonic Sol Fa Songs

The Kodaly Approach is today’s most wide-spread tonic sol-fa based teaching ‘method’ and there are associations and music schools dedicated to promoting it in many countries. So, if you are not in the UK, the chances are that there will be a group offering similar ‘introduction to Kodaly’ opportunities in your own country.

Of course, the Kodaly Method is about so much more than sol-fa! It is, rather, an holistic approach to music education through singing. ‘Method’ is a misnomer and the term is no longer used by Kodaly practitioners. It is extremely difficult to capture this approach and pin it down within the confines of a textbook but those seeking a brief introduction may find Susan Brumhill’s “First, We Sing! Kodály-Inspired Teaching for the Music Classroom!” helpful.

TonicTonic Sol Fa Notation Software
Some years ago, a group of music educators who were great fans of John Curwen’s sol-fa method, developed in Victorian times, founded the Curwen Institute and one of them, William Swinburne, wrote a book, through which they hoped to renew the use of sol-fa in UK schools by teaching the method in parallel with notation.This was the “New Curwen Method”, published by Stainer and Bell. Sadly, it looks as though the venture wasn’t well supported and the Institute seems to have disappeared (as its founders have aged or died?). I believe that the book is now out of print but there are copies available from Amazon. It was based on the idea of teaching with a giant stave on a whiteboard against which the teacher would form the sol-fa hand signs. Doh (Do in Kodaly system) would be marked with a square at the beginning of the stave. Kodaly’s system was also a development of John Curwen’s ideas. In theKodaly method, pupils initially learn to read from rhythmic stick notation with the first letter of the sol-fa syllable under it. It is possible to combine the two by writing sol-fa letters on a stave, with stems and dots to indicate rhythm. “The Kodaly Method” by Lois Choksy, published by Prentice Hall. has an appendix of songs in progressive order, in addition to examples of stick notation and hand signs.

Tonic Sol Fa Albums

In my free softwareLearn Tonic Sol-fa With GridPlay, described on this blog, I try, in some grids, to parallel the New Curwen Method by writing the sol-fa syllables on a modulator which is as close as I can get to a musical stave. The pitches of these syllables can be ‘played’ with the mouse, so the user can check pitch accuracy when singing from the syllables.
This example is in C Major but the layout of the grid could be used as a template for other keys.

Tonic Sol Fa Notation Writing Software

The software also includes fully chromatic C-based ‘notation’ grids in different registers.

Tonic Sol Fa Music

Several posts on my blog deal with aspects of tonic sol-fa, so if you don’t see what you want in this post, check the ‘Category’ menu in the sidebar for more on this subject.