
Solfege and Tonic Sol Fa for Beginners - Music Performance
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Date: 2022-03-28
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Comments and reviews: 10
Raul
Thanks for the lesson. I am using this to learn melodies by plugging in the solfege names. The song melody goes from -do re mi fa so la ti do- and then up to -fa- in the second octave.
I am doing ok singing and recognizing solfege melody within the first octave, for example, -fa mi do-. But struggling recognizing -fa mi do- in the second octave.
Singing -fa mi do- in second octave also feels much different than singing -fa mi do- in first octave. The notes feel farther apart in second octave.
Should the goal be to instantly recognize octaves and know that the second octave -fa mi do- to be the same as the first octave -fa mi do- ?
Or is it better to view the second octave -re mi fa- as three distinct notes beyond the second -do-?
reply
Thanks for the lesson. I am using this to learn melodies by plugging in the solfege names. The song melody goes from -do re mi fa so la ti do- and then up to -fa- in the second octave.
I am doing ok singing and recognizing solfege melody within the first octave, for example, -fa mi do-. But struggling recognizing -fa mi do- in the second octave.
Singing -fa mi do- in second octave also feels much different than singing -fa mi do- in first octave. The notes feel farther apart in second octave.
Should the goal be to instantly recognize octaves and know that the second octave -fa mi do- to be the same as the first octave -fa mi do- ?
Or is it better to view the second octave -re mi fa- as three distinct notes beyond the second -do-?
reply
Fairy
Thank you, this video is very helpful. I am coming form the fixed do, and wanted to learn about movable do as well. I do have a few questions. In a music school sol fa singing example, would there be notes written, or the sol fa notation using only letters (no notes)? If the notes only are written, what would a singer think while singing; would he/she transpose every note, or he should write the note names below? Also, what happens when a melody has a modulation? How do you connect the two different keys/the moment of the modulation/common notes?
reply
Thank you, this video is very helpful. I am coming form the fixed do, and wanted to learn about movable do as well. I do have a few questions. In a music school sol fa singing example, would there be notes written, or the sol fa notation using only letters (no notes)? If the notes only are written, what would a singer think while singing; would he/she transpose every note, or he should write the note names below? Also, what happens when a melody has a modulation? How do you connect the two different keys/the moment of the modulation/common notes?
reply
Emile
Useful lesson well taught. You are an exemplary teacher in that you teach what you promise in a clear way. Your clarity frees the learner to think beyond the lesson to the next steps. For example, after this lesson, I am now curious as to how one would indicate the flat or sharp of a note. So off I go to find that! Thank you for the practicality, style and clarity of your teaching.
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Useful lesson well taught. You are an exemplary teacher in that you teach what you promise in a clear way. Your clarity frees the learner to think beyond the lesson to the next steps. For example, after this lesson, I am now curious as to how one would indicate the flat or sharp of a note. So off I go to find that! Thank you for the practicality, style and clarity of your teaching.
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giuliano
Hallo and thanks for showing the Do scale as we use here in Italy and as far as I know, also in France and Spain. The only note which we write in a different was is your Ti, which we write Si (as u would pronounce the first two letters of Singapore! Goodbye enjoy your day!
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Hallo and thanks for showing the Do scale as we use here in Italy and as far as I know, also in France and Spain. The only note which we write in a different was is your Ti, which we write Si (as u would pronounce the first two letters of Singapore! Goodbye enjoy your day!
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Spazio
In Italy we actually learn music with the Guido d'Arezzo names Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Si. We practice solfeggio using thise names. The A to G system, the very first naming system of notes, is today currently used in anglophone countries, and adopted by us as a secondary system.
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In Italy we actually learn music with the Guido d'Arezzo names Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Si. We practice solfeggio using thise names. The A to G system, the very first naming system of notes, is today currently used in anglophone countries, and adopted by us as a secondary system.
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CornerSpeak
Very useful description of the system, I-ll be using it to teach a quick lesson to a toddler, to assist them used in learning to sing & play simple melodies.
Thanks you! PS really enjoyed the sign language, that-ll add some fun to the learning process.
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Very useful description of the system, I-ll be using it to teach a quick lesson to a toddler, to assist them used in learning to sing & play simple melodies.
Thanks you! PS really enjoyed the sign language, that-ll add some fun to the learning process.
reply
Jay
This makes a lot of sense to me now. I never really understood why this would be used. My first exposure to it, actually, was in the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind. That's how the humans communicated with the aliens.
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This makes a lot of sense to me now. I never really understood why this would be used. My first exposure to it, actually, was in the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind. That's how the humans communicated with the aliens.
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Andy
Does the Do sound same in different keys? Example: is the sound of Do in G major same sound as Do in C major or is the sound of Do in G major higher, like So in C major? Thank you!
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Does the Do sound same in different keys? Example: is the sound of Do in G major same sound as Do in C major or is the sound of Do in G major higher, like So in C major? Thank you!
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arslan
Solfege system might have been derived from Indian classical music it is called SARGAM here in indian subcontinent... Specially movable do is equivalent of SARGAM
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Solfege system might have been derived from Indian classical music it is called SARGAM here in indian subcontinent... Specially movable do is equivalent of SARGAM
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#Nukhoe
Is there a computer program that can convert e.g musescore song into solfege or is there a program I can type solfege on as I want to avoid using handwriting.
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Is there a computer program that can convert e.g musescore song into solfege or is there a program I can type solfege on as I want to avoid using handwriting.
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