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  2. Sight-reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sight-reading

    Aural imagery (ear-playing and sight-singing improves sight-reading) Ability to keep the basic pulse, read, and remember rhythm; Awareness and knowledge of the music's structure and theory; Beauchamp identifies five building blocks in the development of piano sight-reading skills: [9] Grand-staff knowledge; Security within the five finger positions

  3. Tonic sol-fa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonic_sol-fa

    Tonic sol-fa (or tonic sol-fah) is a pedagogical technique for teaching sight-singing, invented by Sarah Anna Glover (1786–1867) of Norwich, England and popularised by John Curwen, who adapted it from a number of earlier musical systems.

  4. Numerical sight-singing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_sight-singing

    Numerical sight singing is not the same as integer notation derived from musical set theory and used primarily for sight singing atonal music. Nor is it the same as " count singing ", a technique popularized by Robert Shaw in which the numbers sung represent the rhythms of a piece in accordance with the beat of a measure.

  5. Shape note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_note

    The practice of singing music to syllables designating pitch goes back to about AD 1000 with the work of Guido of Arezzo. Other early work in this area includes the cipher notation of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (18th century), and the tonic sol-fa of Sarah Anna Glover and John Curwen (19th century).

  6. Interval recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_recognition

    Some music teachers teach their students relative pitch by having them associate each possible interval with the first interval of a popular song. [1] Such songs are known as "reference songs". [ 2 ] However, others have shown that such familiar-melody associations are quite limited in scope, applicable only to the specific scale-degrees found ...

  7. Guidonian hand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guidonian_hand

    The Guidonian hand was a mnemonic device used to assist singers in learning to sight-sing. Some form of the device may have been used by Guido of Arezzo, a medieval music theorist who wrote a number of treatises, including one instructing singers in sightreading. The hand occurs in some manuscripts before Guido's time as a tool to find the ...

  8. Music education and programs within the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_Education_and...

    The Elementary Music Reader was published in 1871 [1] by the Barnes Company, one year after Luther Mason's The National Music Course. Benjamin Jepson was a military man turned music teacher in New Haven after an injury in the war. His music textbooks had exercises and songs presented systematically for the goal of music reading and sight-singing.

  9. Non-lexical vocables in music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-lexical_vocables_in_music

    Solfège, or solfa, is a technique for teaching sight-singing, in which each note is sung to a special syllable (do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti).; Canntaireachd is an ancient Scottish practice of noting music with a combination of definite syllables for ease of recollection and transmission.