![]() ![]() Musicca is a web-based resource offering a series of aural training exercises, including note-naming (treble clef, bass clef, alto clef, tenor clef, and piano keyboard), intervals, chords, scales, and key signatures. Carol Schlosar has similar resources for vocalists ( Vocal Ear Training) and choral singers ( Sight Singing Solution). Navigate through the Products menu to read more details and see and hear examples for each level. They even include some helpful practice tips. Content includes melody playbacks, rhythm clapbacks, interval and chord identification, and cadences (for advanced levels). This graded series includes ear-training resources for pianists ( student and professional), based on the RCM exams-perfect for daily home practice or studio use!Įach level in the Comprehensive Ear Training series includes recorded practice sessions/mini exams on one or more CDs and a fully-notated answer booklet for checking your work. It records playbacks, clapbacks, and singbacks, analyzes your performance, compares it with the original notation on the screen, and suggests areas for improvement. This app has versions that correspond with the ABRSM levels (iPhone/iPad) and RCM (Music Development Program) levels (beginning with Level 1) (iPhone/iPad/Android). AuralbookĪURALBOOK is another helpful (free!) app for developing musicianship and aural skills. The best part is that I can reuse what I've come up with year after year as students move on to the next level. I have used the recommendations in the musicianship section (see Prep A, shown above) to write my own materials for student assessments during the year (playbacks, clapbacks, singbacks, and sight-reading). This has been an invaluable resource for me in planning programs of study for my students and ensuring the development of technique and musicianship skills that correspond with their playing level.ĭownload a copy of the 2015 Piano Syllabus here. ![]() The content, exams, and assessment materials are the same. The Music Development Program (2013) (formerly the Carnegie Hall Royal Conservatory Achievement Program) is the U.S. *Note: The RCM was founded in Canada in 1886. The 2015 Piano Syllabus is a free digital resource from the Royal Conservatory of Music (RCM) Music Development Program featuring repertoire lists, technique, and musicianship skills (aural skills, sight-reading) by level (Preparatory A, Preparatory B, Levels 1-10). Grades 6-8 are available in a second app (full content for $7.99). The full version (all content for Grades 1-5) is $7.99. The Lite version includes sample content from Grades 1 and 4. The app is available for iPhone and iPad. For echo patterns, the app actually records you singing the patterns back, then plays them back for you with the original piano melody so you can evaluate and assess your performance (using a smiley face rating system). My students love the pulse and meter exercises - simply tap the steady beat on the screen along with the recording, then determine whether the example was in duple or triple meter. Based on the ABRSM exams (Grades 1-8), the app includes exercises for pulse and meter, echo patterns (singbacks), identifying musical differences, and critical music listening, and for more advanced levels, sight-singing, cadences, modulations, and chord identification. The Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music (ABRSM) Aural Trainer app is an excellent resource for helping develop aural skills in your students. *Disclosure: I get commissions for purchases made through links in this post. Here are some noteworthy resources for helping develop aural skills in your students:ĭeveloping Aural Skills in the Piano Studio If you don't already include aural skill experiences in your teaching on a regular basis, I hope this inspires you as much as it has me! I've been doing a little research on this and came across several helpful resources for fostering the development of aural skills in private lessons (and at home) with students of all ages. But what kinds of aural skills experiences are we giving our students before college? How can we incorporate aural skill activities in our weekly studio lessons? aural skills classes in college-sight-reading, singing intervals, singing bass lines, spelling chords. Learning to listen, identify, discern, and understand music without notation present helps develop the inner listening skills needed to become a well-rounded, well-versed musician.Īural skills "help musicians at all levels to become more discerning in the way they play, sing, and listen to music" ( source). Aural skills (also known as ear-training) is a fundamental facet of musicianship. ![]()
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