READ.
PLAY.
MASTER.

The modern practice tool for band students. Let's get you set up.

Habits of a Successful Musician
Crocker
Essential Elements
Lautzenheiser et al.
Standard of Excellence
Pearson
None
No method book
🎼
Staff Explorer
Tap any position on the staff to learn note names
🖐️
Fingering Chart
Look up fingerings for any note on your instrument
📖
Vocabulary
Browse music terms and definitions from the method book
🥁
Metronome
Practice with a programmable metronome
🎯
Tuner
Tune your instrument with pitch detection
🎵
Rhythm Explorer
Build rhythms, see counting, and play them back
↕️
Intervals
Explore intervals from generic to augmented & diminished
🎵
Note Reading
Identify and place notes on the staff
🎹
Fingerings
Match notes to fingerings and back
🥁
Rhythms
Read and count rhythmic patterns
↕️
Intervals
Name, identify quality, and build intervals
🧠
Vocabulary
See a term — pick the correct definition
← Select a term to see its definition
0Correct
0Streak
Accuracy
Tap any line or space to see the note name and all fingerings
Mode:
1:00
Progress 0 / 10
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Correct
Accuracy
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Streak
Accuracy
On wrong answer:
Shows correct answer, then advances
NOTE RANGE
Student Settings
MODERATO
120
Beats Per Minute
/
Grouping
Subdivision
Tempo Change
BPM everybars
Gradually increases tempo. Great for building speed on exercises.
Ready
Add sections to begin
100%
𝄐
Fermata
Tap to release
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Instrument
In Tune
±5¢
Close
±15¢
A4
Hz
Reference
Counting
Held Notes
BPM
Notes
Rests
Modifiers
RHYTHM QUIZ
Test your rhythm reading and counting skills
Unison
THE KEYBOARD PATTERN
Half Step (H) Whole Step (W)
A half step is the distance between any key and the very next key — no keys in between.
A whole step is two half steps — there's always one key in between.
E→F and B→C are natural half steps — no black key between them.
All other adjacent natural notes are whole steps.
Tap a key to start
HOW INTERVAL QUALITY WORKS
In Phase 1, you learned that the distance from C up to E is a 3rd. But not all 3rds are the same size — some span 4 half steps, others span 3. That difference is the interval's quality.
There are two families of intervals:
PERFECT
Unison · 4th · 5th · Octave
These intervals have one natural size
MAJOR / MINOR
2nd · 3rd · 6th · 7th
These come in two sizes — major (larger) and minor (smaller)
To find the quality, count the half steps between the two notes on the keyboard. For example: C to E = 4 half steps = Major 3rd. C to E♭ = 3 half steps = Minor 3rd.
Perfect Unison
AUGMENTED & DIMINISHED
In Phase 3, you learned that intervals come in Perfect, Major, and Minor qualities. But intervals can be stretched or shrunk further:
AUGMENTED
One half step larger than Perfect or Major
DIMINISHED
One half step smaller than Perfect or Minor
The pattern:
Perfect intervals: dimPerfectaug
Major/Minor intervals: dimminorMajoraug
For example: C to F = 5 half steps = Perfect 4th. C to F♯ = 6 half steps = Augmented 4th (the tritone).
Perfect Unison
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