Chords: intervals and scales

Learn notes, solfeggio. Music.

Published by: Alexey Ovod
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Description

How to memorize piano or guitar chords? How to learn to build musical intervals? How to learn scales and modes?
Chords is your music trainer to help you learn piano, guitar or ukulele sheet music. By doing the exercises, you will be able to remember the names of notes, intervals, chords, scales.
You can practice piano chords and scales using a MIDI keyboard. If you want to learn ukulele or guitar chords, you can use a microphone. Our application can recognize notes by ear.
We offer you three basic exercises in mastering music theory:
Musical intervals.
In the classes on building musical intervals, you will master the basics of musical theory, solfeggio and harmony. You will learn how to quickly build musical intervals from any note. Get used to recognizing notes and musical intervals by ear. Our app, like a real music teacher, will give you musical tasks throughout the day.
Chords for piano and guitar.
You will learn major, minor, triad, and seventh chords. You can watch jazz, blues guitar chords. As you practice, you will have the opportunity to use a MIDI keyboard or microphone so you can learn guitar tabs or learn piano chords.
Musical modes and scales for piano and guitar.
Knowledge of musical scales and modes is required for every musician. You will learn natural, harmonic, melodic major and minor scales. Remember the Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, Locrian musical modes. Memorize the notes and rules for constructing musical scales. Studying music theory, solfeggio, harmony, will help you compose songs, write blues and jazz improvisations and melodies.
Solve chord progressions. Build guitar tabs. Train your ear for music. Learn to read sheet music. Play musical intervals. If you study independently, with a music teacher, do exercises for the piano, guitar, then you will become a successful musician.
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Chords FAQ

  • Is Chords free?

    Yes, Chords is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.

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  • How much does Chords cost?

    Chords is free.

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User Rating
App is not rated in Lithuania yet.
Ratings History

Chords Reviews

Instructions

tom4288 on

United States

You need to provide detailed instructions on how to use your app. I cannot quite figure it out

Options

Bklyn12345 on

United States

There should be an option to turn off enharmonics and double sharps and flats

Nice app

Natedkg on

United States

Great for staying sharp. However I’d love to see an option to select keys without the piano help. I find myself needing to picture the piano keys to try and remember scales. The piano display feels like a crutch.

Shows Promise

Piano Teacher Suzanne on

United States

I primarily wanted this app to improve my ability to play modal scales. While the app shows promise, the scale exercises don’t start by playing the tonic note. This is extremely frustrating, and makes it hard to hear the scale in one’s mind. On playback, the user finally hears the starting note of the scale…but not the ending note. This is interferes with ear-training for scales. Why did the designer leave out the tonic, the most important note of the scale? Also, not having the tonic throws off the learning in another way. For example, Dorian scales become too easy because the first note that actually plays fools the ear into building a minor scale, using the first note we do hear (the second degree of the scale) as the pseudo-tonic. This could be seen as cheating, but it’s really a problem of poor app design. Four other problems exist with the scales exercises: 1) There is no way to choose the difficulty level. A player is automatically presented with scales such as Cb and E#. 2) On some of the scales, the tonic note isn’t shown on the keyboard. When I was playing, Cb minor did not show the B key. It showed only the C key at the far left of the screen. 3) The hints are given as interval distances, but from the tonic note! I have never seen it done this way. It is not wrong, and perhaps this is how scales are taught in some countries. Since the intervals described are from the tonic note, though, the app really should play the sound of the tonic. 4) The scoring is discouraging: The player has to input six notes for each scale. If one is incorrect, the whole scale is marked wrong, even if the player corrected it before inputting the next note and got the other five right. I do still find the app useful for learning modal scales, and there appears to be no other app like it. Also, I applaud the developer for allowing the user to choose whether to use letters, Do-Re-Mi’s, Sa-Rhe-Ga, and other systems for naming the notes. I would like to see the developer fix the problems above. Also, I request that the developer add numerical scale degrees (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7) in addition to letter names and Do-Re-Mi’s for the naming the notes.

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488

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App Info

Category
Music
Publisher
Alexey Ovod
Languages
English, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian
Recent release
1.3 (10 months ago )
Released on
Dec 28, 2021 (2 years ago )
Last Updated
2 days ago