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tonic sol-fa


n. Music.

A system of notation that is based on relationships between tones in a key and that replaces the usual staff notation with solmization syllables, such as do, re, and mi, or their abbreviations.


 
 
Music Encyclopedia: Tonic Sol-fa

A form of musical notation and a system of teaching sight-singing which depends on it; both were designed by John Curwen in mid-19th-century England. Curwen based his system on a treatise by Sarah Glover, which used a system similar to that of Solmization. Curwen's system used the syllables doh, ray, mi, fah, soh, lah and te for the notes of a rising major scale (each abbreviated to its initial letter in actual notation); chromatic degrees are noted by changing the vowel (the sharpened subdominant is fe, the flattened leading note ta), and a system of printed punctuation marks indicates rhythm. The system has a ‘movable doh ’ where, at a modulation, a new tonic is named doh. The doh is defined at the beginning of a piece, or the lah if it is in a minor key (in which case an extra syllable, bah, is used for the sharpened 6th).

The Tonic Sol-fa system was extensively used in 19th-century England and remains popular in many parts of the world; Curwen founded a Tonic Sol-fa College in London in 1869, which still exists. Often the initial letters of the system are used as a teaching aid without the rest of the system. Though not a substitute (as was once proposed) for staff notation, Tonic Sol-fa remains a valuable aid for those who cannot read staff notation and for the learning of it. A modified version was adopted by Kodály for use in Hungarian schools and it remains widely used for educational purposes.



 
Wikipedia: tonic sol-fa
This article is about the system of solfege and music notation. For the a cappella group, see Tonic Sol-fa (a cappella group)
Solfege table in an Irish classroom
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Solfege table in an Irish classroom

Tonic sol-fa is a pedagogical technique for teaching sight-singing, invented by John Curwen. It uses a system of musical notation based on movable do solfege, whereby every tone is given a name according to its relationship with other tones in the key: the usual staff notation is replaced with anglicized solfege syllables (e.g. do, reh, me, fa, so, la, te, do) or their abbreviations (d,r,m,f,s,l,t,d). "Do" is chosen to be the tonic of whatever key is being used (thus the terminology moveable Do).

Some of the roots of tonic sol-fa may be found in items such as

  • the use of syllables in the 11th century by the monk Guido de Arezzo
  • the cipher notation proposed by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in France in 1746,
  • its further development by Pierre Galin and popularization by Aimé Paris and Emile Chevé, and
  • the Norwich sol-fa of Sarah Ann Glover of England. Reverend John Curwen (1816-1880) was instrumental in the development of tonic sol-fa in England, and was chiefly responsible for its popularity.
    Depiction of Curwen's Solfege hand signs. This version includes the tonal tendencies and interesting titles for each tone.
    Enlarge
    Depiction of Curwen's Solfege hand signs. This version includes the tonal tendencies and interesting titles for each tone.

When John Windet printed the 1594 edition of the Sternhold and Hopkins Psalter, he added the initials of the six syllables of Guido (U, R, M, F, S, L) underneath the note. Windet explained, "...I have caused a new print of note to be made with letter to be joined to every note: whereby thou mayest know how to call every note by his right name, so that with a very little diligence thou mayest more easilie by the viewing of these letters, come to the knowledge of perfect solfeying..." Rousseau, Curwen and others would have been aware of this popular psalter.

B. C. Unseld and Theodore F. Seward, with Biglow and Main publishers, imported Curwen's tonic sol-fa to the United States, though the method was never widely received. Prior to this, the 9th edition of the Bay Psalm Book (Boston, USA) had appeared with the initials of four-note syllables (fa, sol, la, me) underneath the staff. Reverend John Tufts, in his An Introduction to the Singing of Psalm Tunes in a Plaine & Easy Method, moved the initials of the four-note syllables onto the staff in place of "regular notes", and indicated rhythm by punctuation marks to the right of the letters. These may be considered American forerunners of Curwen's system, though he may not have been aware of them. Tufts' Introduction was popular, going through several editions. Nevertheless, his work probably did more to pave the way for shape notes. When Unseld and Steward introduced tonic sol-fa in the late 1800s, it was considered "something new".

Zoltán Kodály (1882-1967) of Hungary championed the system in more modern times, building on Curwen's work. He introduced a set of hand signals which correspond to each solfege syllable.

In 1972 Roberto Goitre printed one of the most important modern metod il Cantar Leggendo with the moveable Do.

Solmization that represents the functions of pitches (such as tonic sol-fa) is called "functional" solmization. All musicians that use functional solmization use "do" to represent the tonic (also known as the "keynote") in the major mode. However, approaches to the minor mode fall into two camps. Some musicians use "do" to represent the tonic in minor (a parallel approach), whereas others prefer to label the tonic in minor as "la" (a relative approach) Both systems have their advantages: The former system more directly represents the scale-degree functions of the pitches in a key; the latter more directly represents the intervals between pitches in any given key signature.

Tonic Sol-fa examples

References

  • The Teacher's Manual of the Tonic Sol-fa Method: Dealing with the Art of Teaching and the Teaching of Music, by John Curwen ISBN 0-86314-118-8

 
 

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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tonic sol-fa" Read more

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