Tenuto

Tenuto

By musictheory.net

  • Category: Music
  • Release Date: 2011-08-30
  • Current Version: 4.2
  • Adult Rating: 4+
  • File Size: 11.32 MB
  • Developer: musictheory.net
  • Compatibility: Requires iOS 12.4 or later.
Score: 4.73322
4.73322
From 566 Ratings

Description

Tenuto is a collection of 24 highly-customizable exercises designed to enhance your musicality. From recognizing chords on a keyboard to identifying intervals by ear, it has an exercise for you. Tenuto also includes six musical calculators for accidentals, intervals, scales, chords, analysis symbols, and twelve-tone matrices. A short description of the exercises and calculators follows. For a full list of all available customizations, visit the "Developer Website" link on this page or open http://tenuto.link/features/ in your web browser. –––––– • Note Identification • Key Signature Identification • Interval Identification • Scale Identification • Chord Identification Tap the button corresponding to the written staff line. For example: if shown a C, E, and G with a sharp; tap the "Augmented Triad" button. –––––– • Note Construction • Key Signature Construction • Interval Construction • Scale Construction • Chord Construction Construct the specified label by moving notes and/or adding accidentals. For example: if shown a C and an "Augmented 4th" label, move the second note to F and add a sharp. –––––– • Keyboard Reverse Identification Tap the piano key corresponding to the written note on the staff. While similar to Note Identification, this exercise uses a piano keyboard rather than note name buttons. • Keyboard Note Identification • Keyboard Interval Identification • Keyboard Scale Identification • Keyboard Chord Identification Tap the button corresponding to the highlighted piano key(s). If the C and G keys are highlighted, tap the "P5" (Perfect 5th) button. –––––– • Fretboard Note Identification • Fretboard Interval Identification • Fretboard Scale Identification • Fretboard Chord Identification Tap the button corresponding to the marked fretboard position(s). If the 2nd fret of the D string is marked, tap the "E" button. –––––– • Keyboard Ear Training • Note Ear Training Listen to the played reference and question notes. Select the piano key or note button corresponding to the question note. • Interval Ear Training • Scale Ear Training • Chord Ear Training Tap the button corresponding to the played notes. If E and F are played, tap the "Minor 2nd" button. –––––– • Accidental Calculator Display the accidental for a note and key. • Interval Calculator Display the interval for a note, type, and key. • Chord Calculator Display the scale for a tonic and scale type. • Chord Calculator Display the chord for a note, type, and key. • Analysis Calculator Display the chord for a symbol and key. • Matrix Calculator Display the twelve-tone matrix for a specified tone row.

Screenshots

Reviews

  • Best app for beginners

    5
    By Beelze-b
    I am learning guitar. Been at it for a little over a year. This app was instrumental in helping me internalize the fretboard. I finally started the ear training sections, and it is super useful. Just showed it to my guitar teacher, and he was surprised such a professional tool existed for beginners. So many options for customizing your lessons too.
  • Great App!

    5
    By Slsjdbe
    Are there any chances of adding more scales for scale identification?
  • Bass position symbols training

    5
    By Thepizzaman121
    I love this app! It has definitely contributed to me having A’s in music theory and my ear training class. The only thing i think it needs is bass position symbol training. Thank you!
  • Wonderful app

    5
    By Geography Appreciator
    Hi, Love the app so much, it’s taught me a bunch. I like how for example in sheet music interval identification the treble and bass are lined up by middle C so it gives you a sense of that link between them, but it would also be wonderful to have a setting making them farther apart, as they usually are in sheet music, and practice naming those intervals between clefs even with that extra distance. Also, more specific chord ear training would be nice - with a reference note, play the exact chord on the little keyboard. As of now you can only practice naming the quality of the chord, which is useful too but not in the same way.
  • My favorite app on the App Store.

    5
    By Skunk//Ape
    I have been using this app to gamify my learning and get good at piano relatively quickly. I use it to practice on the go and at the keyboard. It has helped me rapidly become fluent at reading sheet music. Now I am learning to identify intervals and other important aspects of learning to play jazz. And since, to me, there is nothing cooler than learning to play music, I think this is maybe the impactful to my life, as well as my favorite, app on the App Store.
  • Features

    5
    By rayyyrom
    All a feature that lets us answer interval questions via letter name. Example : What is a M7 of C backwards From a collection of letter notes, I would answer Db
  • Well worth it for a teacher

    5
    By Evp73
    Been using the website for years so I decided to support them and buy there app. Now I don’t need an internet connection. Great app for teaching I use it for all my students
  • Arpeggio identification?

    5
    By Tricked2
    Overall very useful tool for practicing music literacy and ear training. I would be interested in seeing the chord identifier also have the option to show chords as arpeggios ascending and descending.
  • Good, could be better

    5
    By KentArnold
    The exercises in this app are great for someone approaching music theory, or for someone wanting to touch up on chord ID or ear training. The calculators are indeed handy, but there should be exercises for Roman numeral analysis, or cadence ID, and other advanced music theory practice. Other than that, great app. Would recommend for beginner music theory study.
  • Hugely accelerated my learning!

    5
    By vernon t
    I’m learning electric bass and this is helping so much! Instead of playing solitaire or Tetris, or doomscrolling IG, I work the fretboard ID exercises. Turns idle time into music practice even when I’m miles away from my guitar. I’m so glad I found this!

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