Misplaced Pages

Solfège: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 22:37, 3 November 2006 edit71.202.232.142 (talk) External links: linking error not a valid site address← Previous edit Revision as of 05:37, 5 November 2006 edit undo207.64.67.18 (talk) External linksNext edit →
Line 134: Line 134:
* by Neil V. Hawes * by Neil V. Hawes
* *
* By J. Michael Cotta
* by Neil V. Hawes * by Neil V. Hawes



Revision as of 05:37, 5 November 2006

Solfege table in an Irish classroom

In music and sight singing solfege or solmization is a way of assigning syllables to degrees or steps of the diatonic scale. In order, they are: Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So(l), La, Ti (or Si), and Do (for the octave). In India, the origin of solmization was to be found in Vedic texts like the Upanishads, which discuss a musical system of seven notes, realized ultimately in what is known as sargam. In Indian classical music, the notes in order are: Sa, Re, Ga, Ma, Pa, Dha, Ni, Sa. Much later in the West it was a pedagogical technique created by (or at least generally ascribed to) Guido of Arezzo; these names are still used for the notes in Latin countries while in Germanic countries the names of letters of the alphabet are used.

Etymology

"Solfege" came from French solfège in the 1910s. (In French, solfège refers to musical technical skills as a whole: sight reading, writing the score of the music one hears, singing in tune, etc.) The French word in turn came from the Italian solfeggio, which is a combination of sol and fa. Its equivalent since Early Modern English is sol-fa.

The syllable names come from a formerly well-known medieval hymn, entitled Ut queant laxis, in which each successive musical phrase, corresponding to a half line of the first verse, starts on the next higher scale degree in the major scale. The first syllable in each half line corresponds to the solfege syllable, with the exception of the first, "Ut," which was changed in the Seventeenth Century to the more singable "Do," most likely from the Latin Dominus (Lord). The original hymn did not start a phrase upon the seventh scale degree. To fill in this gap, at a later time the Si (or sometimes Ti) was added to the repertoire. The Si was derived from the final phrase of the hymn, Sancte Ioannes (Saint John).

In colloquial language, singers sometimes incorrectly use "solfege" and "sight reading" as synonyms; sight reading means reading the piece without benefit of previous study, or numerical sight-singing, where the solfege syllables are replaced by the numbers one through seven.

In English-speaking countries, solfege is most commonly used with singers. In countries where the fixed Do system is used (see below), solfege is commonly taught to all musicians.

Variations

There are two main types of solfege: moveable Do, in which each syllable corresponds with a scale degree, and fixed Do, in which the syllables correspond to fixed pitches. The advantage of moveable Do is that Do always corresponds to the tonic; the disadvantage is that the singer must do a harmonic analysis of the piece in order to sing the correct syllables. The shaped note system removes this disadvantage. In fixed Do, the pitches are set: the tonic, Do, is C, Re is D, and so on; Fa is easy to remember, since it is F.

There are also other syllables corresponding to notes outside of the major scale. All the solfege syllables are listed in the table below; the syllables in the major scale are shown in bold.

Scale degree Syllable Pronunciation
Unison, Octave Do dough
Augmented unison Di as in deep
Minor second Ra as in hurrah
Major second Re ray
Augmented second Ri as in reach
Minor third Me or Meh or Mé may
Major third Mi as in meat
Perfect fourth Fa as in father
Augmented fourth Fi as in feet
Scale degree Syllable Pronunciation
Diminished fifth Se say
Perfect fifth Sol (or So) like sold
Augmented fifth Si see
Minor sixth Le or Leh lay
Major sixth La as in lava
Augmented sixth Li as in lean
Minor seventh Te or Teh as in table
Major seventh Ti * tea
* In Continental Europe and East Asia, si is the seventh major, instead of ti

Some variations of the syllables are (e.g. the major scale): Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, Si, Do, and Fa, Sol, La, Fa, Sol, La, Mi, Fa. The first variation was common in English-speaking countries until John Curwen changed Si to Ti so each syllable would start with a different letter. The second variation uses four syllables and repeats three of them. This system always has a half step before the syllable "fa". It was once common in England, and, via England, in early America. It has survived in American shape note books such as the Sacred Harp and Southern Harmony. The article Shape note discusses assigning shaped noteheads to correspond with the solfege symbols. John Curwen developed the English Tonic Sol-fa system (see below), in which visual aids such as shape notes removed the difficulty of singing the correct syllables in a moveable Do system.

Tonic Sol-fa

Tonic Sol-fa is a system of musical notation based on relationships between tones in a key. The usual staff notation is replaced with solmization syllables (e.g. do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti, 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). This is the name of one of the most popular among letter systems which was developed by John Curwen of England.

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

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.

Common scales

Some common scales are given below in solfeggio for reference.

Ascending the chromatic scale (using sharps): Do Di Re Ri Mi Fa Fi Sol Si La Li Ti Do
Descending the chromatic scale (using flats): Do Ti Te La Le Sol Se Fa Mi Mé Re Ra Do
The major scale: Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti Do
The natural minor scale (parallel approach): Do Re Mé Fa Sol Le Te Do
The natural minor scale (relative approach): La Ti Do Re Mi Fa Sol La
The harmonic minor scale: Do Re Mé Fa Sol Le Ti Do
The ascending melodic minor scale: Do Re Mé Fa Sol La Ti Do
The descending melodic minor scale: Do Te Le Sol Fa Mé Re Do

In atonal music, integer notation is often sung rather than solfege.

Solfege in popular culture

  • Do-Re-Mi is a song featured in the musical The Sound of Music. Within the story, it is used by Maria to teach the notes of the major musical scale to the Von Trapp children. The song is notable in that each syllable of the diatonic scale appears as solfege in its lyrics, sung on the pitch it names.
  • A Japanese animated series with a musical theme is known as Ojamajo Doremi, with the English language version known as Magical DoReMi. In the Japanese series it is about a girl named Doremi and two of her friends, but the dub changed their names to Dorie, Reanne, and Mirabelle. The fairies in said show are known as Dodo, Rae Rae (Rere in the Japanese version), and Mimi, all given to reflect solfege as well.
  • Hawkwind named their 1972 album Doremi Fasol Latido.

See also

External links

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
Category: