• Latest
  • Trending
Dr. Floyd Richmond

The Legacy of Guido d’Arezzo – Solfège, Part 2

September 19, 2022
How Your Music Boosters Can Help You Become a Better Teacher By Joel Schut & Katherine (Kip) Mason

How Your Music Boosters Can Help You Become a Better Teacher By Joel Schut & Katherine (Kip) Mason

August 22, 2025
Learn About the TeachMusic Coalition

Learn About the TeachMusic Coalition

August 21, 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
Arts Education Strategic Planning: The Ultimate Advocacy Tool By Laurie T. Schell

Arts Education Strategic Planning: The Ultimate Advocacy Tool By Laurie T. Schell

August 21, 2025
Ten Teaching Behaviors That Make a Difference By Dr. Charles T. Menghini

Ten Teaching Behaviors That Make a Difference By Dr. Charles T. Menghini

August 19, 2025
Reflections by Dr. Harry Begian By Dr. Richard Johnson

Reflections by Dr. Harry Begian By Dr. Richard Johnson

August 15, 2025
The Power of Partnerships: University, Communities, and Schools By Christopher M. Baumgartner

The Power of Partnerships: University, Communities, and Schools By Christopher M. Baumgartner

August 14, 2025
The First Week Sets the Tone By Peter Sciaino

The First Week Sets the Tone By Peter Sciaino

August 14, 2025
Band Camp Survival Tips From WindConductor.org

Band Camp Survival Tips From WindConductor.org

August 12, 2025
First Impressions of a Leader by Dr. Matthew Arau

First Impressions of a Leader by Dr. Matthew Arau

August 12, 2025
Headlines

Headlines

August 8, 2025
Colonel Bruce R. Pulver Leader & Commander, The United States Army Band  (Pershing’s Own)

Colonel Bruce R. Pulver Leader & Commander, The United States Army Band (Pershing’s Own)

August 7, 2025
Tempus Fugit by Tom Palmatier, SBO+ Editor-in-Chief

Tempus Fugit by Tom Palmatier, SBO+ Editor-in-Chief

August 6, 2025
Monday, August 25, 2025
  • Contact
SBO+
  • Departments
    • Concert Band
    • Orchestra
      • String Section
    • Choral
    • Marching Band
    • Jazz
    • Modern Band/Popular Music
      • Mariachi
    • Theater
    • Editorial
      • Upclose
      • Advocacy
        • NAfME Neighborhood
        • MAC Corner
        • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
      • Commentary
        • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
        • Leadership Tips
        • Perspective
        • InService
          • America’s Bandmasters
          • America’s Musicians
        • Tone Deaf Comics
      • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
      • New Products
    • Performance
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Technology
    • Travel/Festivals
      • Fundraising
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Awards/Entries
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
  • Subscribe to SBO+
    • Subscribe
    • Login/Manage Subscription
    • Support
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
No Result
View All Result
  • Departments
    • Concert Band
    • Orchestra
      • String Section
    • Choral
    • Marching Band
    • Jazz
    • Modern Band/Popular Music
      • Mariachi
    • Theater
    • Editorial
      • Upclose
      • Advocacy
        • NAfME Neighborhood
        • MAC Corner
        • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
      • Commentary
        • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
        • Leadership Tips
        • Perspective
        • InService
          • America’s Bandmasters
          • America’s Musicians
        • Tone Deaf Comics
      • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
      • New Products
    • Performance
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Technology
    • Travel/Festivals
      • Fundraising
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Awards/Entries
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
  • Subscribe to SBO+
    • Subscribe
    • Login/Manage Subscription
    • Support
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result

The Legacy of Guido d’Arezzo – Solfège, Part 2

September 19, 2022
in Archives, Commentary, Choral
Dr. Floyd Richmond
Share on Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT

By Walter Bitner

Solfège is a practical method for teaching sight-singing (singing music from written notation). Each note of the diatonic scale is assigned a Solfège syllable. This practice is called solmization.

Solfège is the oldest and most widely used system for teaching sight-singing and the ability to read music in the world. It is a training technique and a tool, and it is common for students in music programs to use Solfège every day as part of their musical training.

Guido d’Arezzo (literally, Guido of Arezzo, which is a town in Tuscany) lived from 991 or 992 – 1050. This medieval Benedictine monk is often referred to as the “Father of Music Education” and he is perhaps the most influential musician in history who most people have never heard of. He was a musician, a teacher, and a music theorist, and he was widely known (among his musical contemporaries) during his own lifetime as the author of Micrologus, a treatise on teaching and singing Gregorian Chant and the composition of polyphonic music.

It was Guido who chose the solmization syllables that evolved into the system of Solfège we use today.

The original syllables were:

ut re mi fa sol la si

The first six syllables come from the first syllable in each line of the Latin hymn Ut queant laxis (Hymn to John the Baptist).

  • Ut queant laxis
  • Resonare fibris,
  • Mira gestorum
  • Famuli tuorum,
  • Solve polluti
  • Labii reatum,
  • Sancti Iohannes.

Each of the first six lines of this hymn begins on a note a step higher than the note the previous line began with.

For the seventh note of the diatonic scale, subsequent convention chose the syllable si, a contraction of the first two initials in Sancte Iohannes (Saint John).  Originally, Latin had no letter J.

Guido was responsible for other innovations in music and music education but today he is primarily remembered for the invention of Solfège.  Keeping to our discussion of that, we will leave him here.

“Ut queant laxis” from a contemporary copy of the antiphonale monasticum ~ traditional gregorian chant notation is written in notes sung on a single syllable called “neumes” on a four-line staff

Contemporary Solfège Systems

Although the system of solmization left to us by Guido d’Arezzo has been changed and developed over the last millennium to address the needs of musicians through great changes in musical style and complexity, the basic principles upon which it is based has not changed.  Two of the original syllables – ut and si – have changed in some variations on the method to do and ti, and these are the syllables most familiar to those who use Solfège in the United States.

do re mi fa sol la ti

As will be seen later, these changes have a distinct advantage for the system in that every diatonic syllable begins with a different consonant.  This has several repercussions for the depth in which the system can be applied, and for the fact that when marking music with Solfège syllables (for those in training), diatonic notes can be marked with a single letter (the first letter of the syllable) without confusion.  (There are specific syllables for chromatic notes too; these will be addressed in Part 3.)

Basically, there are three divisions in the way Solfège is used throughout the world.  The method is divided into two distinct styles: fixed do and movable do, and then movable do is further divided into two approaches.

Fixed Do: each syllable corresponds to the (letter) name of a note

Movable Do: each syllable corresponds to a scale degree

In the fixed do system, every note is assigned a Solfège syllable, and the assignment remains regardless of what key the music is in.  For instance, the syllable do is assigned to (letter named note) C, re is D, mi is E, etc.  Therefore, when singing a Major scale using the fixed do system, in the key of C Major the first syllable is do, but in the key of D Major the first syllable is re.

In the movable do system, the syllables correspond to scale degrees rather than fixed notes.  So, the tonic of a Major scale will always be do, regardless of what key the music is in.  A C Major scale will always begin on do, as will a D Major scale – the tonic of a Major scale is always do in the movable do system.

Below is a generalization of the distribution of the use of these two systems throughout the world.  This is a generalization, and exceptions exist probably in every country.  Roughly speaking, those in countries that speak languages derived from Latin mostly use fixed do, whereas those that speak English or German tend to use movable do.

Fixed Do

  • France
  • Italy
  • Spain
  • Portugal
  • Russia
  • Romania
  • South America
  • Parts of North America
  • China
  • Japan
  • Vietnam

Movable Do

  • United Kingdom
  • Australia
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • Indian Classical Music
  • United States
  • English-speaking Canada
  • China
  • Japan

In addition, there are Two Systems of Movable Do:

  •  “la-based minor”

The relationship between Major and minor corresponds to the concept of relative Major and minor

  • “do-based minor”

The relationship between Major and minor corresponds to the concept of parallel Major and minor

In movable do with what is called “la-based minor”, in music set in minor keys the tonic is assigned the syllable la, whereas in the “do-based minor” system the tonic is assigned to do, just as it is in Major.

Which Solfège system is best?

I’ve heard a lot of different opinions about this over the years.  The most consistent thing I have noticed is that, regardless of which system it is, most musicians seem to prefer the one they know.  People are loathe to change, and it becomes more and more true as they get older.  I think it’s more important that teachers and students use Solfège at all than which system they use.  I believe that the use of the system itself improves musicians’ skill and understanding of the patterns and relationships inherent in music-making. I also believe that, with children especially, daily Solfège practice done well and consistently will teach students to read music quickly and thoroughly, as well as provide an excellent tool for developing perfect intonation.

That said, I have noticed that most people regard fixed do as a more difficult system to master.  Since the fixed do disciple must learn a different order and collection of pitches for every key, it is easy to see why.  However, I also believe that the fixed do system is by far the best system to use if you are going to use it to work on learning post-common practice period literature.  If you are a soprano preparing for your role of Marie in Wozzeck, fixed do will be your very good friend in helping you nail all those intervals.

If you are a school music teacher, however, or a choir or band director working with amateur musicians, movable do with la-based minor is more likely to be useful and approachable.  School music teachers especially are often the only music teacher a student has, and as such are responsible for teaching the student everything about music – including not only vocal or instrumental technique, reading music notation, how to function in an ensemble, etc. but also whatever music theory they can squeeze in.  A system that builds in awareness of the relationships between keys the way this method does is a great advantage, in an underhanded way.  Teachers who use this system will see many “aha” moments from their students when after a year or two or three and all of those hours of Solfège practice, everything lines up for a student and the patterns emerge, clear and resonating.  The circle of fifths is not just an abstract chart or design, but a living breathing symbol of our entire tonal music heritage!  Yes, movable do with la-based minor can do this for you and your students.

I’d like to make similar insightful observations about movable do with do-based minor, but unfortunately, I have no experience with it.  I can’t honestly think of any strong reasons to use it with pre-college students.

I have met other musicians, teachers, or directors who instead of Solfège, use numbers.  To them I would say: yes, by all means, use numbers too, it’s important for students to learn the scale degrees in as many ways as possible.  But don’t use numbers as a substitute for Solfège.  As we will see in Part 3, Solfège has a much deeper and more practical application than numbers.  I also believe Solfège is much more artistically satisfying and elegant, and it’s obvious that for singers at least, the fact that all of the vowels of the syllables are pure Latin vowels gives Solfège a great advantage over numbers for working on tone and intonation.

As my primary use of Solfège was as a K-12 music teacher, I always taught movable do with la-based minor to my students, and this is what we will consider more closely in Part 3 in the next issue.

Walter Bitner is a multi-instrumentalist, singer, conductor, and master teacher, and serves as Director of Education & Community Engagement at the Nashville Symphony. He writes about music and education on his blog Off the Podium at walterbitner.com.

You may also like:

Teaching Music with Solfège – Part 3 Default ThumbnailTeaching Modes and Exercises with Solfege Default Thumbnail2011 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report Default ThumbnailTeaching Musical Literacy: Developing the Independent Choral Singer Figure 4The Joy of Solfège
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

POPULAR STORY

  • 50 Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

    50 Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

    1366 shares
    Share 546 Tweet 342
  • When Selecting New Choral Music, Choose Success

    1295 shares
    Share 518 Tweet 324
  • Concert Band Set-up Fundamentals

    1106 shares
    Share 442 Tweet 277
  • The Immediate Threat to School Music Programs

    1011 shares
    Share 404 Tweet 253
  • TI:ME Announces Free PreSonus Revelator USB Microphone at 30th Anniversary Celebration at TMEA

    971 shares
    Share 388 Tweet 243
ADVERTISEMENT

SchoolMusic.Travel

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northwest USA

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northwest USA

Mountains, music, and vibrant cities — the Northwest offers unforgettable experiences for student groups. 🎷 1. Seattle, WA – Innovation Meets Inspiration• Why it’s great:…

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northeast USA

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northeast USA

From Broadway to Boston, the Northeast inspires music students with rich culture and iconic venues. From Broadway lights to historic concert halls, the Northeast is…

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Midwest USA

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Midwest USA

The Midwest is the heartbeat of America — and it beats in 4/4 time. The Midwest is the heartbeat of America — and it beats…

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations on the West Coast

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations on the West Coast

Coastlines, concert halls, and creativity — the West Coast delivers stunning performance opportunities. From iconic performance halls to scenic coastal venues, the West Coast offers…

Next Post
SBO Presents the Class of 2018 Best Tools for Schools Award Recipients

'Practicing with Purpose' from Meredith Music

  • August 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • July 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • June 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • May 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • April 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2025 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

No Result
View All Result
  • Departments
    • Concert Band
    • Orchestra
      • String Section
    • Choral
    • Marching Band
    • Jazz
    • Modern Band/Popular Music
      • Mariachi
    • Theater
    • Editorial
      • Upclose
      • Advocacy
      • Commentary
      • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
      • New Products
    • Performance
      • Woodwinds
      • Percussion
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Technology
    • Travel/Festivals
      • Fundraising
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Awards/Entries
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
  • Subscribe to SBO+
    • Subscribe
    • Login/Manage Subscription
    • Support
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114

Wenger EndurAd Promo