Databases

  • MusicTheory.net has everything from quarter notes to the Phrygian dominant scale; itโ€™s a great place to learn to read and understand music.
  • IMSLP (International Music Score Library Project) has free scores of just about anything in the public domain.
  • The VMII Song Database is a catalogue with descriptions and translations of just about every classical song you could possibly want to know about.

Apps

I personally use every one of these apps. Some are free, some have an up-front cost, and some require a subscription, but I have researched and tested each of them and am confident that they are all the โ€œbest bang for your buck.โ€

Accompaniment:

  • $4-$15/month; I can provide a discount code!
  • Huge catalogue of musical theatre and classical songs
  • Options: controlling the key and tempo, adding fermatas, controlling relative volume of melody and accompaniment, and skipping or repeating sections
  • Excellent for practicing songs or, in a pinch, performing if an accompanist is not available

Karaoke:

  • Free preview with limited catalogue, then $10/month
  • Huge catalogue of pop/rock and popular musical theatre music
  • Options: raising/lowering pitch, controlling tempo, controlling volume of backing singers
  • Best for pop music or for karaoke night with friends

Metronome:

  • Free
  • No unnecessary bells and whistles
  • Options: controlling tempo, key signature, etc.

Rhythm Practice:

  • Free for 10 minutes/day; for an upgrade, you get unlimited time daily
  • Phenomenal app for training how to read and tap out rhythms
  • Progresses from simple to very complex
  • Go at your own pace, easily skip or repeat sections as needed
  • I found this after I became a professional musician, and I wish Iโ€™d had it twenty years ago. Within a few weeks, it brought my confidence in reading rhythm from 20% to 90%. I canโ€™t recommend it enough!

Pitch Practice:

  • Free or minimal fee to download
  • Great for students who are struggling with pitch!
  • To use:
    • Sit at a piano or keyboard (or use a separate device with a simple piano app).
    • Itโ€™s best if you can connect it to headphones so the app only hears your voice, but in this case you need to know your note names.
    • Play a note in your range (starting around middle C is safe for everyone; treble voices can go higher, and adult male voices can go lower). Try to sing the same note. Watch the screen to see if you are on the pitch.
    • It is normal for human voices to have a very slight variation in pitch, which will appear as a faint squiggle. Without this, we would sound robotic! However, if the line representing your voice strays too far from the pitch, try again.
    • Remember to engage your breath support and โ€œsecret smile,โ€ as this will help you to โ€œnail the pitch.โ€

Phonetics Education:

  • Useful for singing in foreign language
  • Similar apps are available for Android, but I havenโ€™t explored them

Music Theory Education:

  • I havenโ€™t spent much time on this myself, but from what I can tell it is a highly educational app for music theory and ear training

Scanning Music:

  • I use this whenever I need to turn scan music (or any other documents) out of a book. It works like a charm! I then export them as a PDF by selecting โ€œsave to files,โ€ and then I can email them or import them into Forscore

Managing Music on iPad:

  • $25 to download
  • This is the industry standard for musicians, but unfortunately it is only available for apple devices (iPad); similar apps, like Flat, are available for Android, but Iโ€™m not familiar with them.
  • Allows you to manage and view your music, annotate, add and rearrange pages, manage set lists, store metadata (like song duration, tempo, key, rating, notes, etc.).
  • Also includes a built-in tuner, metronome, scanner, and lots of other features I have yet to explore.