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Whether you need to practice your sight reading skills, improve your ear training abilities, or just learn the fundamental principles of music theory, Practica Musica 4 allows you to do it all. With the release of version 4.5 and its associated new features, Practica Musica is now, more than ever, the most complete music education package available for music theory and ear training.
This award-winning music training software includes more than 80 theory and ear training activities, each allowing students to focus on specific skills, such as rhythm tapping, interval recognition, chord spelling, polyphonic dictation, etc.
Best of all, Practica Musica 4 allows students to work at their own pace, providing interactive feedback and tracking user progress until mastery of each concept is achieved!
A Wide Variety of Customizable Activities
Practica Musica currently features more than 80 activities, 27 of them specifically designed to accompany Ars Nova's new textbook, Exploring Theory with Practica Musica. As more activities are created, they are posted to a of Ars Nova's web site for free download. Difficulty levels range from beginning to advanced. Here is a list of many activities included with Practica Musica 4:
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Pitch Matching
Pitch Reading
Rhythm Matching
Rhythm Reading
2 Part Rhythm Reading
Pitch & Rhythm Reading
Interval Playing
Interval Spelling
Interval Ear Training
Scales and Key Signatures
Spelling Scales
Scale Ear Training
Chord Playing
Chord Spelling
Chord Ear Training
Chord Progression Ear Training
Pitch Dictation
Rhythm Dictation
Pitch & Rhythm Dictation
Melody Writing
2 Part Pitch Dictation
4 Part Pitch Dictation
Hearing Altered Chords
Progressive Dictation
Visual Chords
Visual Intervals
Building Intervals
Interval Series
Speed Intervals
Active Listening
Real Transposition
Tonal Transposition
You-choose Scales
You-choose Intervals
You-choose Chords
Composition Tools
2 Part Writing Tools
4 Part Writing Tools
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Vertical Reading
Dictation with Chords
Atonal Dictation
Non-Harmonic Tones
Modal Melodies
Pitch Errors
Transposed Pitch Reading
Reading in Keys
Rounds
4 Part Writing Tools
Chorale Writing
Shaping Melody
Reading Syncopation
Reading Triplets
Tonics
Building Triads
Recognizing Sevenths
Tonal Sequencing
Playable Textbook Examples
Additional Beginning Activities:
The Keyboard
Wholestep and Halfstep
Octaves
Reading Treble Clef
Reading Bass Clef
Reading Accidentals
Placing Barlines
Lines and Spaces
Meter Examples
Single Pitches
Transcribe Alto Clef
Recognizing Triads
Recognizing Primary Chords (in progression)
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Each of the above activities can be customized to meet the needs of a specific individual or curriculum -- instructors can even create their own activities for inclusion in their students' activities folders.
Polyphonic Capabilities
Many theory and ear training activities have been included in Practica Musica 4 that take advantage of the program's unique polyphonic capabilities. Practica Musica can now perform rhythm tapping or sight reading exercises in two parts and can tutor students through more advanced ear training exercises such as four-part dictation or chord progression identification. In the chord progression exercises, the voicing of each chord can be displayed in full.
New Sounds
Practica Musica for Macintosh can use Quicktime instruments for output, as well a variety of sampled instruments with 16-bit output resolution for clarity in inner voices. Practica Musica for Windows uses either the sampled sounds, the computer's sound card sythesizer or SoftSynth (if available).
MIDI Compatibility
Though MIDI is not required (except in sight-reading exercises involving both pitch and rhythm) it is often helpful. Practica Musica for the Mac OS X uses OS X's built-in MIDI capabilities so no third party MIDI management software is required. Mac users with OS 8.6 - 9.2.2 can use OMS or FreeMIDI, either via a serial port or USB. Windows users can plug directly to the joystick port found on most sound cards, or to a USB port with a USB interface.
Vocalis Voice Input Technology
New Vocalis voice input technology allows Practica Musica users to sing or play instruments into activities such as Pitch Reading, Interval Playing, etc. Voice input is done using any standard USB microphone.
Notation Tools
Practica Musica's notation tools allow students to write not only melodies, but also chorales and other polyphonic compositions. Music can be heard, saved and printed -- perfect for class assignments. The music file format is the same for both the Macintosh and Windows versions, so files created on one platform can be read and edited by the other.
New Coordinated Textbook
Exploring Theory with Practica Musica (Evans) is a friendly and engaging textbook that provides full coverage of music fundamentals topics, plus a section of tear-out written exercises and music for class use. Using Practica Musica in conjunction with Exploring Theory... enables students to put concepts into practice with immediate feeback -- the new "Textbook Activities" illustrate and reinforce nearly every topic introduced in the book. Students also can refer to Practica Musica to hear all of the music examples printed in the text. Students respond enthusiastically to this multimedia approach because it makes the subject matter both more accessible and more vital, and the new Student Edition makes this advantage available to academic institutions at textbook prices.
New in version 4.5
Practica Musica v.4.5, released in early 2003, introduced several new features. The most significant of these are:
- Mac OS X compatibility.
- Vocalis voice input technology allowing users to sing or play instrumental input into activities such as Pitch Reading, Interval Playing, etc. (voice input is done using any standard USB microphone).
- New large and small screen pianos that you can switch with a single click
- New "Tool Tips" are small boxes with explanatory text that pop up when you hold the mouse cursor over a tool.
- Now you can operate with no student file.
- Mac dialog windows have been enlarged for easier reading.
- More control over the range of generated melodies.
- New arrows make several exercises easier to follow.
- Define chords with a root that is not actually present.
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