Sing In Tune
Precision. Confidence. Control.
Singing in tune isn't just talent—it's trainable. Build internal pitch accuracy one step at a time through guided lessons in ear training, audiation, and real-world application. You'll sing better not by watching a tuner, but by learning to hear, predict, and adjust pitch with your own voice.
This is how confident singers tune: by ear, by instinct, by design.
Lessons
Each lesson builds your strength and control. Tap or click a lesson below to continue.
Lesson 0 – Introduction to the Module
Most singers don't start with a strong head voice—and that's no surprise. In daily life, we rarely use the muscles it depends on. This course helps you build that coordination with short, focused lessons that add up over time.
Lesson 1 – What Is Pitch—and How Do We Hear It?
Most singers think of pitch as something external—something a tuner measures or an app displays. But pitch is something your brain builds, interprets, and adjusts in real time. In this lesson, you'll learn how pitch perception works.
Lesson 2 – Matching Pitch with Humming and Vowels
This lesson bridges theory and sensation. You'll start by humming to focus attention on pitch vibration—then open into vowels like "ah" and "ee," learning how to stabilize pitch across different vocal shapes.
Lesson 3 – Introduction to Solfege
Solfege is the tool that turns sound into structure. In this lesson, you'll learn the syllables (Do, Re, Mi, etc.) that map pitch relationships, helping your brain recognize how notes fit together within a key.
Lesson 4 – Singing the Five-Tone Major Scale
Now it's time to sing. The five-note major scale—also called a pentascale—is your first full pitch pattern. It's short, but powerful: it teaches tuning, builds coordination, and introduces the core structure of major tonality.
Lesson 5 – Singing Full Major Scales
Here, the range expands. You'll move from five-note patterns to full octave scales, adding complexity while deepening your ear's ability to anticipate and adjust.
Lesson 6 – Singing Natural Minor Scales for Contrast
Every singer needs to hear contrast to sing in tune. In this lesson, you'll learn the natural minor scale—and how it shifts both emotional tone and pitch tendencies.
Lesson 7 – Small Steps and Jumps
Melodies are built from small moves—steps and skips. This lesson zooms in on four of the most common intervals: minor and major 2nds and 3rds.
Lesson 8 – Perfect Intervals: The Backbone of Musical Stability
Not all intervals are created equal. The perfect 4th, 5th, and octave are called "perfect" for a reason—they're stable, resonant, and essential.
Lesson 9 – From Intervals to Music
You've learned to sing intervals—now it's time to use them. This lesson brings in real melodies: familiar songs where you can test your accuracy and identify interval patterns.
Lesson 10 – Staying in Tune Through Melodies and Songs
Tuning one note is easy. Tuning an entire phrase—without drifting sharp or flat—is the real test. This final lesson is all about consistency and control.