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  2. Do-Re-Mi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do-Re-Mi

    "Do-Re-Mi" is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound of Music. Each syllable of the musical solfège system appears in the song's lyrics, sung on the pitch it names. Rodgers was helped in its creation by long-time arranger Trude Rittmann who devised the extended vocal sequence in the song.

  3. Tonic sol-fa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonic_sol-fa

    In 1872, Curwen changed his former course of using the Sol-fa system as an aid to sight reading, when that edition of his Standard Course of Lessons excluded the staff and relied solely on Tonic Sol-fa. In 1879 the Tonic Sol-Fa College was opened. Curwen also began publishing, and brought out a periodical called the Tonic Sol-fa Reporter and ...

  4. Solfège - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège

    "Ti" is used in tonic sol-fa (and in the famed American show tune "Do-Re-Mi"). Some authors speculate that the solfège syllables (do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti) might have been influenced by the syllables of the Arabic solmization system called درر مفصّلات Durar Mufaṣṣalāt ("Detailed Pearls") (dāl, rā', mīm, fā', ṣād, lām ...

  5. Tonic Sol-fa (a cappella group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonic_Sol-fa_(a_cappella...

    Tonic Sol-fa is an a cappella quartet from the Minneapolis–Saint Paul region. With a largely pop-music -oriented repertoire, their CDs have sold over 2,000,000 copies, [ 1 ] and the group has toured throughout the US and abroad.

  6. Solmization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solmization

    The seven syllables normally used for this practice in English-speaking countries are: do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, and ti (with sharpened notes of di, ri, fi, si, li and flattened notes of te, le, se, me, ra). The system for other Western countries is similar, though si is often used as the final syllable rather than ti.

  7. Joseph Parry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Parry

    Parry was also involved in music-related publishing. Beginning in 1861, he was a regular contributor of Tonic sol-fa material to the Welsh music journal, Y cerddor Cymreig. [82] Parry's work with making Tonic sol-fa accessible allowed everyone with an interest in choral work to participate. [83]

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  9. John Pyke Hullah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Pyke_Hullah

    From 1839, when he went to Paris to investigate various systems of teaching music to large masses of people, he identified himself with Wilhem's system of the fixed "do," in contrast to the moveable "do" of the Tonic sol-fa. His adaptation of Wilhem's system was taught with enormous success from 1840 to 1860.