Piano Guidance
Photo by G.O.D   picture Pexels Logo Photo: G.O.D picture

Is there a Grade 7 music?

Grade 7 is a small step up from grade 6 music theory. The knowledge of harmony that you built up in grade 6 is extended slightly, with a few more colourful chords, and the tasks you are asked to perform are a little bit more technical.

Should I get 60% or 65% keyboard?
Should I get 60% or 65% keyboard?

Should I get one? If the only thing keeping you from 60% keyboards is the lack of arrow keys, you should go for the 65%. Just keep in mind that...

Read More »
Is C-flat real?
Is C-flat real?

C-flat major is the only major or minor key, other than theoretical keys, which has "flat" or "sharp" in its name, but whose tonic note is the...

Read More »

How would you like to learn?

Other options:

What's Tested at Grade 7 ABRSM Music Theory?

Grade 7 is a small step up from grade 6 music theory.

The knowledge of harmony that you built up in grade 6 is extended slightly, with a few more colourful chords, and the tasks you are asked to perform are a little bit more technical. Your knowledge of how musical styles in the Western world changed over the eras will also be tested.

The exam is divided into 5 questions:

Writing out chords in figured bass for a given bass/melody line. Reconstructing a piece of music based on the given harmonic outline and melodic ideas. Composition: either completing the melody for an instrument with a given piano accompaniment, or composing a melody based on a given opening/harmonic progression. Answering questions about a printed score, for any number of instruments. Questions could be about chords/harmony/cadences, structure, instruments, key/modulations, intervals, notation (symbols/foreign terms), ornaments & melodic decoration, style and so on. As question 4, but based on a different musical score. The exam is marked out of 100, and 66 points are needed to be awarded a pass certificate. For 80-89 points you will be awarded a certificate with "merit" and for 90-100 points with "distinction".

How Hard is Grade 7 Music Theory?

Anyone who has braved the jump from grade 5 to grade 6 should be relieved to find that grade 7 is not such a quantum leap! It is a stepping stone level between the very respectable grade 6 exam, and the highly prized grade 8.

What are the Benefits of Taking the Exam?

Undertaking formal music education does amazing things to your brain. Keeping your brain sharp in the music department can help you in many areas, including:

reading skills analytical skills attention to detail memory improvement

Apart from giving your brain a mental workout, studying music theory will improve your overall experience in music: deeper understanding of the music you play and listen to ability to make informed decisions in the way you interpret music increased sensitivity to the music you are playing greated confidence in your own abilities sense of achievement As with grade 6, a grade 7 music theory certificate will earn you useful UCAS points (UK university entrance points). A pass (66%) gets you 10 points, a merit (80% gets you 15, and a distinction (90%) earns you 20 points. Grade 7 music theory can make a real difference to your UCAS application form.

What grade is Fur Elise on the piano?
What grade is Fur Elise on the piano?

grade 5 It's around grade 5 (ABRSM) or grade 7 (RCM) so very much in the intermediate realm if we're judging by the formal standards of the...

Read More »
What are the 20 shortcut keys and their functions?
What are the 20 shortcut keys and their functions?

Basic Windows keyboard shortcuts Ctrl+W: Close. Ctrl+A: Select all. Alt+Tab: Switch apps. Alt+F4: Close apps. Win+D: Show or hide the desktop....

Read More »

ABRSM Grade 7 Syllabus

The following is an excerpt from the ABRSM's published syllabus for Music Theory Exams Grade 7 As in preceding grades, with the addition of recognition of all diatonic secondary seventh chords and their inversions, the Neapolitan sixth and the diminished seventh chords, and of all ?gures commonly used by composers during the period c.1620–1790 to indicate harmonies above a bass part. Questions will cover: The indication of chords and movement of the inner parts by ?guring the bass in a passage in which both the melody and bass are given. Rewriting a given passage to include appropriate suspensions and notes of melodic decoration. Continuation of a given opening for solo instrument with keyboard accompaniment, which will be given in full throughout the passage, by completing the solo part, or(at the candidate’s choice) composition of a melody for a speci?ed instrument (a choice will be given) based on a given progression of chords or melodic ?gure. Questions on short extracts of music written for piano or in open score for voices or for any combination of instruments and/or voices, designed to test the candidate’s knowledge of the elements and notation of music, including the realization of ornaments, the identi?cation and notation of underlying harmonic structure, phrase structure, style, performance, and on the voices and instruments for which the works were written.

Click here to download the complete syllabus for grades 1-8 Music Theory.

Is it worth to lube my keyboard key?
Is it worth to lube my keyboard key?

If your switches feel extra scratchy or sound rattly, lubing them will improve both the sound and feel instantly. There is a reason why lubing your...

Read More »
What key is always by Blink 182?
What key is always by Blink 182?

of B Major Always is written in the key of B Major. According to the Theorytab database, it is the 11st most popular key among Major keys and the...

Read More »
Does old ivory have value?
Does old ivory have value?

It has no intrinsic value, but its cultural uses make ivory highly prized. In Africa, it has been a status symbol for millennia because it comes...

Read More »
What was Hitler's first Army called?
What was Hitler's first Army called?

By the end of 1921, Hitler had his own private army, the “Sturmabteilung” (“Assault Division”), or SA, whose members were known as storm troopers...

Read More »