Master Your Notes, Master the Stage

A practice tool for musicians at any stage to improve their note recognition and playing skills—quickly and effectively.

Made with for and by musicians
This is an opensource app MIT-CC

How It Works

How LearnMusic works

Train Your Muscle Memory

Just 30 random notes a day is all it takes.

Regular, short practice sessions help you build a direct link between your eyes and your fingers. Stop translating notes in your head and start playing them by instinct.

Daily exercises

Daily short exercises to strengthen the link between reading a note and playing it with the correct fingering.

Progressive Learning

You'll start with common notes, then gradually move into new key signatures, accidentals, and more complex patterns.

Advanced Challenges

Prefer a challenge? You can also practise transposing and other advanced skills to take your musicianship to the next level.

Muscle memory

Customise your user interface so it matches how you play your instrument. Your practice fine tunes muscle memory.

Ready to Practice?

Tip: Install as a PWA (Add to Home Screen) to practice offline!

Tip: Once in, use the menu to adapt the challenge (keys, notes, etc).

What Users Say

Join thousands of musicians who’ve improved their skills!

"This app has transformed the way I practice trumpet notes"

Sara T.

"I’ve never been more confident playing the trombone. Thank you!"

John D.

"Perfect for beginners and experienced musicians alike"

About Tootology

Tootology is a free online music practice tool designed to help musicians master note recognition and fingering. Whether you play trumpet, trombone, french horn, tuba, euphonium, or other brass and wind instruments, our progressive exercises help build muscle memory and sight-reading speed.

Practice scales, intervals, and random notes in various key signatures and clefs (Treble, Bass, Alto, Tenor). No signup required, no ads, and works offline as a Progressive Web App (PWA).


Privacy & Origin Story

This app was originally created to help my 12-year-old son, who has dyslexia, learn his trumpet notes when he was struggling. It is now shared entirely for the community. We store no personal information and use no tracking cookies. Your practice is private and safe.