
Mega Music Publisher
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Mega Music Publisher
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Mega Music Publisher
Germany's innovative new publisher combining educational music publishing and music technology, transforming how music is composed, published, taught, learned, and performed.

© 2018 by Rainer Langhans & Marcel Langhans.
Mega Music Publisher
Germany's innovative new publisher combining educational music publishing and music technology, transforming how music is composed, published, taught, learned, and performed.

© 2018 by Rainer Langhans & Marcel Langhans.
Mega Music Publisher
Germany's innovative new publisher combining educational music publishing and music technology, transforming how music is composed, published, taught, learned, and performed.

© 2018 by Rainer Langhans & Marcel Langhans.
Mega Music Publisher
Germany's innovative new publisher combining educational music publishing and music technology, transforming how music is composed, published, taught, learned, and performed.

© 2018 by Rainer Langhans & Marcel Langhans.
Mega Music Publisher
Germany's innovative new publisher combining educational music publishing and music technology, transforming how music is composed, published, taught, learned, and performed.

© 2018 by Rainer Langhans & Marcel Langhans.
Lesson 1
Introduction to Music Notation

IMPACT MUSIC CURRICULUM
A NEW APPROACH TO CLASSROOM ENSEMBLE LEARNING

Here you’ll find all worksheets, scores, and level descriptors organised by tone range, making every piece playable for mixed-instrument and mixed-ability classrooms. Each level builds ensemble skills step by step — from first tone to full expression. Teachers can use this page to quickly access materials, track skill progression, and guide students through the IMPACT curriculum with clarity and confidence. The levels are flexible and can be revisited or adapted to meet the needs of every ensemble.


1 - First Sound (G)
Students begin by choosing their instrument and learning which family it belongs to. They are shown how to assemble, disassemble, and care for non-stationary instruments (recorders, violins, flutes, guitars, mallets, etc.) so they can handle them safely and confidently.
Once set up, students learn how to hold and position their instrument, produce their first clear and steady note (G), and develop good posture and basic technique. Level 1 introduces the musical staff, steady beat, quarter notes and rests, simple echo patterns, one-note motifs, and first ensemble playing.

Worksheets - Score



2 - Tone Range E–F (Add F)
Building on Level 1, students strengthen their basic musicianship through repetition of essential skills: correct posture, embouchure, stick and mallet grip, guitar hand position, and violin bow hold. They review the four instrument families, choose their instrument with confidence, and learn basic assembly, disassembly, and maintenance routines.
With two notes (E and F), students begin shaping short motifs and simple patterns while practising smooth tone transitions and accurate finger changes. Ensemble work focuses on steady 4/4 counting, echo patterns, clear attacks, and developing confidence in playing short musical ideas together.


3 - Tone Range E–F–G (Add E)
Students learn their first stepwise melodies and begin shaping real musical phrases. Reading becomes more fluent as they connect how notes fit into basic chord patterns and two-part musical ideas.



4- Tone Range D–G (Add D)
Students expand their tone range by adding D, unlocking longer melodic patterns and stronger reading skills. They learn repeat signs, double bars, simple formal structures, and the difference between major and minor sounds. Ensemble activities strengthen steady pulse, develop clear articulation, and build confidence in playing together with accurate timing.


5 - Tone Range C–G (Pentatonic Foundations)
Students make a major step forward by adding B and learning to read and perform eighth-note patterns with confidence. This level develops precision through march and swing styles, strengthens dynamic control (p–mf–f), and introduces pick-up notes and 1st/2nd endings. With folk tunes, rhythmic raps, and early duets, learners build expression, steady pulse, and growing rhythmic independence.

Worksheets - Score



6 - Tone Range C–A (Add A & First Rounds)
Students expand their tone range by adding A, strengthening control, accuracy, and confidence when moving across C–A. They develop steadier long-tone playing, refine posture and breath control, and begin shaping expressive musical lines. Through folk songs, simple duets, and early rounds, learners build ensemble awareness, follow fermatas, and gain their first experience with harmony. This level reinforces steady pulse, clear tone production, and teamwork as students learn to enter, balance, and finish together as a unified group.


7 - Tone Range B–A (Add B & Eighth Notes)
Students take a major step forward by adding the note B and learning to play eighth-note patterns with accuracy and steady coordination. They explore dynamic contrasts (p–mf–f), 1st and 2nd endings, pickup notes, and the feel of 2/4 time. March, swing, and folk styles help strengthen rhythmic independence, steady pulse, and expressive phrasing. Learners develop precision through tapping and beaming exercises, shape melodic lines with clear dynamic control, and build confidence performing short tunes with contrasting styles and tempos.

Worksheets - Score



8 - Tone Range A–A
Students expand their note range with A and B, completing the A-minor scale and discovering its expressive, darker tone. This level develops confident control of dynamics, including crescendos and decrescendos, and introduces dotted half notes and ties to shape longer musical lines. Through rounds, chorales, folk songs, and early blues patterns, learners strengthen ensemble balance, steady pulse, and unified tone production. Activities in 2/4, 4/4, and cut time reinforce rhythmic accuracy and independence, while expressive phrasing, articulation, and musical shaping prepare students to perform together with increasing confidence.
Worksheets - Score
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Hey, Ho! Nobody's Home
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Clap the Dynamics
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Play the Dynamics
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Tone Builder
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Rhythm Etude
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Rhythm Rap
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Chorale
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Aura Lee
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Frère Jacques
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When the Saints Go Marching In
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Old MacDonald Had a Band
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Ode to Joy (from Symphony No. 9)
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Hard Rock Blues –
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Fit to Be Tied
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Alouette
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Alouette – The Sequel
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Camptown Races​
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score



9 - Tone Range A–A & Expanding Skills in 3/4 and Articulation
Students refine expression through accents, ties, dotted rhythms, and the flowing feel of 3/4 meter. Building on the full tone range learned so far (C–A), they strengthen phrasing, balance, and rhythmic independence across varied styles—waltzes, chorales, raps, and folk tunes. The level also deepens ensemble awareness through dynamic shaping and concludes with students composing their own short melodies.

Worksheets - Score
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New Directions
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The Nobles
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Essential Elements Quiz
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Rhythm Rap
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Three Beat Jam
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BarcarolleMorning (from Peer Gynt)
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Chiapanecas
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Essential Creativity
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score



10 - Bâ™, Accents & Triple Meter
Students learn their first accidental (Bâ™), develop accented rhythms in 2/4, and explore flowing phrasing in 3/4. They discover the colour of Eâ™ in simple blues lines, read the F-major key signature, and follow first and second endings with confidence. Cultural styles, pentatonic melodies, and ensemble rounds strengthen musical shape, articulation, and secure group performance.


11 - High C, Waltz Flow & Musical Shape
Students reach high C and explore elegant 3/4 phrasing, legato shaping, D.C. al Fine navigation, expressive dynamics, and classical themes. Calypso rhythms deepen awareness of articulation, musical form, and overall phrasing.

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The Big Airstream
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The Merry Widow Waltz)
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Air Time
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Down by the Station
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Essential Elements Quiz
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Essential Creativity
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Tone Builder
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Rhythm Builder
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Technique Trax
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Chorale (Adapted from Bach’s Cantata No. 147)
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Variations on Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star
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Banana Boat Song
Worksheets - Score



12 - F♯, Legato Flow & Syncopation
Introducing F♯ adds a new colour to the tone palette. Students refine smooth legato playing, learn to contrast slurs vs. tongued/reattacked notes, and read syncopated rhythms confidently. Repertoire in this level builds strong dynamic shaping, expressive phrasing, and light ragtime-style articulation — suitable for all instruments, not just winds.


13 - Leading Tone, Minor Keys & Latin Groove
Students explore how leading tones resolve, compare G major and G minor, and shape complete musical phrases. Latin rhythms, clave patterns, and pickups build stylistic fluency, while a Baroque duet introduces elegant counterpoint. Ensemble work blends phrasing, rhythm, and style into a rich early-intermediate toolkit.



15 - Accidentals, Folk Waltz & Blues Duet
Students explore accidentals through a short E-flat based line, a flowing folk waltz with a pickup, and a lively 12-bar blues duet. They develop confident reading with flats and naturals, shape smooth slurs, feel a gentle swing in the blues section, and strengthen ensemble awareness through simple two-part playing.


16 - Dotted Rhythms & Pickups
Students master dotted-quarter–eighth patterns in both 4/4 and 3/4, learn how pickup bars work, and practise lining up duets with accurate starts and endings. The focus of this level is building strong rhythmic literacy, confident counting, and clean ensemble alignment.


17 - Lyrical Lines & Phrase Control
Students develop expressive, connected phrasing using the familiar C–G tone range, with gentle extension to A and occasional Bâ™ when the music requires it. They learn to shape long melodic lines, plan breaths or bowings, use legato and two-note slurs, and explore classical and folk melodies in both 3/4 and 4/4.
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This level strengthens musical flow, dynamic shaping, and ensemble balance without expanding the pitch range beyond comfortable early-intermediate notes.

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Auld Lang Syne
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Theme from New World
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Symphony (Largo)
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Minuet in C Major (after Bach)
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Für Elise
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Surprise Symphony (Haydn)
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She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
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Over the Waves
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Goin’ Home (
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New World Symphony)
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The Blue Danube
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Essential Elements Intervals Quiz
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Waves of the Danube
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A Little Night Music (Mozart)
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Symphony No. 40 Theme
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Melody in F (Rubinstein)
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My Heart Will Go On
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Kumbaya
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Michael Row the Boat Ashore
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Ach, du lieber Augustin
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Botany Bay
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
Worksheets - Score



18 - Core Technique, Chromatics & Reading
A comprehensive technique level that strengthens 4/4 subdivision, syncopation, chromatic steps, dynamic shaping, and expressive lyrical phrasing. Students explore tonal-center changes, classical lines, and improved reading through short technical studies.
Chromatic notes and common enharmonics (F♯/Gâ™, Eâ™/D♯, Aâ™/G♯) become more familiar, helping learners recognise shared fingerings in different written forms. They also connect chords and arpeggios through brief exercises, building balanced tone, clear articulation, accurate note-reading, and confidence for both classical and pop repertoire.
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Technique Trax
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Finlandia
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Essential Creativity
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Easy Gorilla Jumps
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Technique Trax (
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More Technique Trax
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Du, Du, Leigst Mir im Herzen
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Oh When the Saints Go Marching In
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Lowland
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Gorilla Walk
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Smooth Sailing
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More Gorilla Jumps
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Full Coverage
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The Streets of LaredoS
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chool Spirit
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Carneval of Venice
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
Worksheets - Score


19 - Off-Beat Motion & Classical Style (G Major Focus)
Students refine rhythmic control and classical phrasing through off-beat patterns, light articulation, and elegant melodic shaping. This level reinforces eighth-note subdivision, off-beat entrances, and the stylistic contrasts between Baroque dance character and modern rhythmic patterns. Technique focuses on G-major fluency, steady tempo, clean string/air transitions, and expressive slurs appropriate to each style.


20 - Funk-Pop Groove, Syncopation & Ensemble Precision
Students learn tight funk-pop grooves using leadsheets, coordinating rhythms, chord hits, and vocal/instrument parts as one ensemble. The focus is on syncopation, crisp articulation, short-note precision, and strong off-beat energy. Ensemble listening and alignment create a confident, unified groove.
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The full chromatic scale from C to C is now introduced, including all enharmonic spellings (C♯/Dâ™, D♯/Eâ™, F♯/Gâ™, G♯/Aâ™, A♯/Bâ™). Students learn to recognise every note name, even when the pitch is the same.
Worksheets - Score
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Eighth Note Scramble
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I Had a Little Nut Tree
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Scarborough Fair
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Oh Mr. Golden Sun
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The Entertainer
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Snake Charmer
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The Monkeys Race Around the Woods
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Close Encounters
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March Slav
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Half Steppin’
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Blueberry Hill
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Let It Be
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Love Is All Around
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Sweet Home Alabama
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Stand By Me
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Someone Like You
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All About the Bass
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Shallow
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Perfect
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Always Remember Us This Way
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TreasureI
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score
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Score


21 - Ensemble Groove & Improvisation
Students build ensemble confidence through two contrasting projects: a tight straight-eighth groove and a full swing-blues set.
This level develops unified timing, stylistic accuracy, and section balance while introducing improvisation, riff-based playing, and layered rhythmic textures. Learners strengthen listening awareness, groove consistency, and performance precision across pop, soul, and jazz styles.

Worksheets - Score
A. Mercy — Straight-Eighth Groove (Joe Zawinul)
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A band-based groove project focusing on tight ensemble timing, steady eighth-note feel, and layered rhythmic texture.Songlist (Scores):
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Mercy — Full Band Score
B. Swing Blues Set — 12-Bar Blues in C
Students explore swing rhythm, call-and-response phrasing, and improvisation over a classic 12-bar structure.Songlist (Scores):
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C-Jam Blues
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Route 66
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Blue Monk
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Bag’s Groove
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Now’s the Time
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Billie’s Bounce




No Instrument on Hand?
No Problem!
If you don’t have your real instrument with you, you can still practice!
Simply open the score for your song and choose one of the online instruments below. It will open in a new window.
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These online tools won’t feel exactly like the real thing, but they still let you:
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Follow the notes and finger positions
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Practice simple melodies and chords
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Try out different instruments just for fun
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Keep your learning going anytime, anywhere
Use them for the easier songs or for warm-ups, and enjoy exploring music even without your instrument in your hands.
























