No one but me in the Sofeggion will be
re re re , fa re la
re re re , fa ra mi
re re re, fa ra la
do re do sol fa mi re
When I read from the music note I know what it is? But if I don't have written music in G key how do I work it out?
How do I immediately transpose the sofeggio in G major or even in A major ??
The last line in "re major" would be "la ti la so fa mi re"
I recognize the melody as something I sang as a child called "Here we go loop di loo" and I did it orally in my head.
In G (sol) major it would be:
1 so so so ti so re
2 so so so to so la (repeat 1)
3 re mi re do ti la so.
How? Intervals. It's easier to see in C major (less foreign)
do do do mi do so
= The three do's are unisons. Your next note goes up a major third. You can hear that major third when you sing it. Three notes up from do are "mi".
The next note goes back down a third to the starting note, so you have the "do".
The next note is up a fifth, so you have "so". OR you can see the last note as being a third up from the "mi" that you sang/played before.
That is how I worked out the first line. Except it came instantly and automatically to me while typing at the computer, nothing written in hand, just memory of the melody.
If you go to Hellene's circles (new to me) you will see that one of the circles goes in thirds, and one goes in fourths.
To visit the one in thirds (I'm doing this in my head) the kids will have memorized:
do mi so ti re fa la .... after which it repeats .... and backward.
So you get to something like John's song which goes up and down in thirds and fifths (two thirds in succession), you draw mentally on these memorized thirds.
Supposing that your song has started on "re" and it goes up a third. You have memorized "re fa la do... " etc. so you know your next note, which is a third up, is "fa". If you have that already, then singing the music as solfege syllables is a breeze, as long as you can recognize basic intervals.
Actually I can see that those three circles hold everything. The first circle has the interval of seconds. The second circle has intervals of thirds, which naturally also include the 5th and the 7th. You can't get at an interval of a fourth with the seonc circle, but you can with the third circle which contains fourths. Voila, all possible intervals at the tip of your tongue.
I am curious now how it happened that I had solfege in that primary grade in the 1960's because it was not part of the curriculum. Could it be that this particular teacher just happened to want to teach it? What she did basically was to drill us in patterns of thirds, fourths, fifths going up and down by pointing at the syllables which we sang as she pointed. That is why what has been presented makes instant sense to me.