What’s better than using MyMusicTheory – music theory by myrApps s.r.o.? Well, try it on a big screen, on your PC or Mac, with BlueStacks to see the difference.
MyMusicTheory feels like a stack of quick, focused drills that actually make music theory stick. It starts super simple with note names on treble, then ramps up to trickier stuff like spotting modes in mezzo-soprano or even the french violin clef. The range is wide. Key signatures go up to seven sharps or flats, intervals include compounds across more than an octave and it will even throw double sharps or double flats in identification. Chords are not just triads and sevenths, there are sixth chords, suspended shapes, open voicings, inversions, and the extended ones like 9ths and 11ths. Scales cover modes of major and minor, including harmonic and melodic flavors, plus neapolitan and pentatonic. There are rhythm tasks too, with sixteenth notes, dotted and double dotted notes, finishing a bar with rests or notes, or just naming the value, even a breve if that appears.
What stands out is how many clefs it lets you practice. Treble, bass, alto, tenor, soprano, mezzo-soprano, baritone in C or F, and that rare french violin one. Note names can switch between CDEFGAB, the German system with H, or Do Re Mi, which is handy. It aims at ABRSM prep around grades 1 to 5, although it clearly says it does not cover every topic and it is not affiliated. On PC through BlueStacks, the larger staff and easy mouse taps make the tougher clefs and dense chords way less squinty, so quick sessions feel smooth rather than fiddly on a small screen.
BlueStacks brings your apps to life on a bigger screen—seamless and straightforward.