I haven't taken a written music theory exam, and I never will, but I don't understand how it would work. You've got a lot of people in a room, all trying to answer the same questions. And if half of them are like me, then half of them are humming or whistling in order to figure out if this passage sounds major or minor, or what the underlying chords are, or whatever. That's how I work and I would find any other technique much harder. Judging by their recordings, I think Thelonius Monk and Glenn Gould feel the same way, so I'm definitely not alone. So I imagine a cacophony of people all doing this at once, distracting each other. Is that what it's like, or do you have to remain quiet, or what happens?
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1Did my last one over 60 yrs ago. 100 candidates in a school hall. No noise allowed (aloud?). It wouldn't have been fair to even hum audibly. And, theory exams must all be taken en masse, otherwise questions could be related to later groups! – Tim May 25 '23 at 13:15
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2Which country are you taking your exam in? In UK, exams are taken in silence. – cup May 26 '23 at 17:00
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So many great answers - thank you everyone <3 – Adam Chalcraft May 28 '23 at 20:56
5 Answers
I've taken a fair number of classroom music theory exams, and they were generally quiet. Any humming would have been done very, very quietly.
But since the exams are primarily analytical, there's also an expectation that they'll be answered near entirely by analysis.
Theory curricula are often combined with ear training and rhythm training. Those exams are typically done separately and individually.
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3(To elaborate: "ear training"/"aural skills" exams necessarily have out-loud content. Anything requiring the student to listen—like, to hear and write down melodies or chords—can be administered to a whole class at once, but anything requiring the student to "perform," like to sing a melody using solfege, has to be done in private with one student at a time to avoid students "getting the answer" from others' performances. In my undergrad, these skills were actually a separate course from music theory classes and had their own exams.) – Andy Bonner May 25 '23 at 13:21
One of the goals of music theory is to be able to tell whether a passage is major or minor and to completely analyze without needing to hum or whistle at all.
Cadences often have to be heard, though. In the class I took where score analysis required finding cadences, our professor set aside a portion of the exam time for playing recordings of the excerpts in question. No humming needed.
Note that in American university ear training courses, humming is generally prohibited but overlooked if done quietly by beginners. By the third semester the expectation is that students can audiate, that is hear the music completely in their heads right from the page. During sight singing juries, points may be deducted for any noises made before beginning the excerpt.
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So many great answers - thank you everyone. But this one gets the check mark for reminding me about audiation. – Adam Chalcraft May 28 '23 at 20:55
I see what you're getting at! But no, theory exam rooms are generally pretty quiet.
Here's the sort of thing you're asked to do. (Grade 5 is the 'everyone needs to know this much' level.)
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Generally, written music exams are silent, just like any other exam. The extent of permitted humming or quiet whistling is generally up to the examiner and governing body.
Some other types of exams are taken using computers, which may include audio components with headphones.
Performance-based examinations are necessarily different.
People with the Aphantasia condition (about 4% of the population) have limited sensory recall/imagination, varying in degree and type. For those with audio aphantasia, exam conditions can be very challenging indeed.
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I thought aphantasia is mainly a visual condition (or rather: lack of an ability, namely lack of visual imagery). I don't know whether there is a term for the auditory analogue, but I would say that the auditory analogue to visual imagery is either relative pitch (which comes in degrees, of course) or something closely related to it. – Lover of Structure May 25 '23 at 17:19
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@LoverofStructure What are you talking about? The auditory analogue of visual imagery is audiation. Aphantasia can affect any sense or all of them. – the-baby-is-you May 26 '23 at 21:21
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@the-baby-is-you It seems like in research, the term "aphantasia" is only applied to visual imagery. According to the little I can read online about "audiation", that term is more vague and applied far more broadly than relative pitch, and relative pitch or "inner ear" seem to be more fitting for a music theory exam, though I would add "hearing multiple voices at the same time or imagining harmonies". – Lover of Structure May 26 '23 at 21:27
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@LoverofStructure That's why relative pitch isn't the right term here. That's like saying visual imagery is distance. – the-baby-is-you May 26 '23 at 22:06
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@the-baby-is-you Your assertions are too strong. Actually, thinking about it, relative and absolute pitch as terms imply high musical ability, at least in common usage. – Lover of Structure May 27 '23 at 02:18
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@LoverofStructure The term is fairly new and the definiton varies depending on who you ask. Loosely speaking it's the inability to imagine (project senses mentally, especially visual, but there are plenty of people for whom it's audible also). There are many different types and manifestations of the condition. I've experienced aphantasia temporarily myself (very strange). Normally I'm mild hyperphantasiac which is the opposite to aphantasia. I've been studying aphantasia for several years and personally know various people with the condition. – Andrew Kingdom May 29 '23 at 04:26
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So far as so-called absolute or perfect pitch, this is the same as learning experientially what visual frequency of light corresponds to the word 'red'; It's a learnt ability but easier for some people (I work with a world expert in this space). – Andrew Kingdom May 29 '23 at 04:29
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(I've worked in education for decades and have helped set up for exams many times.) – Andrew Kingdom May 29 '23 at 04:34
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@AndrewKingdom [Visual] aphantasia is very independent of the auditory analogue, as evidenced from the many people who have one but not the other. One doesn't imply the other at all. As for perfect pitch, some people fail miserably in learning, just like you can't learn painting if your brain's memory span for visual material is effectively zero. You also can't expand your short-term memory span for digits etc unless you cheat by chunking (requiring extreme practice), and the result is very domain-specific (non-transferable chunking of whatever you practiced), not a generally wider STM span. – Lover of Structure May 29 '23 at 06:19
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@LoverofStructure There is a huge variety of different types of aphantasia and I've not seen any useful paper covering the various types (I've been collecting details on such types for several years, speaking regularly to those with the condition). There is much ongoing research in the field (I know this first hand from speaking with various researchers and from my own studies). At present Aphantaisia is also used to cover the auditory as there is no standandard term for such yet in any significant papers I've seen. This is mainly as the research is recent and ongoing. – Andrew Kingdom May 29 '23 at 07:38
Just to clarify the kind of "music theory exam" we're talking about, this does NOT include "ear training" / "aural test" which @AndyBonner described well in his comment:
(To elaborate: "ear training"/"aural skills" exams necessarily have out-loud content. Anything requiring the student to listen—like, to hear and write down melodies or chords—can be administered to a whole class at once, but anything requiring the student to "perform," like to sing a melody using solfege, has to be done in private with one student at a time to avoid students "getting the answer" from others' performances. In my undergrad, these skills were actually a separate course from music theory classes and had their own exams.)
@Laurence's answer provided a sample ABRSM grade 5 exam where the only possible benefit from humming comes in section 5 (chords) but you can mitigate by visually counting the steps in the ledger lines between the notes.
In higher grades, like this grade 8 exam, you need to do:
- some simple composition (example: Section 1.1 and 2.1),
- harmonization (example: Section 4.1, also this ABRSM Grade 8 Trio Sonata question), and
- analysis (example: Section 5)
where humming or playing the score on the keyboard would have been helpful. BUT THEN, as you advance in your training, you are ALSO expected to be more proficient in hearing the music in your head, although not to the extent that Beethoven was able to do when he became deaf.
I admit that when I took those ABRSM exams, as well as college level ones, I sometimes wish that the exam room would provide a keyboard with headphones for anyone to use during the exam, but alas, it's not provided. I think it's part of the training to be able to do all those tasks in your head. My fellow exam takers and classmates have been absolutely courteous to maintain a quiet environment like in the library.
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