The Whole Horn: Scale Practice
Thomas Hornig
Play all twelve major scales — fluently, in tune, in time — on your instrument, in your transposition, in your clef. Automatically. The Whole Horn is a scale practice studio for every wind player, string player, and vocalist. Choose your instrument — saxophone, trumpet, clarinet, flute, oboe, cello, voice, even timpani — and every scale appears correctly transposed, in the right clef, in your instrument's real range. An alto saxophonist sees C major and hears E-flat concert. A trumpeter sees the same key their band director calls. No mental math. No wrong octaves. Just press Play — you can't break anything. WHY TWELVE KEYS? A STORY. I grew up in Bloomington, Minnesota, in the Thomas Jefferson High School band program, led by Dr. Earl C. Benson, who gave us more performing experience across more styles and stages than most players get in a lifetime. My saxophone teacher, Richard Dirlam, insisted I learn all twelve major scales cold. Because he insisted, when I was sixteen and staring at a big band chart I couldn't read, I could hear my way through a solo — the whole tune lived inside one major scale, and I owned that scale. That was the moment I became a musician. Forty years later, as a conservatory professor, I built the practice tool I wish I'd had then. This app is my turn to make the impression those two teachers made on me. WHAT'S INSIDE • All 12 major scales, every key, with read-along notation that scrolls as you play • Automatic transposition and clef for winds, strings, voice, and percussion • Tempo control, articulation choices, note values from quarters to sixteenths • Overtone training — the foundation of a professional sound • The Full Studio: minor scales and arpeggios, intervals, pentatonics, chromatic technique, whole-tone and diminished • ABC or Do-Ré-Mi note names • Works completely offline — practice anywhere WHO IT'S FOR The adult returning to an instrument set down years ago. The serious amateur who never stopped. The student whose band director just said "learn your scales." Anyone ready to finally get around their horn. Fluency in twelve keys doesn't just improve your playing. It's how you become who you are as a musician. thewholehorn.com