Theory
Versions
Chart History
Time Machine ›Ratings Over Time
| Date | Version | Rating | Ratings | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 16, 2018 | — | ★ 4.5 | 35 | $2.99 |
| Nov 29, 2020 | — | ★ 4.5 | 73 | $2.99 |
| Nov 28, 2023 | 3.1.1 | ★ 4.4 | 105 | $2.99 |
| Dec 1, 2024 | 3.1.1 | ★ 4.4 | 115 | $2.99 |
From archived App Store listing data, captured by the Wayback Machine.
Archived Reviews
8 of 15There is a practice mode that is on the website version. It seems like the app is a lackluster version of the website. For a more expensive alternative, I would expect either the practice exercises or other practice features to be implemented. <br/><br/>A great offline version for the lessons but not much else. The website offers the same, comprehensive lessons as well as activities/ games to help solidify and check in on your learning for free. <br/><br/>It has the most user friendly diagrams and lessons that I’ve seen compared to other apps.
The app is working again, all I needed was to delete it and put it back in my phone. Works perfectly.
I love this app. It is simple in its format but highly effective in conveying this not-so-easy-to-grasp material. It is better than all the music theory books I have read to date! What a nice contribution.
Its a list of bullet points with a couple of gifs. The positive reviews here must be a scam. Worthless.
Musictheory.net is an excellent free resource for teachers and students. Being technologically challenged, I like the simplicity of it. The site accomplishes its purpose without frills. Though it might not be as exciting as an online game, it seems to challenge students appropriately. It can be used to teach a new concept or review old concepts, as an assessment tool, and for students to practice. Student can easily go online and practice, put their knowledge to the test, or complete an assignment. I am eager to use the Interval Identification exercise for students to practice and track their own progress.
This honestly is I would say the best music theory app out there I do with that between this app “Theory” and “Tenuto” that is would be more helpful in memorizing things like maybe implementing something for practice.<br/><br/>Also I kinda wish “Theory” had a thing in the scales section to learn about pentatonic scales and blues scales. Also to learn to apply concert pitch to different instruments. <br/><br/>Thanks I hope you guys are improving things also honestly this app is extremely good you should honestly have people pay for it so you can have the time to update it and stuff and implement those things.
I had needed a great music theory app, and this fulfills my need quite perfectly.<br/><br/>The teaching is laid out in a very easy-to-understand format with attractive interactive user-friendly diagrams.<br/><br/>By the end of the first lesson, I felt as if I’d learnt quite a lot. And all without any effort at all. It’s unbelievable!<br/><br/>I already have an excellent practical practice app, in form of playgroundsessions app, that I had bought in a package deal along with a baby grand piano. <br/><br/>But I had found the hands-on playgroundsessions teaching tool to be slightly lacking in deep music theory support.<br/><br/>So I went looking for something to compliment the playgroundsessions hands-on app, and to hence fully round out my musical education. <br/><br/>Now I have one app for hands-on practice, and this one, for in-depth theory learning.<br/><br/>This is great!
needs practice modes from the website
Period reviews recovered from Apple's customer-review feeds via the Wayback Machine.