solmization, system of designating musical notes by syllable names. A well-developed solmization system exists in the music of India, using the syllables ṣa, ṛi, ga, ma, pa, dha, ni; and similar systems occur in, for example, Chinese, Southeast Asian, and ancient Greek music.
The system that predominates in European music was introduced by an 11th-century Italian monk, Guido of Arezzo, who derived it from a Latin hymn, “Ut queant laxis,” the first six lines of which begin on successively higher notes of the scale. Taking the syllables sung on the first note of each line, he arrived at the series ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la. This six-note series, or hexachord, facilitated the sight-reading of music by allowing the singer always to associate a given musical interval with any two syllables. For example, mi-fa was always a semitone, no matter how high or low the two pitches were sung. By mutating, or switching from one hexachord (say, beginning on C) to an overlapping one (say, beginning on F), the singer could always place the syllables mi-fa on any half step in the music.
Changing musical styles at the end of the 16th century made mutation necessary too often to be practical. During the 17th century, an adaptation of the system to the seven-note major and minor scales was introduced in France, the syllable si (later ti in some countries) being added for the seventh note. During that century also, the syllable ut was replaced by do, considered more singable.
Two modern uses of the solmization syllables subsequently developed. In France, Italy, and Spain the syllables became attached to fixed pitches (fixed-do system): do meaning C; re, D; mi, E; fa, F; sol, G; la, A; and si, B. Elsewhere a movable-do system prevailed, in which do always represented the first pitch of the major scale (thus allowing the singer to associate syllable names with given intervals, as in the old hexachord system).
Various systems of teaching singing and sight reading based on the movable-do system were devised, the most prominent being tonic sol-fa, developed about 1850 in England by John Curwen. Tonic sol-fa emphasizes the relation of the notes to one another and to the tonic, or key note (do in major scales, la in minor scales). If the key changes, do (or la) shifts to a new pitch (similar to the old practice of mutation). A special notation using the initial letters of each syllable is utilized.
In England and America in the 18th century, a four-syllable system was common, in which the major scale was sung fa-sol-la-fa-sol-la-mi-(fa). Often called fasola, it survives in some areas of the United States. See shape-note hymnal.