Test what you actually know about music
Interactive quizzes across 8 core disciplines — from sight-reading to ensemble timing — give you specific, honest feedback on where you stand right now.
Rhythm and timing quizzes
Timing questions derived from 12 real performance contexts — from solo piano to chamber settings.
Instant scoring on every answer
No waiting. Each question scores immediately and shows exactly which concept needs more work — not just a final number.
How it worksAccessible anywhere
Works on phone, tablet, or desktop. Students from 28 countries have completed at least 1 full test module in the past 6 months.
Upcoming eventsWhat changes after 4 weeks
Most students start without knowing where their gaps are. After 4 weeks of weekly quizzes, the pattern gets clear.
The two phases below describe what typically shifts between week 1 and week 4 — not a guarantee, just an honest picture.
Unclear on weak areas
Students often score well in 3 areas but lose points consistently in 1 or 2 without knowing it. The gap is usually ear training or harmonic analysis — not technique.
Targeted practice replaces guesswork
With a score history across 6+ sessions, patterns show up clearly. Students can address the right thing instead of reviewing material they already know.
Who built the quiz content
Véronique spent 11 years teaching conservatory-level students before building the question bank here. Every question maps to a real skill gap she observed in classroom evaluations.
The content covers sight-reading, harmonic recognition, dynamic control, ensemble timing, and 4 more categories — all written by working musicians, not generalists.
Meet the teamNot sure where to start?
The placement quiz takes about 7 minutes and gives you a category breakdown across all 8 skill areas.
Take the placement quizAlready know your level?
Browse the program structure to find the specific modules that match your current focus.
See full programGet notified when new modules drop
New quiz sets go live every 3 weeks. Leave your email and we'll send a short note when something relevant to your discipline is added — no newsletters, no sequences.