Timothy Chenette, Foundations of Aural Skills
Cleland & Dobrea-Grindahl, Developing Musicianship through Aural Skills (available online through the library)
Lavengood, Hamm, Gullings, et. al. Open Music Theory
Miranda Wilson, Integrated Musicianship (paired with Integrated Music Theory)
Robin Armstrong & Karen Rege, GlobalMusix: Contemporary Music Throughout the World
Benjamin Crowell, Eyes and Ears
Tobin Stewart, Foundational Sight Singing
Dave Smey, "Melodies for Sight-Reading"
Tutoring is free for all NYU students enrolled in a core music theory course in the department.
See the link here for more information.
MuseScore: Free open-source music notation program for download that works on any platform.
Tempo: Online Metronome or BPM Tool for keeping or finding a tempo.
Piano Drone: Tool for singing intervals or melodies again a sustained pitch.
Notio (Interactive Keyboard): Online interactive keyboard that you can set for any scale. Scale degrees/solfege/note names can be added to keys. A great visual tool for improvisation and dictation work!
IMSLP: Largest online database of public domain music scores.
Music Theory for Musician's and Normal People: Handy reference handouts created by Sparky the Theory Dog for various topics.
BandLab: Free open-source online platform for recording, mixing, and collaborating on music projects. Audacity is another good open-source downloadable option that works cross-platform.
HookTheory: Plug in a chord progression and listen to excerpts from pop songs that use that progression.
Groove Pizza: Interactive online tool for experimenting with different grooves in popular music.
aQWERTYon: Jam along with your favorite Youtube recordings on your computer keyboard with different instruments and effects.
Analysis Apps: Audio Timerliner and BriFormer are great for marking up an audio recording with notes about harmony, rhythmic patterns, formal areas, keys, etc. Both are free and work cross-platform.