Welcome to FableNotes!
The essential music literacy picture book that turned the latest educational research into this all-in-one music teaching resource that children love. Here Come the High Notes has empowered thousands of children to understand and memorize music notation. It was successfully launched on Kickstarter, and is now being utilized in hundreds of schools internationally. Join the party and sit back to watch how easily it transforms the way children interact with their sheet music. All hardcover books sold here will be signed by the author and shipped on the next business day. Digital download links will arrive in your email within 24 hours.
Grand Staff Printables
The notes kids love, all in one place! Use it to talk about relationships between notes, intervals, octaves, grand staff, scales, and chords. Play guessing games to enhance the student's knowledge of the note's position, like "Who is the treble clef note on the bottom space," they answer "Sleepy F!" Students often use this when practicing on their own to remind themselves of a note when the teacher isn't around, which increases their confidence and independence. Great for remote teaching!
*Please allow 24 hours for your download link to arrive in your email inbox.
"I have a student with severe dyslexia who struggled to recognize any note for three years of lessons, and now she's suddenly shouting the note names at her lessons with newfound self-confidence and JOY!"
-J. Perlan, music teacher
"We just got this book a few days ago and my 26-month-old is already able to name every note. He is obsessed with their fuzzy little faces. He asks to read it every day. This book is genius."
-A. Elsen, parent
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"By the end my first lesson teaching with FableNotes, I got to see a 6-year-old absolute beginner read an Am7 1st inversion chord that he saw on my advanced music saying he remembered the notes from the story!"
-Y. Feldner, PhD, music educator
"My kindergartener uses Here Come the High Notes like an encyclopedia to figure out the notes in her song when she's on her own to practice. She goes, 'I don't know that note, but I know where to find it!'"
-S. Brown, parent
"The hardest part of using FableNotes is dragging the kids' attention from the book and back to playing their repertoire and scales! And they keep talking about the notes' stories long after they've learned to read music from it."