---
title: "AP Music Theory Exam"
description: "AP Music Theory Exam - Ap Music Theory unit content"
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam"
type: "unit"
subject: "AP Music Theory"
unit: "AP Music Theory Exam"
---

# AP Music Theory Exam

## Overview

AP Music Theory is one of the most format-intensive AP exams. You move between listening tasks with a Bluebook audio, written notation on staff paper, four-voice part writing, and live recorded performance. Each section rewards a different skill set, so targeted practice by section matters more than general review.

## AP CED Alignment

This unit hub is organized around AP Course and Exam Description topics, skills, and exam task types when they are available in the source data.
- MCQ: Multiple-Choice Questions
- FRQs 1-2: Melodic Dictation
- FRQs 3-4: Harmonic Dictation
- FRQs 5-7: Part Writing and Harmonization
- Sight singing: Sight Singing
- Difficulty guide: Is AP Music Theory Hard?
- Exam format: How the AP Music Theory exam is structured
- Scoring: How your answers are scored across sections
- Preparation sequence: What to practice first and why

## Topics

- [MCQ: Multiple-Choice Questions](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-mcq/study-guide/ap-music-theory-mcq): 75 questions split between aural (Part A, Bluebook audio) and nonaural (Part B, printed scores). Worth 45% of your score. The aural and nonaural halves demand different skills: real-time listening versus score analysis. The topic guide covers format breakdown, question set structure, and strategies for both parts.
- [FRQs 1-2: Melodic Dictation](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-frqs-melodic-dictation/study-guide/ap-music-theory-frqs-melodic-dictation): You hear a 4-measure melody four times and notate its pitch and rhythm on staff paper. Scored by segment, so errors in one measure do not eliminate points in others. The topic guide covers the segment-scoring rubric and a listening-by-listening strategy for each of the four plays.
- [FRQs 3-4: Harmonic Dictation](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-frqs-harmonic-dictation/study-guide/ap-music-theory-frqs-harmonic-dictation): You hear a short four-part progression seven times and notate the soprano line, bass line, and Roman numeral analysis. The topic guide covers how to sequence your listening across seven plays and how to deduce Roman numerals from the bass and soprano you have already notated.
- [FRQs 5-7: Part Writing and Harmonization](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-frqs-part-writing-harmonization/study-guide/ap-music-theory-frqs-part-writing-harmonization): Three self-paced written questions: realize a figured bass in four voices, part-write from Roman numerals, and harmonize a melody with a bass line and Roman numeral analysis. The topic guide covers voice-leading rules, figured bass symbols, and a systematic checking process for parallel motion errors.
- [Sight singing: Sight Singing](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/sight-singing/study-guide/ap-music-theory-sight-singing): Two short melodies performed aloud and recorded. 75 seconds of silent practice, 30 seconds to record, no second take. Worth 10% of your score. Pitch and rhythm are scored separately, so partial credit is available. The topic guide covers the 75-second preparation routine and solfege strategies.
- [Difficulty guide: Is AP Music Theory Hard?](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-is-it-hard/study-guide/4dNVIrHkNHdivKgcWiQH): AP Music Theory tests listening, notation, analysis, part writing, harmonization, and sight singing simultaneously. The difficulty guide covers what makes each section challenging, what background helps most, and a two-week study path for students at different preparation levels.

## Review Notes

### Exam format: How the AP Music Theory exam is structured

The exam has three scored components. The MCQ section splits into an aural half paced by a Bluebook audio sequence and a nonaural half based on printed scores. The FRQ section splits into a timed dictation block and a self-paced part-writing block. Sight singing is a separate recorded performance. Understanding which skills each section demands helps you allocate practice time accurately.

- **Part A (aural MCQ)**: 41-43 questions paced by Bluebook audio; you cannot control playback, so you must answer in real time as the excerpt plays.
- **Part B (nonaural MCQ)**: 32-34 questions based on printed scores; self-paced with 35 minutes, no audio.
- **Dictation block (FRQs 1-4)**: Bluebook audio sequence lasting about 25 minutes; pacing is set for you across melodic and harmonic dictation tasks.
- **Part-writing block (FRQs 5-7)**: Self-paced, about 45 minutes; no recording, all written work on staff paper.
- **Sight singing**: Two melodies, 75 seconds of silent practice plus 30 seconds of recorded performance each; counts for 10% of total score.

**Checkpoint:** Can you describe what you are doing in each of the five format segments above without looking at notes? If any segment is unclear, read its dedicated topic guide before practicing.

Section | Format | Time | Score weight
--- | --- | --- | ---
MCQ Part A | Aural, Bluebook audio | ~45 min | Part of 45%
MCQ Part B | Nonaural, printed score | ~35 min | Part of 45%
FRQs 1-4 | Dictation, Bluebook audio | ~25 min | Part of 45%
FRQs 5-7 | Part writing, self-paced | ~45 min | Part of 45%
Sight singing | Live performance, recorded | ~10 min | 10%

### Scoring: How your answers are scored across sections

MCQ is machine-scored with no penalty for wrong answers, so you should answer every question. FRQ dictation questions use segment-based rubrics: you earn points for each correctly notated segment of a melody or each correctly identified chord in a progression, so a wrong answer early does not wipe out points for later segments. Part-writing FRQs are scored on voice-leading accuracy, correct realization of figured bass symbols, and proper Roman numeral labeling. Sight singing is scored on pitch accuracy and rhythmic accuracy separately, so a rhythmically correct performance with some pitch errors still earns partial credit.

- **Segment scoring (dictation)**: Each measure or chord in a dictation task is scored independently; errors in one segment do not cascade to others.
- **No wrong-answer penalty (MCQ)**: Guess on every MCQ you are unsure about; a blank and a wrong answer both earn zero points.
- **Partial credit (sight singing)**: Pitch and rhythm are scored separately, so a performance with rhythmic accuracy but some pitch errors still earns points.
- **Voice-leading errors (part writing)**: Parallel fifths, parallel octaves, voice crossing, and incorrect doubling each cost points on FRQs 5-7.

**Checkpoint:** On a harmonic dictation question, if you mishear chord 2, do you know whether that affects your score on chord 3? It should not, because of segment scoring. If you were unsure, review the harmonic dictation topic guide.

Section | Scoring method | Partial credit available
--- | --- | ---
MCQ | Machine-scored, no penalty | No
Melodic dictation | Segment-based rubric | Yes
Harmonic dictation | Chord-by-chord rubric | Yes
Part writing | Voice-leading and notation rubric | Yes
Sight singing | Pitch and rhythm scored separately | Yes

### Preparation sequence: What to practice first and why

Start with the sections that have the least flexibility: dictation and sight singing. Both run on Bluebook audio sequences you cannot control, so fluency with the listening process must be automatic before exam day. Part writing and nonaural MCQ reward deliberate practice with printed scores and can be drilled at your own pace. Aural MCQ falls in between: you need fast pattern recognition but you can build that through repeated listening practice outside of exam conditions.

- **Priority 1: Dictation**: Practice notating melodies and chord progressions from audio with a timer. Segment your listening: contour first, then rhythm, then exact pitches.
- **Priority 2: Sight singing**: Practice the 75-second preparation routine daily. Use solfege or scale-degree numbers consistently. Record yourself and listen back.
- **Priority 3: Part writing**: Drill figured bass realization and Roman numeral part writing on staff paper. Check every voice pair for parallel fifths and octaves.
- **Priority 4: Aural MCQ**: Build pattern recognition for cadences, intervals, chord qualities, and melodic sequences through active listening practice.
- **Priority 5: Nonaural MCQ**: Practice score reading: identify form, harmonic function, melodic devices, and texture from printed notation under timed conditions.

**Checkpoint:** Have you practiced at least one full dictation task with a timer this week? If not, that is your next study session.

Skill | Format constraint | Best practice method
--- | --- | ---
Melodic dictation | Bluebook audio, 4 plays | Listen with timer, segment by measure
Harmonic dictation | Bluebook audio, 7 plays | Notate bass first, then soprano, then Roman numerals
Sight singing | 75 sec prep, 30 sec record | Daily recording practice with solfege
Part writing | Self-paced, staff paper | Drill on paper, check voice pairs systematically
Aural MCQ | Bluebook audio, no rewind | Active listening with pattern identification

## Study Guides

- [Multiple-Choice Questions (MCQ)](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-mcq/study-guide/ap-music-theory-mcq)
- [FRQs 1-2 – Melodic Dictation](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-frqs-melodic-dictation/study-guide/ap-music-theory-frqs-melodic-dictation)
- [FRQs 3-4 – Harmonic Dictation](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-frqs-harmonic-dictation/study-guide/ap-music-theory-frqs-harmonic-dictation)
- [FRQs 5-7 – Part Writing + Harmonization](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-frqs-part-writing-harmonization/study-guide/ap-music-theory-frqs-part-writing-harmonization)
- [Sight Singing](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/sight-singing/study-guide/ap-music-theory-sight-singing)
- [Is AP Music Theory Hard? Difficulty and Worth It Guide](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam/ap-music-theory-is-it-hard/study-guide/4dNVIrHkNHdivKgcWiQH)

## Key Terms

- **18th-century chorale**: A four-part harmonic composition from the Baroque era, typically featuring a soprano melody with accompanying bass, alto, and tenor voices, following specific stylistic conventions including rhythmic profiles and voice-leading rules. This is the style model for FRQs 5 and 6.
- **soprano-bass counterpoint**: The compositional technique of combining a soprano line with a newly composed bass line following 18th-century melodic conventions. FRQ 7 asks you to compose a bass line beneath a given melody, making this the central skill for that question.

## Common Mistakes

- **Freezing during the Bluebook dictation audio**: Students who have not practiced with a Bluebook audio often freeze when the audio moves on before they finish notating. The fix is to practice with a timer and accept that you will not get every note on the first play. Prioritize contour and rhythm on early plays, then fill in exact pitches on later plays.
- **Writing parallel fifths or octaves in part writing**: Parallel perfect fifths and parallel octaves are among the most common errors on FRQs 5-7 and cost points on every occurrence. Students often catch them in soprano-bass but miss them in inner voice pairs. Check all six voice pairs systematically before moving to the next question.
- **Skipping the 75-second prep routine in sight singing**: Students who start singing immediately without using the preparation time often stumble on rhythmic complexity or unexpected intervals mid-melody. Use all 75 seconds: identify the key, scan the rhythm, and mentally rehearse the hardest spots before you record.
- **Leaving MCQ questions blank**: Because there is no wrong-answer penalty, a blank is always worse than a guess. Students who run low on time in Part A sometimes skip questions rather than guessing. Fill in every answer before time is called, even if it is a random choice.
- **Abandoning a dictation task after an early error**: Because dictation is scored by segment, an error in measure 1 does not eliminate points for measures 2, 3, and 4. Students who give up after mishearing the opening lose points they could have earned. Always continue notating for every remaining segment.

## Exam Connections

- **Dictation and part writing test the same harmonic knowledge from opposite directions**: In harmonic dictation (FRQs 3-4), you hear a progression and identify its Roman numerals. In part writing (FRQs 5-6), you start with Roman numerals and construct the voices. Studying one reinforces the other: if you can hear why a chord is a V7, you can also write one correctly.
- **Aural MCQ and sight singing both reward active listening habits**: Part A of the MCQ section asks you to identify intervals, chord qualities, cadences, and melodic patterns in real time. Sight singing asks you to internally hear a melody before performing it. Both skills improve through the same practice: daily active listening with solfege and pattern identification.
- **Voice-leading rules connect part writing to score analysis in nonaural MCQ**: The 18th-century chorale conventions you apply in FRQs 5-7 are the same conventions you analyze in printed scores during MCQ Part B. Recognizing a deceptive cadence or an augmented sixth chord in a Bach chorale on the MCQ is the same knowledge you use when writing one in the FRQ section.

## Final Review Checklist

- **Know the format of every section cold**: Before exam day, you should be able to describe the number of questions, time available, and format constraints for each of the five segments: aural MCQ, nonaural MCQ, melodic dictation, harmonic dictation, part writing, and sight singing. Surprises on exam day cost time and focus.
- **Practice dictation with a timer and no rewind**: Simulate the Bluebook audio by playing a melody or progression once and notating what you hear, then playing it again. Do not pause or rewind. The Bluebook audio controls the pacing, so your listening strategy must work within that constraint.
- **Run the 75-second sight-singing prep routine**: Use your 75 seconds to identify the key, scan the rhythm, mark any tricky intervals, and mentally sing through the melody using solfege or scale-degree numbers. Record yourself and listen back. Do this daily in the final week before the exam.
- **Check every voice pair for parallel fifths and octaves**: On FRQs 5-7, develop a systematic checking habit: after writing your four voices, compare soprano-alto, soprano-tenor, soprano-bass, alto-tenor, alto-bass, and tenor-bass for parallel perfect intervals. One missed parallel fifth can cost points that a quick check would have saved.
- **Answer every MCQ question**: There is no wrong-answer penalty on the MCQ section. A blank and a wrong answer both earn zero points. If you are unsure, eliminate what you can and choose from what remains. Never leave a question blank.
- **Use segment scoring to your advantage on dictation**: If you mishear a measure or a chord, do not abandon the rest of the task. Each segment is scored independently. Move forward, notate what you can for the remaining segments, and collect every available point.
- **Estimate your score with the score calculator**: Use the AP Music Theory score calculator available on this page to translate your practice performance into an estimated AP score. Knowing which sections are costing you the most points helps you direct your final review time.

## Study Plan

- **Week 1: Diagnose your weakest section**: Attempt one task from each section: a set of aural MCQs, a melodic dictation, a harmonic dictation, one part-writing question, and one sight-singing melody. Identify which section costs you the most points. That section gets the most time in weeks 2 and 3.
- **Week 2: Drill dictation and sight singing daily**: These two sections run on Bluebook audio sequences you cannot control, so fluency must be automatic. Practice at least one melodic dictation and one sight-singing melody every day. Use the topic guides for the listening-by-listening strategy and the 75-second prep routine.
- **Week 3: Systematic part-writing practice**: Work through figured bass realization, Roman numeral part writing, and melody harmonization on staff paper. After each attempt, check all six voice pairs for parallel motion errors. Review the 18th-century chorale conventions and soprano-bass counterpoint principles covered in the topic guides.
- **Final days: Timed full-section simulations**: Run Part A and Part B of the MCQ section under timed conditions. Complete a full dictation block with a Bluebook audio. Do both sight-singing melodies back to back with the actual time limits. Use the score calculator to estimate where you stand and identify any remaining gaps.
- **Exam week: Format review and routine maintenance**: Stop introducing new material. Review the format of each section, confirm your listening strategy for dictation, and run one sight-singing melody per day to keep your ear active. Get sleep. Bring pencils and an eraser for staff paper work.

## More Ways To Review

- [Topic study guides](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam#topics)
- [FRQ practice](/ap-music-theory/frq-practice)
- [Cram archive videos](/cram-archives?subject=ap-music-theory&unit=ap-music-theory-exam)
- [Cheatsheets](/ap-music-theory/cheatsheets/ap-music-theory-exam)
- [Key terms](/ap-music-theory/key-terms)

## FAQs

### What's on the AP Music Theory exam progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The AP Music Theory exam progress check covers the full range of topics tested on the actual exam, including melodic and harmonic dictation, sight-singing, part-writing, and music analysis. The MCQ section tests your ability to identify intervals, chords, and musical structures, while the FRQ section asks you to complete or compose short musical passages. Practicing both parts helps you see exactly where your ear training and theory knowledge need work. Check out [/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam) for matched practice questions and study materials.

### How do I practice AP Music Theory exam FRQs?

AP Music Theory exam FRQs cover four main task types: melodic dictation, harmonic dictation, part-writing in four voices, and sight-singing. To practice, work through each type separately. For dictation, listen to short passages and notate what you hear. For part-writing, practice resolving chord progressions using proper voice-leading rules like avoiding parallel fifths and octaves. Timed, repeated practice on each task type builds the muscle memory you need. Find FRQ-style practice at [/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam).

### Where can I find AP Music Theory exam practice questions?

The best place to find AP Music Theory exam practice questions, including MCQ and full practice test sets, is [/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam). There you'll find multiple-choice questions on topics like chord identification, key signatures, and melodic analysis, plus free-response practice covering dictation and part-writing. Working through both question types together gives you the most realistic exam prep experience.

### How should I study for the AP Music Theory exam?

Studying for the AP Music Theory exam works best when you split your time between ear training and written theory. Start by drilling intervals, scales, and chord qualities until you can identify them by sound and by sight. Then move to part-writing practice, focusing on smooth voice leading in four-part SATB style. Set aside time each day for short dictation exercises, even just five to ten minutes of active listening. Use [/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam](/ap-music-theory/ap-music-theory-exam) to find practice materials that mirror the real exam format and track your progress across all skill areas.

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