Tap the mic and sing a tune. Detected swaras appear here — tap any to hear it.
Melody shape
Your sung line will be drawn here.
How it works
You sing a melody in your voice — even just “aa aa aa” — and this listens through your
mic, finds the pitch of each note, and names it as a swara (sargam) and a Western
note. Then it plays your tune back on a piano so you can learn to sing it in sargam.
1 · Set your Sa
In Hindustani music every note is relative to Sa (your tonic). Pick a
Key (Sa), or better — hit “Set Sa from my voice” and hold a comfortable
note; it becomes your Sa. Now every swara is measured from where your voice sits,
exactly how a singer tunes to the tanpura.
2 · Sing
Tap the mic and sing. The big note shows what you're on right now; the
tuning meter shows if you're flat/sharp of the nearest note. Steady notes get
captured into your tune below. Sing single vowels (“aa”) for the cleanest detection.
3 · Snap to a scale
Chromatic (free) reports the exact nearest note (all 12). Pick a
raag/scale and every note snaps to the closest allowed swara — handy to keep a
tune inside a raag and clean up small slips.
4 · Play & learn
Play on piano replays your captured tune with your own timing. Tap any single note
chip to hear just that one. Toggle Sargam ⇄ Western to read it either way, and
Copy to save the swaras as text.
Tips for good detection
Use a quiet room; hum or “aa” rather than words.
Give each note a clear, short hold — staccato slips get filtered out.
Raise Sensitivity if soft singing isn't picked up; lower it if noise triggers notes.