🔤
Note Converter
by PitchFit
Your notes
Converted
Try:
Free note converter

Convert notes between four notation systems instantly

Whether you are a French musician learning English chord charts, a German studying Italian solfège, or an Asian musician switching between jianpu and Western notation, this tool converts in real time.

🌍

Four notation systems

English (A B C D E F G), solfège (Do Ré Mi Fa Sol La Si), German (where B♭ = B and B = H), and Chinese jianpu (1 through 7 based on the major scale).

🎸

Handles chords and accidentals

Sharps (♯), flats (♭), and chord qualities (m, maj7, sus4, dim, aug) are preserved. The converter only changes the root note letter and leaves the rest untouched.

Real-time conversion

No convert button to press. The output updates as you type. Use the swap arrows to flip source and target in a single click.

Reference

How the four notation systems map

English Solfège German Jianpu
CDoC1
DD2
EMiE3
FFaF4
GSolG5
ALaA6
B♭Si♭B7♭
BSiH7

Note the German quirk on the last two rows: what the rest of the world calls B, Germans call H. And what the rest of the world calls B♭, Germans simply call B. This is historical — early notation used a square B (natural) and a round B (flat), which evolved into H and B respectively.

Common questions

FAQ

Why does German use H for B natural?

Medieval scribes distinguished between B rotundum (soft, rounded, lowered pitch) and B quadratum (hard, square, natural pitch). The square b eventually resembled an h and became H in German-speaking regions, while B came to mean B-flat. This convention is still used throughout Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Poland, and much of central Europe.

What is jianpu?

Jianpu (简谱) is a numerical notation system popular in China. Numbers 1 through 7 represent the degrees of the major scale: 1 is the tonic (Do / C in the key of C), 2 is the second degree (Ré / D), and so on. It is movable — 1 always refers to the tonic of the current key, similar to solfège in some traditions.

Does this handle chord symbols?

Yes. The converter identifies the root note of each chord symbol (including sharps and flats) and translates only the root. The quality suffix (m, maj7, sus4, etc.) stays as-is, since it is used identically across notation systems.

Is fixed-do or movable-do solfège used?

This converter uses fixed-do solfège, the system used in France, Italy, Spain, and most of Latin America. In fixed-do, Do always means C, Ré always means D, and so on — regardless of the key. This is different from movable-do, where Do refers to the tonic of whatever key you are in.

More tools

Other free tools for musicians

Speak music fluently

Train your ear to recognise the notes, not just name them.

Take the free pitch test →