The MOST Important Musical Skill

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  • Опубліковано 22 вер 2018
  • In this episode we discuss the most important musical skill: Audiation or using your minds ear.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,7 тис.

  • @deadstar44
    @deadstar44 5 років тому +982

    Does anybody dream about listening to a popular band's tune or attending a gig of your favourite band, then you wake up and realize that song doesn't really exist but your mind just imagined and created it from scratch associating it with that band, vocals and arrangements included? (Then have a hard time remembering it when you want to write all that down even though it sounded crystal clear and awesome in your dream).

    • @fluteloopsyd
      @fluteloopsyd 5 років тому +27

      Unless what if it's a premonition and you're actually going to be there and it's a song they're going to make in the future?😃😂

    • @fluteloopsyd
      @fluteloopsyd 5 років тому +2

      But not for me, no.😆😊

    • @whatyoumakeofit6635
      @whatyoumakeofit6635 5 років тому +32

      No. Never happened to me. I wish it would. Sounds amazing !!! You really should worm on harnessing that. Most timless songs have been created from a writer waking from a dream with a song in there mind

    • @Waltzhybrid92
      @Waltzhybrid92 5 років тому +3

      Oooh which ones? I can think of Hey Jude but I want to know others.

    • @WoodLard
      @WoodLard 5 років тому +38

      yeah!!! I wish we could output our dreams into something tangible! I always lose the epic tracks that come up in my head...

  • @stefanstolarchuk5766
    @stefanstolarchuk5766 4 роки тому +109

    My favorite part of this is your kids singing these tunes and getting them all in the right key off the top of their heads.

    • @Zimzamzoom95
      @Zimzamzoom95 3 роки тому +4

      layla didn't get it in the right key. but dylan did, he has perfect pitch

    • @javiercisternasnajle
      @javiercisternasnajle 3 роки тому

      Yeah! I'm so impressed!

    • @Bubu567
      @Bubu567 3 роки тому +6

      @@Zimzamzoom95 What do you mean? It was in the right key, for the video that she learned the song from.

    • @Zimzamzoom95
      @Zimzamzoom95 3 роки тому +1

      @@Bubu567 she was slightly off key

    • @Noodlestud1
      @Noodlestud1 Рік тому

      @@Zimzamzoom95 maybe the exact frequencies weren’t right lol but it was the right key

  • @BauKim
    @BauKim 2 роки тому +21

    For people who take this to heart and want to then transfer it to your fingers for whatever instrument. here are some exercises I've been doing at home:
    1. Play a chord and put it on some kind of repeat, so you have something to play on top of
    2. Start from the root note, and sing a 3 to 4 note melody. Then play the exact melody on the instrument.
    3. If you want to hit some certain notes but the notes aren't coming to you mentally, try playing a little riff and then sing it back to yourself, and then play it again.
    Another exercise:
    1. Key agnostically just sing the first 2 bars of a popular tune.
    2. Try to play it on the instrument.
    3. Continue the song.
    I've been trying to do this about 15 to 30 minutes a day (to an hour if I'm having too much fun), and my ability to find the "right" notes has gone up quite a bit. My ability to also mentally think up new licks and then play them as intended is also going up slowly.

  • @LUCDofficial
    @LUCDofficial 4 роки тому +194

    This is why Beethoven is immortal. He composed some of the most amazing pieces in history WHILE HE WAS DEAF.

    • @ynotttt
      @ynotttt 2 роки тому +3

      I’m deaf in 1 ear…..maybe there’s hope!!! Ha!! I always think of that Beethoven thing when I’m struggling.

    • @zanderday4466
      @zanderday4466 2 роки тому +8

      but he could hear the music "in his head" - that is the most important part of creating New Music - imh

    • @aperson8438
      @aperson8438 2 роки тому

      @@ynotttt
      hey brian wilson (of the beach boys), arguably one of the most innovative producers and arrangers ever, is deaf in one ear. always has been, so he could never hear his own songs in stereo. listening to the instrumental track for “don’t talk” may give you some hope 😂

    • @morganpeline9822
      @morganpeline9822 2 роки тому +2

      Beethoven could also feel the vibrations of his piano

  • @MarkPeotter
    @MarkPeotter 3 роки тому +79

    Rick says "It's not perfect pitch. It's not relative pitch. It's the ability to take a sound from your mind and make it louder." That's heavy, man! AND, that is exactly the same advice I receive from my Vocal Teacher. She says that our ability to sing ANYTHING comes from this skill.

    • @pe1er1
      @pe1er1 2 роки тому +2

      This is such a difficult task for me. I can sing starts of melodies etc, but I find it very difficult to hear anything in my head! It's like my brain is connected to my voice, if vocalcords is whispering/quiet then my head is pitchless!!

    • @nathanielfaerman
      @nathanielfaerman 2 роки тому +1

      @@pe1er1 Interesting, I have a similar problem, but with visualisation, rather than audiation. I can hear any instrument or timbre in my head, but I can’t visualise even simple things. I know, what they look like, but I cant „see“ them.

  • @mikemogul2263
    @mikemogul2263 4 роки тому +270

    Taking a cue from Rick Beato, my first child's name will be BucketHead.

    • @Bldyiii
      @Bldyiii 3 роки тому +4

      ThatsRaidillonActually am I saying this right: “Balsac the Jaws of Death?”

    • @elisabethseaton6521
      @elisabethseaton6521 3 роки тому +3

      Will your second kid be Meatloaf?

    • @theraven6836
      @theraven6836 3 роки тому +1

      mike mogul Gonna insist my first grandchild is called Leadbelly.

    • @d.c.8828
      @d.c.8828 3 роки тому

      @@theraven6836 Absolute legend!

    • @davidstair9657
      @davidstair9657 2 роки тому

      My old dog was named Lars.

  • @CurtisBooksMusic
    @CurtisBooksMusic 4 роки тому +218

    Why elementary music education is so damn important!

    • @p.c.1019
      @p.c.1019 4 роки тому +2

      CurtisBooksMusic and just general education.

    • @p.c.1019
      @p.c.1019 4 роки тому +6

      Ceres Lee Very true. Sports dad kinda push? Of course, kids can get physically/mentally hurt in sports. A pushy parent in music could obviously mentally hurt a child, but I see nothing here to suggest that. Not saying you’re inferring this, but my musical connect, and occasional nudging, were magical for me. As I was, Dylan looks like a musically “in to it” young man.

    • @70erJahreJunge
      @70erJahreJunge 3 роки тому +3

      If it incoporates all musical genres and is not restricted to a dusty curriculum

    • @CurtisBooksMusic
      @CurtisBooksMusic 3 роки тому

      @Joel Totally missing the point

  • @dubbs733
    @dubbs733 4 роки тому +8

    Rick has got to be the coolest dad out there! How lucky are his kids to have him and be able to grow up with him and learn from his vast wealth of knowledge!

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape 5 років тому +151

    Adam Neely has talked about audiation before as well. I've always done this in my head, and always assumed everyone else does, too. Translating it to my instrument is a bit harder, though.

    • @abhisheknautiyal8877
      @abhisheknautiyal8877 5 років тому +8

      Yeah when you have no music theory knowledge like me but i manage to play solos somehow

    • @cacophonyguitar
      @cacophonyguitar 5 років тому

      Abhishek Nautiyal Agree. In fact I always see my self confused when I get into the theory of these things. Probably bad in the long run.

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss 4 роки тому +2

      Making it easier to translate to your instrument just takes increased familiarity with your instrument. So just work at that, and the rest will come.
      Fred

    • @michaelscott356
      @michaelscott356 4 роки тому

      Every time your son demonstrates his perfect pitch, it breaks my heart. a) because I'm so happy for him that he HAS that skill, and b) because you've told us that no matter how hard we work at it we can never LEARN this. (I had "acquiring perfect pitch", in retirement, on my bucket list! 😂)

    • @secretmission7607
      @secretmission7607 4 роки тому +4

      @@michaelscott356 But great RELATIVE pitch is way more useful than 'perfect pitch' (really, absolute pitch) and that CAN be developed.

  • @GeorgeSPAMTindle
    @GeorgeSPAMTindle 5 років тому +16

    As a young kid I believed that we had record players inside our heads and that we can listen to any song we know just by playing that record on the turntable in our head. I have been told that I could whistle recognizable tunes before I could speak, which apparently my mum found very embarrassing. I was regarded as being a weird child.

  • @davidcochran6291
    @davidcochran6291 4 роки тому +10

    In answering deadstar44 below, I woke up in the middle of a dream and I was singing the notes to a song I'd never heard, or thought I'd never heard, coming out of my mouth. I remembered the verse melody and part of the transition to the chorus. I kept humming to myself all day, gradually it faded from direct memory. About 6 months later I was walking by a house on a street where I live, when out of an open window I heard that tune. I am not shy when it comes to something that has been driving me crazy. So I knocked on the door where the music was coming from an attractive lady a little older that I was, this is probably 20 years ago I'm 68 now, answered the door. I apologized and told her the story and finally I asked for the name of the song. She said that is Billy Joel, and the name of the song is, "And So It Goes" from his 'Live' album in Russia. Now while I am a fan Billy Joel's early stuff I had not listened to anything past his first double album of greatest hits. So now I had I heard this before in a situation where it would have been passive listening, like walking through a mall, or had I heard it and just forgot, to this day I do not know.
    So to end this, I think the music you listen to can trigger some sort of ability to have an idea for a song, or whatever you find interesting. I've read where engineers will have ideas come to them in sleep mode so why not music. By the way that Billy Joel remains one of my favorites, and if I'm wandering by an idle piano anywhere devoid of humans I'll sit down and play and sing it. I've been 'caught' a few times and got a few "that was nice" comments. Sorry about the ramble, but my Mom said I started talking at 14 mos. and I haven't stopped since.

    • @juanoliveiraguitar
      @juanoliveiraguitar Рік тому

      Nice story! There is an incredible version of this tune by Jill Seifers and Kurt Rosenwinkel. Jill was an amazing singer who sadly took her own life a few years ago

  • @FrankRideausonore
    @FrankRideausonore 5 років тому +1183

    The most important musical skill is the hair.

    • @tonyiommi2380
      @tonyiommi2380 4 роки тому +26

      I wanted to start playing guitar my I looked in the mirror and remembered that I'm bald - fucked

    • @mrgone658
      @mrgone658 4 роки тому +29

      I think Joe Satriani would disagree.

    • @TS-gn2wy
      @TS-gn2wy 4 роки тому +1

      LMFAO!

    • @SkylarLux
      @SkylarLux 4 роки тому +6

      Maynard James Keenan disagrees 😂

    • @aussie_philosopher8079
      @aussie_philosopher8079 4 роки тому

      Hahaha that's awesome

  • @cacophonyguitar
    @cacophonyguitar 5 років тому +32

    Absolutely. Ear training is more about translating the head sound on your instrument. A lot of people can sing it but not put it on their instrument. So there's nothing wrong with the ears. It's just the mapping of the note on instrument. Great video to demonstrate this. :)

  • @paulsimmons5726
    @paulsimmons5726 5 років тому +62

    Dylan and Layla. .. yeah, you're a musician!
    Great video, thanks for sharing your insights!

    • @SimonJohnOwen
      @SimonJohnOwen 4 роки тому +10

      At least he didn't call his kids Rimsky and Korsakov

    • @TheSnos15
      @TheSnos15 4 роки тому +1

      this is one person

    • @seantracey6968
      @seantracey6968 4 роки тому

      I was just thinking that. His favourite songwriter and favourite rock song maybe.

    • @notalcno9
      @notalcno9 3 роки тому

      I believe he has a child named Lennon too.

  • @RICKRATT1
    @RICKRATT1 3 роки тому +19

    I’m a musician and always assumed everyone could do this . Amazing stuff Rick, this why I love and value your channel.

  • @eggbass
    @eggbass 5 років тому +18

    This is how I was always able to learn songs on bass. If I heard it in my head I could play it.

    • @davidshepherd445
      @davidshepherd445 4 роки тому +1

      Me too! When people ask me do I know how to play a song on bass, I say yes if I can hear it in my head, even if I've never played it before.

    • @jimandlizhudson2501
      @jimandlizhudson2501 3 роки тому

      Me too....on most instruments.

  • @DavidDiMuzio
    @DavidDiMuzio 5 років тому +64

    Dylan's growing up to be such a rockstar. Love it! ...Very important concept as well.

  • @AimeeNolte
    @AimeeNolte 5 років тому +721

    I could sit here and listen to Rick’s kids sing melodies all day.

  • @micheleparker8123
    @micheleparker8123 4 роки тому +4

    Exactly!!! There have been times in my life when I had no access to music and out of desperation, would go through a whole song in my head, including the parts with no words, or instrumentals; or when I'm trying to think of a song/name of a song I have to sing the parts I remember until my mind/memory catches the rest of the song, and THEN it all comes back to me. 😀

  • @JPLodine
    @JPLodine 5 років тому +10

    I basically have a few hundred albums "recorded" in my head that I can play at will -- typically I do this as I sing to myself while working on the lawn or in the workshop, painting the house etc. I'll sing a record (say, any of my dozen favorite Sinatra albums :-) ) in order, with each song in its proper key, or at least in the right key relative to what came before. I don't have perfect pitch but do have a strong pitch memory -- if I notice that I don't hear all of the orchestra stuff in my head, I'll realize that I'm not in the right key and will hunt around up & down a few half steps until I find where the "recording" resonates. Once I have that, I'll sing the whole thing with the right key transitions from song to song, and I'll hear all of the orchestra parts along with my vocals. I thought everyone could do this, but I guess that's not the case.
    Btw, Aimee Nolte makes this same point all the time: you really want to know what a note or phrase will sound like coming from your instrument BEFORE you play it -- otherwise you really can't improvise.
    Great video as always, Rick (and Dylan)!

  • @OrionHellraiser
    @OrionHellraiser 5 років тому +58

    I'm a self taught guitar player, I never even had idea about the notes I was playing, all i cared was for me to sound right, whenever I play a song it's not like thinking about the next note, it's about jamming with the song that I can clearly hear in my head. I got a song stuck from just hearing it once from my dad, I pulled it on guitar and some years later I played it for my dad so he could tell me which song it was, it was "Apache" from The Shadows, and I swear I got every note right and remembered very well just by listening to it once. that's one of my skills I love the most

    • @Mr.CrackZapIt
      @Mr.CrackZapIt 5 років тому +2

      Enjoy the blessing!

    • @mercydominickalio7183
      @mercydominickalio7183 5 років тому +2

      Orion Hellraiser Fuck! This is me!!!! Like, ME! Self taught too. Exactly my situation

    • @criddycriddy
      @criddycriddy 5 років тому +4

      Me too, 30 years and I still don’t know the chords by name 😀

    • @criddycriddy
      @criddycriddy 5 років тому +1

      Fantastic what a great idea

    • @sonibraun4971
      @sonibraun4971 4 роки тому +1

      @@criddycriddy But does it work for you? I feel people without some basic music theory really miss out.

  • @SendilSelvan
    @SendilSelvan 2 роки тому +13

    This is perhaps the most vital lesson for those of us ‘searching for that sound’. Thank you Master Rick

  • @simpleeye7950
    @simpleeye7950 5 років тому +1

    You are spot on Rick about audiation/imagination. It's a really great skill that can set the stage for musical/ ear development. I like to listen to things and then listen them play in my head.

  • @reggiejones6999
    @reggiejones6999 3 роки тому +1

    Rick, I can not get over the wealth of talent, knowledge, and ability to entertain. I think you are genuis. Thanks. I just discovered you a few weeks ago

  • @MiataTravels
    @MiataTravels 5 років тому +6

    I love the variety of thing you come up with, Rick. Stimulating!

  • @PaulWelsh
    @PaulWelsh 5 років тому +27

    I can never think of superman's theme after hearing star wars! Impressive talent

    • @BenjaminGessel
      @BenjaminGessel 4 роки тому +1

      Those two melodies begin rather similarly, yes...

  • @PianoHooks
    @PianoHooks 4 роки тому +2

    Absolutely Rick! To audiate and intonate is crucial to being able to play/sing what we want. That is what my whole piano course is all about. I used to teach how I learned; by brute force of memorizing and playing over and over, and focusing on reading notes. Focusing on HEARING the music is ABSOLUTELY the MOST IMPORTANT skill!
    Thank you for this!!!

  • @redmed10
    @redmed10 4 роки тому +1

    Music stays with you all your life. There are 3 or 4 songs or pieces of music that I've loved at an earlier point in my life that I've completely forgotten the identity of but have later on in life come across them again and recognised them straight away. It's one of the joys of music. Certain bits of music just become a part of you.

  • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849
    @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 4 роки тому +5

    It’s great to hear you identify and explain this skill, Rick. I don’t have perfect pitch, but I do use the first chord of a number of songs as pitch references - songs I’ve heard countless times. For example, I use the 1st chord of Highway to Hell for an A. Led Zeppelin’s The Rain Song for G. Sweet Home Alabama for D, Tom Sawyer by Rush for E, etc. Thanks for exploring this!

  • @almundeyes
    @almundeyes 4 роки тому +71

    the inner ear thing is something i naturally had since i was a kid but frankly i thought everybody could do it

    • @andsalomoni
      @andsalomoni 3 роки тому +6

      It is imagination, and everbody has it. If it is not musical, it is visual or any other sense. You can even have smell imagination.

    • @justsomeguy892
      @justsomeguy892 3 роки тому +5

      @@andsalomoni Actually, not everybody has it. Most do, but some can't imagine music, and some can't imagine images or smells or tastes either. Some can't do any of those.

    • @justsomeguy892
      @justsomeguy892 3 роки тому

      @@andsalomoni I can do all of them but sound is by far the most vivid and realistic for me.

    • @khaled7stars
      @khaled7stars 3 роки тому

      me too

    • @mari97216
      @mari97216 2 роки тому

      Same here, I didn’t think it was unusual. This is also why it can be so annoying to have a whole library of songs running through your mind when you don’t want them to. F. ex baby shark on repeat😂 my tonal memory is very good and I learn songs fast.

  • @dcool2u2
    @dcool2u2 4 роки тому +2

    I use this when I need to learn any song for my cover band. Before I even pick up the guitar or sit at the keyboard I'll listen to the song multiple times so all the parts, the intro, verses, chorus, vocals, are in my head. Makes it so much easier and faster to learn.

  • @novacadian4745
    @novacadian4745 3 роки тому

    Such wonderful children, Rick! The brief interaction on the video supported what had been my thought for a while now... that you truly are a nice guy and as it turns out a loving father.

  • @JeffreyGold
    @JeffreyGold 5 років тому +19

    When I was in Cambridgeshire, I remember a famous English composer telling me that half the great composers had perfect pitch and the other half had relative pitch, and that having relative pitch was not a disadvantage-in fact, it is more versatile, because people with perfect pitch can be _discombobulated_ by a piece not being in the right key.

    • @Cr8Tron
      @Cr8Tron 5 років тому +2

      Maybe not "discombobulated", but I think even people with relative pitch can be at least "bothered" by music after it's been transposed. I know it often bothers me. I'm definitely never off by more than a semitone, when tested without a reference. Perhaps even more accurate than that. But I'm pretty sure perfect pitch implies something more like being able to never be off by more than 10 cents?

    • @johnhaller7017
      @johnhaller7017 5 років тому +3

      If you can audiate (hear in your head) then relative pitch is all you need. The intervals in your head can be transposed if you need to later. The trick is to recognise when your mind is receptive to hearing the inner Music. Generally when you are doing something like jogging or walking or even washing the dishes. During these times you have to switch your attention to your inner ear and then you will hear the"youv'e got mail" in the form of whatever music is coming through at that moment.

    • @JeffreyGold
      @JeffreyGold 5 років тому +1

      LOL. Well, I struggled to find the right word, and when I tried to suss out the nuance to the word *discombobulated,* it stated _disconcert or confuse_ (and _confuse_ need not have the permanence we usually attribute to it). The origin of word in the mid 19th century was likely based on _discompose_ (disturb or agitate) and _discomfit_ (feel uneasy), which I thought were equally apt.

    • @Cr8Tron
      @Cr8Tron 5 років тому +1

      @@JeffreyGold I wasn't trying to point out any misuse of your words (I wasn't even implying such). You used "discombobulated" to describe peoples' experience with PERFECT pitch, and I just wanted to point out that I can still perhaps relate, even with only RELATIVE pitch. I was only suggesting the milder word "bothered" to describe a relative-pitch person like myself, as I didn't want to come off like I was downplaying the severity of a perfect-pitch person's negative experience.

    • @JeffreyGold
      @JeffreyGold 5 років тому +1

      @Cr8Tron No worries. I totally got you. :-) I did use it as an opportunity to delve even more into the nuance.
      Regarding your other note: As a relative pitch man myself, I have absolutely no idea of what you speak. LOL
      (I just tested myself again to see if I have transcended to perfect pitch, and I have not.)

  • @debvalle7466
    @debvalle7466 5 років тому +3

    I'd love to hear a longer version of this! Great topic. Maybe there's hope for me : D

  • @CiscoDuck
    @CiscoDuck 5 років тому +1

    Rick, this video just reinforces something I was taught first from my father who was a great musician - and many times over the years by various people whom I connected with in a musical way; many of them as musicians I worked with and others I met who told me over and over like so many others before dating back to my Pops, "The most important musical skill is that of listening & hearing." I asked all of them what they meant, and the response was to really listen to each musical composition or piece with my real ears. In other words to really hear the song. As a tot I heard songs like 'Sleep Walk', 'Tequila' and other tunes that caught my young ear and stuck in my mind; eventually getting down in my heart - LONG before I ever touched a mysical instrument and LONG before I even had a recognizable desire to even play. I could sing those notes out, pretty much in time and in very close to key or pitch. A decade later when learning to play the guitar I could still sing out those notes to the songs but I was a disaster when it came to attempting to play those tunes. I couldn't find my butt with either hand as the saying goes. I couldn't even approximate the rhythm much less the melody. Eventually my musical skills caught up with my already mentally processed familiararity with those tunes but I had to learn to hear what I had already present in my head - I had to re-listen to what I had heard as a youngster. Then I could discover where those tunes were on the guitar. It took years to recognize all of that but over and over I came to the same crossroads as I was learning many songs I had heard as a kid, songs that I really dug, and ones that made an indellible impression on me - so much so they worked their way into my psyche, etched upon my mind and dear to my heart. Over the years I learned thousands of songs - just by ear. How was I able to learn so many songs without the benefit of formal musical training or having copies of the sheet music? Simply by listening and really hearing the songs. Over fifty years have come and gone and after learning many things about music, listening and hearing are still the most important skills I ever developed and they appeared long before I ever showed any aptitude to play an instrument.

  • @davesteel7513
    @davesteel7513 5 років тому

    First, thanks Rick. Your videos are always a treat. Second - cute kids and they are as musical as their father. What you're talking about here is the primary auditory cortex. It is a clear and separate part of the brain. Even stroke victims can still recognize songs and can often sing the melody. Keep up the great work.

  • @jonthecomposer
    @jonthecomposer 5 років тому +5

    Another great video!!!
    I agree. I was going to say "listen," but that's all part of what you are talking about. Because you have to listen (in your mind) to what you are imagining in order to bring it out. And in direct opposite of that, you must listen in order to internalize anything you hear with your ears.
    I taught myself listening early on because I used to be obssessive about getting things correct as a kid. So instead of hearing something and approximating it and saying, "That's good enough," sometimes I'd take hours (back before I had any actual ear training) and listen over and over and over ad infinitum until what I played matched. The great thing was it was all self-taught with no reference point. In other words, I "toughed it out" with a trial-and-error approach until I'd gotten good enough that it started just coming to me. Then once I learned intervals, it was easy. It literally helped EVERYTHING. It helped intonation, playing songs, writing songs, transcribing, memorization, everything.
    Music is all relative. There is ALWAYS a correlation somewhere no matter how melodious, dissonant, or atonal. And once you start to recognize the landscape of the building blocks of music, you can appreciate more greatly how things relate, diverge, cooperate, clash, harmonize, and convey emotion/meaning.

    • @jfo3000
      @jfo3000 5 років тому +1

      I also learned a lot of music by ear. I tried to teach myself guitar from 1972 to 74 and actually learned solos note for note, by ear, before TAB, instructional videos, the Web, as we all did back then. Such a valuable experience. I believe that helped me develop strong audiation. I've named songs in two notes, and even one note at public events. I hear that one note and my mind jumps through the entire song to the end in a fraction of a second. I'm sure many can do this, but it always amazes me. But I don't do it, my brain does it, I just listen.

    • @jonthecomposer
      @jonthecomposer 5 років тому

      That's awesome! I do that too with songs. And the more I like the song, the easier it is to do. My favorite song, A Whiter Shade of Pale, is like that. As soon as I hear that first E from the organ on the original, I know instantly. It's amazing what the brain can do.

  • @baconair
    @baconair 4 роки тому +3

    When I write music I always imagine the tune in my head, where it brews for some time. Days or weeks later I have a complete song in my head, almost without me thinking about it. With harmonies, base, rhytm, feel, everything. At this point it's for me to decide if the tune is decent enough to record it.
    I have multiple ideas brewing at the same time. Sometimes they feed into each other, merge, and two tunes become one.
    Kinda cool. I'm just a "transcriber" really.

  • @jamesnudell4190
    @jamesnudell4190 5 років тому

    sir . you are a really goood father figure and a great grandpa. love watching you. I've been a music teacher for 3 decades and have played viola in the Spokane Symphony back in the 80's as a prodigy turned into street kid meets L.A in the 80's then Seattle in the 90's. Guitar mostly

  • @christopherpayne8776
    @christopherpayne8776 5 років тому

    this is hands down my favorite articulation of this idea. aimee nolte addressed this in a slightly different way talking about imagining melodies in modes and whatnot. but never from that video did i get the impression that this was something ANYBODY can do. very encouraging. liked.

  • @007380
    @007380 4 роки тому +128

    I thought everyone could do this. I'm 63 and I can't remember not being able to do this.

    • @palliaskamen5722
      @palliaskamen5722 4 роки тому +20

      The problem is, getting songs OUT of your head, like Dancing Queen by ABBA.

    • @theoneleggedchef
      @theoneleggedchef 4 роки тому +2

      Just curious, are you a fellow musician? I've been obsessed with playing guitar for 34 years now...

    • @mackhomie6
      @mackhomie6 4 роки тому +2

      I doubt that, Roger. you have perfect pitch and didnt realize it?

    • @wiltisdabest
      @wiltisdabest 4 роки тому +13

      @@mackhomie6 this isn't perfect pitch most people remember familiar songs in the right key in their head. If they have training with the voice they usually sing it in the right key too or very close.

    • @mackhomie6
      @mackhomie6 4 роки тому +1

      @@wiltisdabest i haven't found that to be the case, and "very close" being á half step? two steps?
      also, the kid has perfect pitch.

  • @listenerofrealrap
    @listenerofrealrap 5 років тому +3

    Great video Rick, about 2 to 3 months ago, I figured out the main theme from Ode to Joy on my guitar completely from audiating from my head to the guitar (wrong key though).
    As someone without perfect pitch and an underdeveloped relative pitch, it was a massive achievement for me and I hope practicing musicians will understand how important this skill is from your video as well.

    • @johnhaller7017
      @johnhaller7017 5 років тому +1

      Relative pitch is all you need. If you need to copy an already existent song note for note then you can zone in on it from relative pitch, because the melodic intervals are the same. Adjust the pitch later. If you hear it in B and it's actually in C, then you can adjust it once you have established the relative melody in the first place.

  • @Locoporcromo1
    @Locoporcromo1 4 роки тому

    Loved this video. Simple. Clear. Extremely Valuable. Many Thaks Rick!

  • @krishnablah
    @krishnablah 5 років тому

    A ton of gratitude . every video is so informative and your kids are so amazing. makes me feel like quitting music and immediately makes me fall in love with music again and practice . Thank you so much

  • @SamyakJainMusician
    @SamyakJainMusician 5 років тому +4

    You are the best rick..!
    Love from 🇮🇳 India

  • @tx4yabass
    @tx4yabass 5 років тому +3

    I LOVE THIS GUY!!!.. Just discovered this chanel.... So interesting!!!!

  • @hectorjayala
    @hectorjayala 5 років тому

    Really, Rick, you have changed my LIFE. No price, no way to tell you how much I Thank YOU.

  • @danielpalese6887
    @danielpalese6887 5 років тому

    Rick, I love your videos. They’re such an awesome and accessible resource for music and musicians

  • @wienerwoods
    @wienerwoods 4 роки тому +163

    Listening is the most important cognitive skill a musician has. Close listening.

    • @TS-gn2wy
      @TS-gn2wy 4 роки тому +4

      It's the most important skill in life. Thanks for reminding me! 😎

    • @ferox965
      @ferox965 4 роки тому +7

      Absolutely. Without a developed ear, you don't make it to practicing an instrument.

    • @mrridikilis
      @mrridikilis 4 роки тому

      Werd!

    • @j74s98
      @j74s98 4 роки тому +2

      When I tried to learn to play bass as a 16 year old, I had a brilliant guitar teacher. I never practiced and eventually sold my bass. But what he taught me, and what I still do today, is to listen. When I hear music now I separating bass, drums, keys, guitar, vocals, everything. Then I can understand why I like the song or dislike the song.

    • @s4lroachclip
      @s4lroachclip 4 роки тому +1

      There have been a great deal of deaf musicians that proved otherwise. I knew this guy that played guitar completely amazing, and was gigging, but he had to have someone else keep his guitar tuned because he, like me need a needle to tell me not my ear.

  • @Oilid
    @Oilid 5 років тому +21

    I got this skill.
    Sometimes I hear wonderful pieces of music... but I'm too lazy to work on it!
    It would be so great if a piece of gear were invented to record into our inner ears!!!

    • @alex0589
      @alex0589 5 років тому +3

      i think you mean to record our thoughts, cause recording your inner ear is exactly what a microphone is trying to do, just without the bones and liquid slushing around ahah yuck

    • @Oilid
      @Oilid 5 років тому +1

      ha ha

  • @simpleeye7950
    @simpleeye7950 5 років тому +1

    Dylan described the audiation process really well! That's exactly what it feels like. Perfect pitch operates like that too, how you hum a pitch seemingly out of thin air. Each pitch is a book on a shelf that you pull down and open up at will.

  • @markmanczuk3458
    @markmanczuk3458 5 років тому +1

    This segment is fantastic! I have told my students over the years-“if you can sing it...you can play it.” Many of the musical traditions from Africa and Asia require you to sing are transmitted via oral tradition. Good stuff Rick...we should chat sometime. Be glad to share my experiences on learning tabla as it relates to this...

  • @Armov
    @Armov 5 років тому +102

    Literally say this to my students every day.

  • @ihavetubes
    @ihavetubes 5 років тому +660

    The MOST Important Musical Skill Is...............persistence.

    • @aidanschram9652
      @aidanschram9652 5 років тому +19

      Is that really a skill tho?

    • @Waltzhybrid92
      @Waltzhybrid92 5 років тому +6

      Yeah very musical.

    • @ingridayarza
      @ingridayarza 5 років тому +22

      @@aidanschram9652 I think so. You have to cultivate it.

    • @HBSuccess
      @HBSuccess 5 років тому +21

      That’s critical in getting the gig - but once you’re hired, above all else (even above persistence) you have to be able to work easily with people. Being professional- on time, no excuses, low maintenance, self-contained, and FLEXIBLE, especially when things are not going well for a gig or a production. That’s way more important than talent unless you’re one of the elite few headliners who can get away (for a short time) being prima donnas because they can fill classical concert halls or rock arenas. For the other 99.999% of the folks lucky enough to make a living in the music industry it’s about the relationships you make over years and decades. Burn even one bridge and it could take a lifetime to get another opportunity.

    • @trydigama3
      @trydigama3 5 років тому +2

      ihavetubes i thing discipline would be more important

  • @ThomasAtzinger
    @ThomasAtzinger 4 роки тому +2

    I really love what you say and do.
    You are doing a great service to music. Thank you!

  • @VincentPendley
    @VincentPendley 5 років тому

    Good point Rick, that's something I've been doing for years. I would even practice hearing them and "switching channels" to a new song, etc. It'a great tool for learning. Thanks, great video.

  • @temporarymomentary
    @temporarymomentary 5 років тому +179

    What makes this song great - King Crimson

    • @MrBorderlands123
      @MrBorderlands123 5 років тому +27

      As long as Fripp is around, that's not happening.

    • @abisamraj4408
      @abisamraj4408 5 років тому +1

      Are you have a fox

    • @mattmarkus4868
      @mattmarkus4868 5 років тому

      TempuS truth

    • @abisamraj4408
      @abisamraj4408 5 років тому

      Are you all women or lesbians kind of guy good to know that you are a musician

    • @giovannicerva5522
      @giovannicerva5522 5 років тому +3

      You are very wise black Phillip.

  • @SpectreSoundStudios
    @SpectreSoundStudios 5 років тому +78

    Very cool episode, Rick!

  • @ZgemboBeterovic
    @ZgemboBeterovic 5 років тому

    So many videos and every time I see new one, I'm blown away by it's quality

  • @DBLRxyz
    @DBLRxyz 5 років тому +1

    This is definitely something valuable in mastering. Simple yet highly effective. This is how I have been able to translate my favorite artists methods of drum loops to chord progressions laying tightly under some other instruments in more experimental music.

  • @lisawanderess
    @lisawanderess 3 роки тому +3

    I don’t know how many gigs of RAM I have in my brain for thousands of songs: the lyrics, melody, base lines & harmonies but its a LOT! My kids always joke “Mum do you have a song for everything?” because I’ll hear someone say something and start singing a song that phrase brought up in my brain. My daughter once phoned me asking “Mum, I know you’ll know this but whats that song that goes ba, ba, bah bah, ba, ba ba bupah?” And instantly I replied “Thats Bronski Beat’s Smalltown Boy” 😂

  • @OHHnoYOUdidntMAN
    @OHHnoYOUdidntMAN 5 років тому +4

    This is in-part exactly how I learned how to make music from a framework of the mix of artists I enjoy and take inspiration from.
    Perfect explanation.

  • @slowmotion6870
    @slowmotion6870 5 років тому

    Very helpful. I make tunes myself most inspired by jazz. Every tune i made so far started out as just a few notes in my head which seem to express the mood, rythm, tone... but i never actually stopped to think of this. Thanks for reminding it is of great use to consciously use this i think.

  • @raybart5604
    @raybart5604 5 років тому

    Having watched your channel from the start this is the first time I am moved to comment (although I have been fascinated by your output). This is stunning and works reliably for me, pitch/key accurate. This is especially true for tunes from my youthful memory. Totally absorbing all day, many thanks.

  • @maxkaledin3462
    @maxkaledin3462 5 років тому +5

    I have been a bass player for almost 10 years. This is a story of how I learned the piano.
    On my last job there was wonderful electric piano. Being a terrible ping-pong player (this was a natural option to spend time during lunch break), I found myself on this instrument. Time was tight, about 30 minutes every day, so I did not even think about printing scores and trying to play them (or it was just my laziness :) ). The framework was simple: I had in mind some tunes (musical themes, songs) and some idea about chords. So I applied my knowledge and translation skill. I just started playing on the piano! I had never ever played it, only had theoretical understanding. I started to use my translation and memory to continue with that. In the evening I watched some youtube video, or a film, or listening to jazzFM. In the lunch time the most impressive tunes were sounding from the piano. JUST after hearing it several times! On the instrument I have never played! Easily combining two hands with a melody and chords/arpeggios.
    The progress was amazing. Practise is essential to adsorb techniques in the hands. However there is no mechanical practice which could be as effective as pure exploration of your musical memory and trying to transcribe the ideas you heard.

    • @xyzyzx1253
      @xyzyzx1253 5 років тому

      Maxim Kaledin this is encouraging thank you!

  • @lphilpot01
    @lphilpot01 5 років тому +76

    Many times I'll find myself on a drive and instead of listening to music on the stereo, I'll "play" tune after tune, completely, in my head. I can even hear things I couldn't figure out (to play) but when I get home and try to replicate on it guitar, it's gone. :-\

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape 5 років тому +18

      This happens to me in the shower. By the time I towel off and get to my instrument it's gone. Like trying to remember a dream fives minutes after you wake up, so frustrating.

    • @lphilpot01
      @lphilpot01 5 років тому +9

      Helium Road exactly. It's in my head until I play the first note on the guitar and it vanishes. I can 't hold onto it.

    • @gyurko
      @gyurko 5 років тому +5

      Haha YES! I've been doing this for some time now, and often it is more "pleasurable" to listen to the song inside my head than the actual song itself! Haha!

    • @bobparsonsartist564
      @bobparsonsartist564 5 років тому +5

      My early guitar teacher was teaching me to play Little Rock Getaway. He said can you hear the melody in your head? I said yeah. He said , you need a way to translate that into audible notes...can you hum it or whistle it. I found I could whistle it. Then, having the sound out in the open I could find the notes on the guitar. One thing, “singing “ the phrase will do, well two things is: It will give you I the amount of notes and the timing of the notes within the phrase, even if your pitches are off.

    • @wesleyalan9179
      @wesleyalan9179 5 років тому

      Len Philpot ...hahaha, me too, happens all the time!

  • @alcondragon
    @alcondragon 4 роки тому +1

    Rick, great video. I have 2 friends that were grads from MIT( wait, not true, 1 grad the other dropped out after 2 years took a job) in Boston (actually Cambridge). This was something we have discussed for 30 years. I always contended that memory is a file system within our brain, because I could always pull (such as your son Dylan) either sound or video. I could see a movie or memory as if video were playing in my head. Any movie scene that I saw once, or like in high-school band, all I needed was to see the sheet music once and i would retain and then always be able to recall it. I never needed the music in parades and I always knew the order of play. Same as in stage band. (And-while always tuning) In band I played the Tuba and stage band guitar. I always had perfect pitch, and didn't need to tune to any machine, I was always tested on it. Both my friends that were grads went on into computer science and have done very well, we only talk 2 to 3 times a year now as life takes its travels, they are both on the west coast. My point here is YOU...Rick!..... Every one of your videos touches a base of the past, the present and the future. You are like sitting with an old friend and talking and discussing life from within the Musical Realm!....I can't thank you enough for the memories that you have reopened and brought back to the surface.........As well as YOU being responsible for what no one else could do, get me back into Music Theory.....Mr. Rick Beato, may you continue to be blessed and teach, the doors you open to so many now a million or more. God Bless Rick! ENjoy!

  • @TheEleventeen
    @TheEleventeen 5 років тому

    Wonderful video Mr. Beato ! Well, I have to admit that all of your videos are wonderful. Thank you for making them.

  •  5 років тому +3

    Hey Rick! Digging your videos a lot.
    I guess you are familiar with Edwin Gordon's music learning theory? He basically outlined the whole process of how to teach music through audiation. I was working for 2 years in a music school which principal was very into this and it has also helped me develop more my own 'ear'.
    I remember having this friend in primary music school who was able to play anything by ear, reharmonize it or play a small invention based on it. I used to think that is some cosmic skill you randomly get from the universe. Now I know that anyone can learn it! Of course the earlier you start, the better. But as I've been learning music since I was 7 years old, only around my 18th year of living I realized I lack the skill of AUDIATION! But thanks to some open minded people I met on my way I started to also develop this ability and now, for example, I rarely need any sheets for the music I play. I just ask someone to play it for me or I learn from a recording.
    Actually I don't know why I've mentioned all of this, just wanted to tell you about Edwin Gordon and say hello. Thanks again for your classy content :)

  • @mkivy
    @mkivy 4 роки тому +10

    Hey sir, I really enjoy ur expertise and experience....love Layla’s name...Eric Clapton original! I’m an old Rocker from the sixties seventies and early eighties life...I toured mostly the east coast with Charlie Daniels and Nazareth...and yes I lived the rockers life. I was a lead guitar player N lead singer....I also wrote most of the music. I was classically trained from age 8-12 the the Beatles when I was nine and that was the change in my music 🎼 taste, but when I heard Hendrix, the Doors, and especially Cream, I begged for an electric guitar...I am impressed with ur experienced...I wish there had been classic guitar colleges around me when I was 17 in 1972...but my parents couldn’t afford it...so...I wrote music practiced, and formed my first band 1969...the drum auditions was Wipe out and the guitar auditions were “Sunshine of ur love”, they had to be able to play the drums and guitar parts...I hired most bass players bc they were hard to find...my first PA was a Altec Lansing and Shure Sm57 mics. I still remember saving up and buying a Wine Colored Les Paul...hard shell case “included!” But soon learned my short stubby fingers couldn’t reach the high end register. I then bought an SG and the rest is history...(which I have a degree In). later sir...as I said , I’m very impressed with ur resume, and life experience...and u play very well....bless u and ur beautiful family....my 4 kids changed my life...got me off the road and a world who knows how it would of ended bc I was totally a rock star 💫 well not really but I drank a heck of a lot like a Rock Star...Mr Daniels paid for our beer which was brought to us not by hand but buy hand-truck- lol, those were the days...hard to believe I survived it...so many did t and or earned early deaths...I’ve had kidney Cancer and now Heart disease...one of them will finish me. Enjoy these times with ur family. Now that I’m a Grand-father, I just adore those kids...but I miss my kids. I can close my eyes 👀 and remember the days when they were small! Relish these times. U only get one chance per kid...and they are beautiful and talented like their father...thank u for the time...sorry I “Ramble On”....

    • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849
      @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 4 роки тому +4

      Mike Ivy: you’re not rambling, you’re sharing and I enjoyed reading it. All the best my man. 👍

    • @jstnxprsn
      @jstnxprsn 4 роки тому +2

      We're almost exactly the same age and had many similar experiences, it seems, and we're still both here to reminisce about them.
      Peace brother. Keep on rockin' the free world.

    • @elisabethseaton6521
      @elisabethseaton6521 3 роки тому

      I usually don't read really long comments, but I read yours to the end. I was 26 in 1972 and the music was amazing. ( I remember the Fresh Cream album.) I found your remarks very interesting and somewhat nostalgia-inducing. I hope you are still on the planet enjoying your grandkids. Waylon and I shared the same birthday, but he was 9 years older than I. RIP Charlie and Waylon. Thank you for posting your comment

  • @truthseeker4128
    @truthseeker4128 4 роки тому

    Wow... Rick, I've been sub'ed to your channel for a short while now.. and I just realized that your son is the kid with perfect pitch.. I loved those videos and I'm completely blown away!

  • @ParkourStormer
    @ParkourStormer 4 роки тому

    I've had that since I was really young because I was BINGING on music ... Now I'm super into production and playing the guitar and listening to so much music definitely helps your musical intuition

  • @thomaskelly2040
    @thomaskelly2040 5 років тому +6

    SHOCKING! Rick Beato uploaded a video at 10:30pm Sunday night. It's important I will watch!

  • @agento86
    @agento86 5 років тому +24

    Wewt!! Story time with Rick. Bring it! ./pass popcorn.
    I love the fact that from time to time you refer to Bach.
    BWV 1048 is my favorite of the Brandenburg Concertos. In fact, right after you mentioned it, I started whistling his Variation no. 6. (popped in my head for some reason) While the melody is great, the Variation no. 6 has this wonderful "perpetuum mobile" in the harmony that is just as fun to sing as it is to play.
    Nice. It's going to be stuck in my head all night. Might as well head over to the piano and play it. :D

    • @andyq9669
      @andyq9669 5 років тому +2

      Yeah, I got that earworm too now. Bach is the Boss.

  • @GuilhermeSilva-rp2it
    @GuilhermeSilva-rp2it 5 років тому

    I´ve got addicted to Rick´s videos, just cannot stop watching them. Greetings from Rio de Janeiro.

  • @johnmoser2689
    @johnmoser2689 5 років тому

    That was another excellent episode.... thanks for sharing with us all I'm sure I speak for all your fans when I say Happy New Year we love you Rick

  • @AaronLaFalce
    @AaronLaFalce 4 роки тому +5

    great vid, brother. i love that you incorporate the kids.

    • @yurik1068
      @yurik1068 4 роки тому

      That little kids awesome, with his perfect pitch and is very musical. I love it whenever his in the show.

  • @Holobrine
    @Holobrine 5 років тому +3

    I’ve been able to do that for as long as can remember, even when I don’t want it to happen.

  • @juricabura8967
    @juricabura8967 3 роки тому

    Rick You are amazing man, sharing all of this with us, and nice to see that You have beautiful family. Learned so much from You in such a short time. God bless!

  • @PhilBusby
    @PhilBusby 3 роки тому

    More of this philosophy of music please. If anyone else is making videos like this, please list as reply. It is so important to consider these aspects and I cannot get enough of them. Thank you Mr Beato.

  • @wishnewsky
    @wishnewsky 5 років тому +87

    Fun and important scientific fact: people audiate music at 2x speed of the original (as you can see in this video as well). No idea why though

    • @enkiea8322
      @enkiea8322 5 років тому +3

      Wow, I've always noticed I do that. Never realized everyone did. Cool.

    • @MatthewHarnage
      @MatthewHarnage 5 років тому +10

      I don't know either but I do it sometimes to remind myself of the next part.
      So say I remember the verse but not the chorus. I'd audiate twice as fast through the verse to jog my memory, or I guess go get my book of the shelf. ;)

    • @alex0589
      @alex0589 5 років тому +1

      I think i can do 8x, just like a dvd player!

    • @pebblenapkins
      @pebblenapkins 5 років тому +9

      you need to be born with perfect tempo.
      Jk idk

    • @justgivemethetruth
      @justgivemethetruth 4 роки тому

      so you can catch up with yourself.

  • @russellworkman9262
    @russellworkman9262 4 роки тому +19

    doesn't everyone's brain do this? sad. I still remember feeling delighted when I was about 7 or 8 years old and realizing I could instantly "hear" any song I wanted to just by thinking of it. Was it as exciting as actually listening to it? no. But it really kind of amazed me that I could do this at will, because I really liked music.

  • @gilbertrockstv8557
    @gilbertrockstv8557 5 років тому +1

    Great stuff Rick! As an elementary ed. music teacher, I gotta say I love your teaching style. My entire room is setup like a recording studio and a logic or pro tools session is up on the big screen for every grade. There is an end game to what we learn that is fun and connects with this generation. You should really think about getting the Beato Method into elementary schools across America. It's how I am teaching already and our country needs a major overhaul in the educational arena. Keep on rocking it my friend. :)

  • @fionaottley4976
    @fionaottley4976 4 роки тому +2

    It's like a recording of the performance I know best, in toto. All the instruments, the vocalists actual voice. I can literally hear it in my mind.

  • @thejasonknightfiascoband5099
    @thejasonknightfiascoband5099 5 років тому +19

    If I ever have kids I hope I have a similar musical relationship w/ them.

  • @nicktaylor5264
    @nicktaylor5264 5 років тому +10

    I always though that the theme from Star Wars was basically Born Free (about lions and such) upside down.

  • @cledo44
    @cledo44 Рік тому +1

    Lovely & amazing tutorial!

  • @nitinsampaul
    @nitinsampaul 4 роки тому

    Rick you're so great, you're explaining intangible stuff that normal people can't see. You're bringing in the visual.

  • @brentmoore3778
    @brentmoore3778 5 років тому +5

    Rick just wanted to thank you for the wealth of information you have laid on us I couldn't message you on you're live s'

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  5 років тому

      Why is that Brent? If you can message here you can message there.

  • @chrisa7498
    @chrisa7498 4 роки тому +3

    So here's the question. I can hear a song, seemingly almost perfectly in my head, but when I try to sing/hum it, it doesn't come out right, often, because I am not a good singer. Getting it from head to voice can often disrupt what the song sounds like. It's usually easier for me to go from head straight to guitar. So the question is, how does one take advantage of that shortcoming? I'm not sure how singing out the parts of a song, if not in pitch, or close to pitch, helps someone because without being close to pitch, you can mess up what the song sounds like, intervals excepted perhaps. Does that make sense?
    It's so frustrating because my 10 year old daughter has an amazing singing voice, but probably mostly because she's a songbird and has been singing all day every day since she was born....likely inherited from my wife who has a very good singing voice.

  • @justingutube
    @justingutube 3 роки тому

    I love this. I'll never forget when I was a kid driving somewhere and my father and he taught me rhythm. He told me to tap the center console with the beat to whatever song was on the radio, and I had no idea what he was talking about. I was way off initially, but he was very patient and i caught on. Eventually he patiently showed me how to listen to the beat and by the time we got to our destination I was tapping the console to the beat of every song. I will never forget that and it was a lesson many people still don't know as years go by, how to follow a beat. I love this Rick, nice work.

    • @tomasvanecek8626
      @tomasvanecek8626 Рік тому +1

      The rhythm feel is so hard to get.. anyone can learn to play scales..
      play fast.. But you have to know where to play on the beat, and even more so when and how behind the beat - if you´re into rock or blues

  • @norbertarnoczki9890
    @norbertarnoczki9890 4 роки тому

    Sir. Iam glad you are here. Thank you.

  • @victorwilburn8588
    @victorwilburn8588 3 роки тому +3

    I think even before that, listening is the most important skill for a musician, especially an ensemble musician.

    • @paulquigley8576
      @paulquigley8576 3 роки тому

      Listening is most important skill in life, listening to everything, everyone, and each other...
      Been listening to some improvisation recordings, thinking, why didn't I repeat that bit ? It's totally different listening back than it is while playing it, or, making it up as I hear it, or, the other way round, or something, or ghosts controlling thought...

  • @poopypanysou812
    @poopypanysou812 5 років тому +24

    When I listen to an album a few times, I can hear the next songs intro in pitch and time and hear it's dynamics....Only in the space before it plays. I'm not sure but can't everybody do this?

  • @joemorgan1854
    @joemorgan1854 4 роки тому

    Thank you, Rick, for talking about the developed skill to audiate. Just a few years ago, I had to realize this on my own as the reason I got sloppy or was fuzzy or had a bad day in terms of execution. None of the countless teachers I'd taken from over decades ever broached this idea. I've been teaching my voice students that it's almost certainly not a physical issue when they're having trouble - it's a matter of not audiating. Hear it, and get out of your own way.

  • @tweikert3
    @tweikert3 5 років тому +1

    I believe this technique is also used in music therapy for helping people relearn how to speak if they have had some mental trauma and lost the ability (like a stroke). Memory is based on spatial reference rather than “storing books on a shelf” as his son describes, so if you can physically imagine the song or recording playing as Rick describes, then the melody will follow and can be vocalized using a different part of the brain than what controls our speaking. So it was found that those whom have lost the ability to speak can still vocalize their thoughts by singing them along with the melody of songs they know very well.

  • @joekelley5121
    @joekelley5121 5 років тому +3

    I have the ability to instantly sing a song's melody I think of, but it's definitely not perfect pitch since I'm usually flat, but I don't sing off key. I have this weird thing I do on occasion where I'll start singing a song, and then shift keys while I keep singing.

    • @alex0589
      @alex0589 5 років тому

      Joe Kelley so youre tone deaf.... congratulations!

    • @joekelley5121
      @joekelley5121 5 років тому

      No, that's not what I said at all. I'm not tone deaf. It's just something I found that I could do.

  • @brandonquaite7739
    @brandonquaite7739 5 років тому +10

    I Love Your Channel! :)
    Your son is awesome! :)
    We both have perfect pitch! ;)

    • @freeman7079
      @freeman7079 5 років тому

      Brandon Quaite Rick doesn’t have perfect pitch but his children do.

    • @Hailey_Paige_1937
      @Hailey_Paige_1937 5 років тому

      I think Brandon was referring to himself, and to Dylan. “We” both have perfect pitch.

  • @GarnetWaltersMusic
    @GarnetWaltersMusic 5 років тому

    This is awesome! I can finally put a term to what I do in my mind musically! I love your videos! Thanks for sharing this.

  • @MrKittles1123
    @MrKittles1123 4 роки тому

    This is really important and it can take a long time to be aware of it enough to start consciously using it. It’s amazing how obvious it is when it dawns on a person, but it eludes many.