Train Your Ears Part One: Intervals
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- Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
- In todays video we take a look at a skill many of my students aim to learn, ear training. This is the first part in a series of videos where I will aim to walk you through the fundamental skills that are taught in ear training classes in music universities everywhere. Links to everything I do can be found below and here is a link to the ear training website I mentioned before! www.teoria.com
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Great lesson Matt! Ty for the inspiration
My pleasure!
thank you :3! I’ll use this later‼️
Glad you found it useful!
Thanks man. I'm going to try it with the guitar.
Good luck with it!
As other user(and I hope,your follower) said,great lesson. I remember you talking in one of your videos about improvisation how we’re all better improvisers in our minds while in reality we don’t really dig the sounds we are producing. Don’t you think it has something to do with underdeveloped ears(at least to some extent)?
Because coming up with a great phrase doesn’t mean anything if you can’t reproduce it in real time. Relying on scale fingerings and patterns in hope of finding a nice melody isn’t really the right way, I think. Tim Miller said in interview that a most of the stuff he covers with his students goes to ear training. Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m nowhere near a great improvisor(in any style) nor do I have great set of ears, I’m just sharing my thoughts with you.
With all that being said, I subscribed to your Channel and I NEVER subscribe to any channels(last time I did that was over 10 years ago). Great content(be it lessons or clips of you playing)! It’s great how you managed to explain some of the jazz concepts that always seemed out of my reach(to be fair,most of the jazz stuff seemed too advanced for me and I do know some theory). Thanks,man😊
Glad you enjoyed the video and thanks for the sub! As far as ear training leading to better solo's I tend to agree with you! However it is possible for players to develop very strong audiation skills (audiation is getting the sound in your head to come out of the guitar) without intensive ear training but I would argue that ear training and actually knowing what you're playing will improve your overall musicality and audiation without trying to rely on a natural knack for being able to channel ideas from your head to the instrument.
I'm really glad to hear you feel like you're learning and improving from my videos! I've been committed to trying to put out straight to the point and practical lessons rather than click baity videos to gain views so it's a little slow going growth wise but comments like this make it all worth it!
Thanks for watching and being a part of this channels small but mighty community!
Yeah, I agree… Trained ears,good technique and extensive knowledge of music theory is the combination we all should aim for! After that, it is only the matter of imagination and creativity…
As for audiation goes, I agree on that one too. How else to explain great improvising skills of players from various ethnic music backgrounds? Yes,there is always some theory involved,but in the end,those guys mostly rely on their ears.
Anyway,thank you for taking time to reply! Have fun…