He’s definitely right. I started here and then started over from the first one and it’s definitely easier starting from the ground up. Great series so far.
I’ve seen other channels do videos on ear training and theory, and they breeze by all 12 intervals in the first 5 minutes. In my experience in teaching, that just doesn’t work.
Hello not a brad here just want to drop this comment pointing out that when I started watching your video the music theory that I've been trying to learn since past few months became a piece of cake sadly can't have cakes I don't like sweet too much 😞 but anyways you helped me a lot thank kind sir 😂
I've been wanting to do ear interval training forever and I just stumbled upon your Channel today I am your 200 subscriber LOL I just happen to notice because the step four was like And subscribe LOL and it made me laugh. I've never tried interval training before but I've only got like one wrong on video four and the video five on my first try each time so far. So it's definitely giving me hope that intervals will be easier to learn than I thought. Thank you for your videos :-) looking forward to the next one!
Yay! Yes, intervals are much easier when taught in the right order. No offense to any other teachers, but I’ve seen a lot of videos that are like “here’s all 12 intervals, good luck!” I developed these videos while teaching intervals to 4th and 5th graders, and if they can learn it anyone can.
Just found your channel. I’ve played guitar and electric bass for years but never took ear training serious. Definitely seen an improvement using the videos and exercises and found I wasn’t as bad as I thought I’d be. I’ve started to sing the major scale as numbers during the exercises now because frankly….I’m scared you’ll hunt me if I don’t put down Star Wars….or in my case the p5 was always superman.
Thanks for watching! Glad you found my channel. My lawyers advise me to publicly state that I am no longer hunting down people who only use tunes to identify intervals.
View out the whole series here: ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdnOR1cDcS_uQvW7Zff68xXT SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL: www.patreon.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy FOLLOW ME FOR THE LATEST NEWS ON CONTENT Facebook: facebook.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy Instagram: instagram.com/joeluegersmusicacademy Website: www.luegerswriter.com/ TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@joeluegersmusicacademy
This is exactly what i needed, having them described as “hollow” and “emotional”. Also, your humor is pretty good, if you can increase the quality of your videos i think you can become big.
Glad this helped! Yes, I know a whole lot more about music education than video editing, but I keep learning a bit each week and hopefully I can upgrade some of my recording equipment within the year.
bah, the content is good, the humor is good. This is a niche market, but it is helpful and the ideas and presentation is wonderful. Video production is secondary.
@@TedSchoenling if I’m being honest, I started making these to use for my own students. Since more and more people are finding them helpful, I’m going to put a “little” more work into mixing the audio and polishing the video production, to the best of my ability, but the focus is still the educational aspect.
I am going through your mini course on learning to recognize intervals. I am on the final episode. I still at an early stage of this episode; I guess I could say I am at sleeping on it stage- meaning I have yet to complete this episode. I will comment on one part of trying to listen to the different sources playing the interval. I am 75 years old. As you are well aware, as we get older, the amount of hair cells in our inner ear decrease which results in loosing the ability to hear higher frequencies. This is not a complaint, only a statement, some of the interments you use are very high frequency chimes or other high frequency producing instruments. I am unable to hear anything when chimes are the instrument, I hear a partial sound, but can not hear the two notes that are played. All of the notes you produced in the earlier lessons I been able to recognize- I sure there maybe higher frequency resonances- that I miss but I am able to distinguish the different notes played. As a educator, I appreciate you sharing these lectures to community via RUclips. Joe, you have a lot of other videos posted covering many different topics. Can you offer me a suggestion, i which of your other videos would logically be the next series to watch. I play guitar. I trying to learn to be able to better hear changes between the notes of popular music. I do not play well enough to be able to hear the relative changes in the melody or the be able to hear a chord changes and be able to recognize I V chord change verses I -> IV chord change. I want to be able to listen to a piece of music and be able using my ears alone, to recognize the change of chords or to easily figure out the actual melody changes during a song. I know I will never be able to hear high frequencies- but hopefully higher frequency overtones mirror the lever frequency that I am still able to hear. Thank you, I appreciate your effort to teach others how to use your ears to distinguish different sounds we hear. Thank you. When I was a kid I wish we had our current technology to do simple things like being able to keep a guitar in tune.
Thank you for the kind words and I'm glad by videos have been good use to you. Hopefully all of my piano examples were within a good hearing frequency; I'm guessing it was the extreme ranges section of the final lesson that may have gone beyond the ordinary hearing range. The overtone series is an interesting thing. A study has shown that if you remove the bottom pitch, or the fundamental, our brains put it back in because our ears recognize the pattern of overtones. As long as you can hear the first overtone, the pitch should be correct, and in most of my videos I try to stay around the middle of a piano. If you'd like to work on chord changes, I recently started a new series that talks about the roman numeral system. There should be a new episode in September. Here's the first: ruclips.net/video/xrUIS4UJxss/видео.htmlsi=X5MB-n8PazlNZQid Yes, the potential for education on technology like RUclips is really amazing. I'm only 32, but when I learned guitar things were very different if you were trying to teach yourself. I would buy books of guitar tabs, but if I didn't know how to read certain rhythms it would make it too confusing to learn. Now I use apps that play the music back at me, and I can adjust the tempo. It will be interesting to see if there is a new generation of RUclips-educated musicians coming up soon.
You might also find these useful: ruclips.net/video/YA-TXGYxOSw/видео.htmlsi=5znBdprGrhs1b842 And ruclips.net/video/8_dlvOc_Phg/видео.htmlsi=SvdKW8eqgC-CudPg
ive been doing these for a while and all intervals seem easy, but i cannot learn the perfect 5th and 4th. played one after another, the difference is obvious, but played randomly, i have no idea wich one is it. i know its one of the perfect intervals, but i got no clue which one. Anybody has any tips on how to percieve them to actually know them?
4ths and 5ths are probably the most commonly confused intervals other than 6ths. It makes sense because they are inversions of each other (C-F is a 4th, F-C is a 5th). The thing to do is imagine a resolution for the 4th. Sing 1-4-3 (do-fa-mi) and listen to how the upper note resolves down by a half step. You can’t really resolve a 5th like this. Hope that makes sense.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Thats an intresting way to think about it. I also didnt notice that 4th and 5th are invertions of themselves. Thanks for the tips! And for all your videos, they are fantastic.
Yes- a 4th can resolve down by a half step. Play these notes- C-F-E and listen to how it feels “settled” when you get to E. A perfect 5th or major 3rd can’t really resolve like this, and they usually sound very stable on their own. 3rds have a more emotionally complex sound than 5ths, which sounds super in-tune when played harmonically.
Sir, i want to play guitar fingerstyle . I am beginner , i don't know much about music, i am trying to learn. I want to learn solfege, please help me . Upload videos on solfege.🙏 I heard that knowing Solfege makes it easy to play any song .
Check out my newest video on solfège: Sight-Singing Exercises for the Treble Clef - Moveable Do Edition ruclips.net/video/e5c-37Rbeu0/видео.html For finger-style guitar, I teach my students out of this book: www.amazon.in/Julio-Sagreras-Guitar-Lessons-Book-ebook/dp/B00WYNM8C4
Yes I noticed that in my car, and it seems to depend on the speakers. My studio monitors sound fine, headphones sound okay. I’ve switched to a different midi piano sound for the next video, so let me know if you still hear it in that one. I think some midi instruments slightly detune in the sustain on purpose to sound less like midi, but I agree the timbre is a bit grating
He’s definitely right. I started here and then started over from the first one and it’s definitely easier starting from the ground up. Great series so far.
I’ve seen other channels do videos on ear training and theory, and they breeze by all 12 intervals in the first 5 minutes. In my experience in teaching, that just doesn’t work.
“Dear Star Wars, it’s not you, it’s me. I’m sure you’ll find someone else though.” Thx bro.
Hello not a brad here just want to drop this comment pointing out that when I started watching your video the music theory that I've been trying to learn since past few months became a piece of cake sadly can't have cakes I don't like sweet too much 😞 but anyways you helped me a lot thank kind sir 😂
Good to hear that these videos are helping! I always appreciate a non-Brad comment.
I love your videos! They're making a difference and I intend to absorb every one. thanks, again.
Yay! So glad they are helping.
Thankyou very much sir, it's really a great series. ❤ From INDIA🇮🇳
You are very welcome! Thanks for watching!
I've been wanting to do ear interval training forever and I just stumbled upon your Channel today I am your 200 subscriber LOL I just happen to notice because the step four was like And subscribe LOL and it made me laugh.
I've never tried interval training before but I've only got like one wrong on video four and the video five on my first try each time so far. So it's definitely giving me hope that intervals will be easier to learn than I thought. Thank you for your videos :-) looking forward to the next one!
Yay! Yes, intervals are much easier when taught in the right order. No offense to any other teachers, but I’ve seen a lot of videos that are like “here’s all 12 intervals, good luck!” I developed these videos while teaching intervals to 4th and 5th graders, and if they can learn it anyone can.
Just found your channel. I’ve played guitar and electric bass for years but never took ear training serious. Definitely seen an improvement using the videos and exercises and found I wasn’t as bad as I thought I’d be.
I’ve started to sing the major scale as numbers during the exercises now because frankly….I’m scared you’ll hunt me if I don’t put down Star Wars….or in my case the p5 was always superman.
Thanks for watching! Glad you found my channel.
My lawyers advise me to publicly state that I am no longer hunting down people who only use tunes to identify intervals.
View out the whole series here: ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdnOR1cDcS_uQvW7Zff68xXT
SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL: www.patreon.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy
FOLLOW ME FOR THE LATEST NEWS ON CONTENT
Facebook: facebook.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy
Instagram: instagram.com/joeluegersmusicacademy
Website: www.luegerswriter.com/
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@joeluegersmusicacademy
This is exactly what i needed, having them described as “hollow” and “emotional”. Also, your humor is pretty good, if you can increase the quality of your videos i think you can become big.
Glad this helped! Yes, I know a whole lot more about music education than video editing, but I keep learning a bit each week and hopefully I can upgrade some of my recording equipment within the year.
bah, the content is good, the humor is good. This is a niche market, but it is helpful and the ideas and presentation is wonderful. Video production is secondary.
@@TedSchoenling if I’m being honest, I started making these to use for my own students. Since more and more people are finding them helpful, I’m going to put a “little” more work into mixing the audio and polishing the video production, to the best of my ability, but the focus is still the educational aspect.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy We definitely appreciate it :D
Thanks mate! you're just wonderfull and funny. (Best way to really learn something) I wish you were my ear training teacher at music school
Oh man this channel is nice, this is very nice, this is good, I subscribed, very good
“A nerd that listens to baroque era music” . Touché 😅
Thank you for your videos! I'll subscribe right now!
this is so good... great teacher....
Awww, shucks!
1:30 Thank you!
감사합니다.
Thanks so much!!!!
Love your video graphics! 😂
I'm on my first day here. Havent made a mistake yet but i am going to miss linking up to songs haha
Thanks
Thank you 🙏🏻🎶
I am going through your mini course on learning to recognize intervals. I am on the final episode. I still at an early stage of this episode; I guess I could say I am at sleeping on it stage- meaning I have yet to complete this episode. I will comment on one part of trying to listen to the different sources playing the interval.
I am 75 years old. As you are well aware, as we get older, the amount of hair cells in our inner ear decrease which results in loosing the ability to hear higher frequencies. This is not a complaint, only a statement, some of the interments you use are very high frequency chimes or other high frequency producing instruments. I am unable to hear anything when chimes are the instrument, I hear a partial sound, but can not hear the two notes that are played. All of the notes you produced in the earlier lessons I been able to recognize- I sure there maybe higher frequency resonances- that I miss but I am able to distinguish the different notes played. As a educator, I appreciate you sharing these lectures to community via RUclips.
Joe, you have a lot of other videos posted covering many different topics. Can you offer me a suggestion, i which of your other videos would logically be the next series to watch.
I play guitar. I trying to learn to be able to better hear changes between the notes of popular music. I do not play well enough to be able to hear the relative changes in the melody or the be able to hear a chord changes and be able to recognize I V chord change verses I -> IV chord change. I want to be able to listen to a piece of music and be able using my ears alone, to recognize the change of chords or to easily figure out the actual melody changes during a song.
I know I will never be able to hear high frequencies- but hopefully higher frequency overtones mirror the lever frequency that I am still able to hear.
Thank you, I appreciate your effort to teach others how to use your ears to distinguish different sounds we hear. Thank you. When I was a kid I wish we had our current technology to do simple things like being able to keep a guitar in tune.
Thank you for the kind words and I'm glad by videos have been good use to you. Hopefully all of my piano examples were within a good hearing frequency; I'm guessing it was the extreme ranges section of the final lesson that may have gone beyond the ordinary hearing range. The overtone series is an interesting thing. A study has shown that if you remove the bottom pitch, or the fundamental, our brains put it back in because our ears recognize the pattern of overtones. As long as you can hear the first overtone, the pitch should be correct, and in most of my videos I try to stay around the middle of a piano. If you'd like to work on chord changes, I recently started a new series that talks about the roman numeral system. There should be a new episode in September. Here's the first: ruclips.net/video/xrUIS4UJxss/видео.htmlsi=X5MB-n8PazlNZQid
Yes, the potential for education on technology like RUclips is really amazing. I'm only 32, but when I learned guitar things were very different if you were trying to teach yourself. I would buy books of guitar tabs, but if I didn't know how to read certain rhythms it would make it too confusing to learn. Now I use apps that play the music back at me, and I can adjust the tempo. It will be interesting to see if there is a new generation of RUclips-educated musicians coming up soon.
You might also find these useful: ruclips.net/video/YA-TXGYxOSw/видео.htmlsi=5znBdprGrhs1b842
And ruclips.net/video/8_dlvOc_Phg/видео.htmlsi=SvdKW8eqgC-CudPg
🙏🙏🙏🙏
Wow. Just found this channel and I subscribed immediately. Love it!
Welcome to the JLMA earmy.
ive been doing these for a while and all intervals seem easy, but i cannot learn the perfect 5th and 4th. played one after another, the difference is obvious, but played randomly, i have no idea wich one is it. i know its one of the perfect intervals, but i got no clue which one. Anybody has any tips on how to percieve them to actually know them?
4ths and 5ths are probably the most commonly confused intervals other than 6ths. It makes sense because they are inversions of each other (C-F is a 4th, F-C is a 5th). The thing to do is imagine a resolution for the 4th. Sing 1-4-3 (do-fa-mi) and listen to how the upper note resolves down by a half step. You can’t really resolve a 5th like this. Hope that makes sense.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Thats an intresting way to think about it. I also didnt notice that 4th and 5th are invertions of themselves. Thanks for the tips! And for all your videos, they are fantastic.
Very nice lesson. I just subscribed to your channel. Now tell me about BRAD. Thanks.
1: Thanks so much! 2: Brad won’t be a problem anymore.
Hi! I keep messing up the 3, 4th and 5th, do you have any tips?
Yes- a 4th can resolve down by a half step. Play these notes- C-F-E and listen to how it feels “settled” when you get to E. A perfect 5th or major 3rd can’t really resolve like this, and they usually sound very stable on their own. 3rds have a more emotionally complex sound than 5ths, which sounds super in-tune when played harmonically.
Sir, i want to play guitar fingerstyle . I am beginner , i don't know much about music, i am trying to learn. I want to learn solfege, please help me . Upload videos on solfege.🙏
I heard that knowing Solfege makes it easy to play any song .
Check out my newest video on solfège: Sight-Singing Exercises for the Treble Clef - Moveable Do Edition
ruclips.net/video/e5c-37Rbeu0/видео.html
For finger-style guitar, I teach my students out of this book: www.amazon.in/Julio-Sagreras-Guitar-Lessons-Book-ebook/dp/B00WYNM8C4
Sure sir , Thankyou so much.♥️🙏
It’s funny every time he plays the two octave notes and then both together I think, “wait, why did he just repeat the first not…oooh.” 😄
On my phone speakers, sometimes I can't tell that it's an octave at all.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Good point, I have to listen to this series again with better speakers!
Good video. Sorry to inform you that the piano is distorting a litte bit..
Yes I noticed that in my car, and it seems to depend on the speakers. My studio monitors sound fine, headphones sound okay. I’ve switched to a different midi piano sound for the next video, so let me know if you still hear it in that one. I think some midi instruments slightly detune in the sustain on purpose to sound less like midi, but I agree the timbre is a bit grating
Thats on your end. Sorry to inform you
I'm Bred Johnson
Who is this Chad you speak of?
Yah