Ear Training: Secrets of Interval Singing Exercise 1
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- Опубликовано: 24 янв 2017
- In this episode called Secrets of Interval Singing and Hearing Exercise 1, I will show a simple exercise that I like to teach my ear training students to work on both Solfege and Interval Singing. Practice it everyday even if you have a good ear. I will help you greatly on the dreaded descending intervals that most musicians are not great at.
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Fantastic channel, Rick! Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge. In a "younger life" I was a full-time musician (went to Berklee for a couple of years, in rock bands for 15-20 years, and more....) and being exposed to this type of material was hugely helpful and inspirational for my budding career. Although that career has ended, and I have a "real" job now and am retired from music, your channel has inspired me once again to study and think about music. I've enjoyed immensely everything you've so graciously shared on this channel. Keep up the great teaching, you rock!
I love this channel. It has reignited my love for guitar and "all things music"!
geez everytime i need some info its here on this channel big ups rick beato !
Thank you! I will do this 2 times a day and I'm looking forward to the next one bc I REALLY need this.
Excllent! Really glad I stumbled across your channel. Always quality content!
Congratulations and please, keep going! I will love to see the next one and the next one!
Im anxious for the next videos! Great channel!!
Thanks for the video! Definitely going to practice this.
Thank you very much!!!You're a great man!
Brilliant! Thanks Rick!
I use this with my students (and also for myself when learning new scales) and it really opens up their ears. I usually do it to a drone (on Do) since it really helps you with hearing the flavour/personality of each note in the scale. Awesome stuff as usual Rick:)
Hi Jon,
I am learning to sing. I can hit right pitch when single note is played.
However, I am having trouble hearing when chords are played or multiple notes are played. Can you recommend any listening exercises?
Because if this I am going off pitch. Any tips are welcome.
Thanks
@@rohitn8271 Same here
Great exercise. I'm going to practice this right now :) ...and every morning this week. I like the speed aspect.
updates?
Updates??
@JULIA LOUREIRO MEDEIROS DE SOUZA ahahahahhahaha
@@ravindrabanchhod1579 lol
Man i love your exercises thanks a lot
Thanks for the video, I'm a new subscriber and I have a terrible ear so this is really helpful.
Thanks, very helpful exercise ;)
Great lesson. Thanks for sharing.
Thanx for the video it's awesome, keep it up :D
this is so great. thanks man
This is super helpful, I decided to train my ears properly about a month ago (your video inspired me and gave idea how to approach it), and I 'developed' some simple singing exercises, but I've never thought that I could approach this like that. It's the thing that I needed, and I can already see how useful this will be. Thanks a bunch!
it’s hard work but reaps the benefit of having strong musicianship at the end. i use the number system. for few minutes a day, it’s a good practice to keep up.
Great tips and lesson (as usual)
Very informative vids man.Really good stuff.How bout some stuff on modulating to different keys?Perhaps using songs as examples.The beatles have loads.Always easier to understand when ya hear it in a tune.Keep up the good work!
Hey Rick...It`s a thumbs up from me.
U r a great man
Great exercise!
TY! Rick sir!
Thanks master 🙏❤🙏
Thanks Rick, please can you make more videos on sight singing! A skill I really need to learn:)
I clicked on this video in hopes of learning something that can help me. But as soon as he said chocolate milk stains I reflected to my kids just leaving food on my acoustic bass fretboard. One night I actually came home and found footprints on the soundboard of my acoustic bass! Completely relative.
Rick, you get me.
great lesson ! is there an exercise 2 ? I would guess it would take this idea and take a different "relative" note as pedal point ? first Re, then mi etc.
Thank you sir
Rick... where is the other one please (the follow up exercise)? thank you for everything you represent and the content you create. You already know
Amazing! Going to practice it everyday!
Awesome~! What videos are after this? I can't find any other "Singing Exercise" on your page.
Grazie!
the second part of this exercise is you sing the intervals without an instrument and then check with a instrument? Ex: sing do ré do and then redo while play the piano at the same time?
Download a tuner on your phone and use it to monitor your pitch as you go along. Helps a LOT!
Casio CTK-601
Why everytime I click in this video there's a ad that pops up trying to explain to me that I dont need interval training.
When I watched this it reminded me of 7 shape, shape note singing.
I can't help thinking of Homer Simpson when watching this...lol...great content though...DoH! Thx Rick love your channel.
Do you think it's a good idea to group the same notes and practice in the order: 1-2-1 (higher note), 1-2-1 (lower note), 1-3-1 (higher note), 1-3-1 (lower note) , ... ?
Hi Rick! I have always wondered if some of the great rock & roll singers are known to do vocal warm-ups?Do you know? Thanks so much. Love your channel!
Yes they do. Almost all of them. From Mick Jagger to Neil Young to Anthony Kiedis. And the more obvious ones to.
Rick .. I never really focused on the descending interval. I wonder if the square dancing do sI do with your partner.. didn't have it's roots here.. liked and as you know I'm already a subscriber. Working on a version of Autumn leaves. It has the licks that sound likeConfirmation by Charlie Parker. This sound is totally different to my ear when played by a sax.. not better not worse just different.
Did this with my 5 year he lives it
good food :)
Any suggestion of exercise if I struggle to sing back a note even after playing it on the piano?
What should you do if you play the note at the end and find out you've drifted a lot?
Question: I've been doing a similar exercise for about two weeks but starting in each note from C4 to B4 and after a break: from C4 to D3, then I take a 30 question quiz, take my time and write my results down. After I nail down the major scale intervals I was planning on doing one of two exercises:
a) singing the phrygian mode (do, de, me, fa, so, se, le, do) that way I can get down all the minor intervals, or
b) singing the locrian mode, using fe to get the tritone
Eventually I thought of maybe singing the chromatic scale, in many months/some years? time.
Do you have any suggestions? I don't like the idea of using the aeolian mode starting in la, because I have a feeling that might end up being more confusing in the long run when changing pitches, and besides I've never understood why the aeolian mode is the minor scale instead of the phrygian mode.
Tou rey tou, tou mi tou, tou faa tou, tou soul tou, tou la tou, tou si tou, tou tou tou
Sou fhaat?
What happens if you sing the notes wro g. If I don’t do it slow and pay attention i’m mostly not singing right notes. Should I do another exercise first or will this get better as I do it
If you have this problem sing through the scale and make sure your very comfortable with the exact pitches of the scale. Then break it up do re mi re do… do mi do…. Do re me fa me re do, do fa do….do re me fa so fa me re do. Do so do. Etc… going at your own pace. ..dont move on until you get it perfect and feel really comfortable with it.
What is the benefit of doing this sir ?
So I guess I’m not a patreon, sorry. but it was my intention to support you? Since you don’t have a patreon page how do patrons support you other than to purchase your book because I did that already.
dododo!
Watched a lot of your videos :) and I enjoy your teachin skills so much. Keep uploading those.
There is a little mistake tho, or i misunderstood what you said at the beginnig, but i'm french and B is spelled "Si" not "Ti". The other names are good. Do Ré mi Fa Sol La Si Do. Funny to hear them with american accent :)
+Olivier Rifà you didn't listen very closely. I explain why I use Ti instead of Si in the first 30 seconds.
Rick Beaton OK thanks, i was quite confused you've made that kind of mistake :)
you can use whatever sounds you like. most people in the UK use so instead of sol. so long as you remember them, it doesn't matter.
so funny. I always get these comments too. you guys use Si for Ti ... we use Ti ... it's not wrong, just different.
Dies rick ever stop working damage
The Do is ok… but when I start go down … other tones are not ok
If notes r visible it could have much interest to watch
why Rick you name and say the Note B as TI, you´re wrong, I am a native spanish speaker we say an sing the note B, in the same way that you pronouce the Letter an the note C in English, I mean, you say an sing Do Re Mi Fa Sol La, SI (the letter C)
Already explained it in another video
testing with the octave isn't helpful, the first do is still in memory and the octave is the easiest interval to sing.
the point was testing if you are still on the same note as at the beggining
how about a "secrets of interval singing exercise 2" video? or at least take the 1 out of the title lol
Why do american people call it Ti? The correct name is Si, pronounced exactly as See.