I'm so glad I've found your channel! Love the fact that you focus on 1 of the most important but yet least talked about aspects of being a musician!! Because after all if you can't hear the music your chances of being a great musician is slim to nil!!!🙏🙏🙏🤘🤘🤘
Joe, I play classical guitar and have had no problems adapting this material to the guitar, I have learned and improved so much in just two weeks of following these exercises, i am so great-full a big thank you for putting these podcasts out All the best Dave Yorkshire England
Thanks, Dave! I studied both piano and classical guitar in college. I tried to make these videos non-instrument specific enough for just about any musician to use, so I’m glad it’s working! I do reference the piano a lot, but the layout of the piano just makes so much sense. I even tell non-piano players to “think in piano” with certain music theory concepts.
Absolutely agree! 🎵 Ear training is so crucial, and it's often overlooked in favor of music theory. This video is a fantastic resource to help shift that focus! These exercises are perfect for developing a strong musical ear. Thanks for sharing this valuable insight! 🙌
Interesting, I've been making dance music for over 10 years (not classically trained) and I tried doing the do-re-mi's with my mouth and missed every single one, lmao. I connected the midi piano and got them all within a couple seconds. Never too late to keep learning. Great job on these training videos! I'll be here practicing for a while 😉 Liked, subbed etc 👊
Why didn't my music instructor start me of w this over music theory? All the music theory I learnedl and I still feel I haven't developed as a musician 😢. Thank u for sharing!
Ive finally started to move my way into professional orchestra settings, which has just made me anxious about my intonation since its always up and down and shifts drastically. Time to buff my ears 🔥🔥🔥
Best of luck to you! You might be interested in this playlist I created of all of my ear training videos, sorted in order of importance/difficulty. ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlfiS6YGQ3zr9mQRj7naT19&si=lvxx9abgahmlDOTX
Thanks! I know another music theory teacher who plays this series in their classes: ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdnOR1cDcS_uQvW7Zff68xXT&si=eG3J2DVNp4VEUUeW Each video I down how to hear a different specific interval. Still not done with the whole series.
Yes, I saw that one. Excellent. I think there will be a wide range of skill levels getting started, so I'll post this one for sure. Thank you! @@joeluegersmusicacademy
I can’t agree more. I’m in a few music theory groups online and every day I see people talking about polyrhythms, serialism, weird scales, and so on, and I always hope to myself that they’ve really solidified their ability to hear basic concepts in action before digging into things that the average musician doesn’t need 99% of the time.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy its worse than that ! names dont matter and probably harm way more than they help. take a great church musician whos been making music in a practical way for years. you can add a bit of theory "oh we call that sound phrygian, like minor with the flat 2" in one second. the name has almost no value ! _the value is in having a deep personal relationship to the sound_ !
To counter that, I would say that the way the brain learns best is by putting vocabulary to things and chunking concepts into categories. Jazz musicians probably have the best ears out of any musician, and most of them know the terms, although they have also have the ability to put all of it in the back of their head and just play.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy thats probably right, but i think jacob collier has it right, _the order is critical_ after it has become your own you can label it if it helps you bracket and multiply and expand it etc *but* its a terrible thing to teach people the concept before they have any practical experience with it i really believe that is catastrophic and basically widespread in education !
I made a playlist of all my ear training content in the order I suggest learning it. It’s not necessarily in order of difficulty, as lots of people find functional ear training to be difficult, but I do believe I put the most important skills first. The Ultimate Ear Training Playlist ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlfiS6YGQ3zr9mQRj7naT19
Really glad to know that this kind of thing is available, but I must be too new, cause I don't know where to start. Maybe I'll find a more traditional method? @Joe, feel free to hold my hand and learn me how to start!
Great question! I have a series of over 50 exercises on my Patreon that starts with the most basic skills and gradually ramps up the difficultly. The first couple exercises are free and then the rest are for my 5$ tier and up. Eventually this will be a purchasable E-book. Here it is: www.patreon.com/collection/90196? And you could also work through this playlist I put together: ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlfiS6YGQ3zr9mQRj7naT19&si=v53NUYshDa3rUb1I
Thanks for pointing that out. The audio is correct, and the letter names displayed are correct. The chord progression is indeed D-Bb-C-D. For the Roman numerals it looks like I stopped typing too soon. Should be I-bVI-bVII-I
I believe learning to hear things first is far more useful and practical, although learning the theory and aural skills parts at the same time also works. What you don’t want to do is learn the theory without ever connecting it to what things sound like.
This lays a solid foundation, although it probably doesn’t cover enough to help you easily learn complex jazz songs, atonal music, complex orchestral harmonies, and so on. But it’s a good starting place.
I have about 20 more exercises in this series to finish, but once that is done I’m going to make it into an album on Spotify/Apple. Hands-Free Ear Training ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlAY_g71Pf9RBy97mqXpQHK The first 21 of these have mp3 downloads on my Patreon for 1$ total.
What is purpose of interval training, Could you please explain for me . I can hear the functional note- scale degree, triad, and bass note in key however I think hearing interval is unnecessary. I am looking forward to hearing your answer . Thank you
Honestly, functional ear training is more practical than interval ear training, but I don’t think any one kind of exercise will give you everything you need. Learning intervals is all about helping your ear recognize precise distances between notes. It helps when you are working out the individual notes of a complex chord or learning music without an obvious tonic. Intervals are a basic building block, so it can’t hurt to know what they sound like. I have a vocalist friend who performed an atonal opera piece, and I asked her how in the world she sang the right notes since there’s no “key” to latch onto. Her answer was that she knew her intervals.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Great answer. Thank you so much. I usually ignore interval exercise because I don't know how to apply it. Usually I find the key and use functional ear training to find the note all it. Now I will practice interval exercise. Thank you
MINOR CORRECTION- At 1:14:32 The audio is correct, and the letter names displayed are correct. The chord progression is indeed D-Bb-C-D. For the Roman numerals it looks like I stopped typing too soon. Should be I-bVI-bVII-I. LESSONS 1-3 OF MY EAR TRAINING COURSE ARE NOW AVAILABLE TO THE FREE TIER ON PATERON: www.patreon.com/collection/90196 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
@@kierenmoore3236I have no idea why the bs are there. I believe they are correct minus the bs. Probably a copy of paste error. This was back when almost nobody watched my videos, and I’ve stepped up on editing process.
@@kierenmoore3236I have no idea why the bs are there. I believe they are correct minus the bs. Probably a copy of paste error. This was back when almost nobody watched my videos, and I’ve stepped up on editing process.
A big part of singing is having a good ear to figure out if you are on the correct pitch, so yes it should help, although I don’t really get into vocal technique.
Good question- the chord progression in the background provides the tonal center. It would be easier if I played a scale or something first, but this is a more real-world example.
doesn't it make more sense for training to tell us the note, interval, chord etc first and then play it? with the sound first, it's more a test not training.
I guess is more useful like this because you train to recognize them. In the sense that when you hear something you there is nobody that tells you the intervals so you train to guess
Your descending interval exercises aren't really descending. I don't need the second tone to tell the interval. At the moment when I hear the first note I already know the interval. This is because I still have the base note in my ear which is lower than your first note. So in reality these exercises are ascending as well. I could propose you various fixes, but now when you know the problem you'll surely come up with your own solutions.
Do you you have a specific time stamp with a correction? A common misunderstanding is that I speak the name of an interval and then immediately play it. Rather, these questions are a quiz. I play an example while you guess the answer and THEN I speak the answer.
The black plague taught people more about Music than the "Do'Re-Mi" system!!
"Thumb down" of course
You heard it here first everyone: Solfège is canceled! You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy What just happened🤣🤣
@@malikmartinI was put in my place.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy In some world, I suppose 🤣🤣
A website for this would be a game changer, this format but with every key and endless randomised exercises
Maybe one of these days I can develop an app.
Great idea. 💡
endless? 🤯
I’m gonna say as a music student this is exactly what we need! Tysm for spending time in this, truly appreciate
No problem! I’ve got a lot more stuff like this, so check out the playlists tab on my channel if you need anything else.
I'm so glad I've found your channel! Love the fact that you focus on 1 of the most important but yet least talked about aspects of being a musician!! Because after all if you can't hear the music your chances of being a great musician is slim to nil!!!🙏🙏🙏🤘🤘🤘
Thanks! Spending so much time editing videos about ear training has actually improved my ear quite a bit, so Irma been good for everybody.
Joe, I play classical guitar and have had no problems adapting this material to the guitar, I have learned and improved so much in just two weeks of following these exercises, i am so great-full a big thank you for putting these podcasts out
All the best Dave
Yorkshire England
Thanks, Dave! I studied both piano and classical guitar in college. I tried to make these videos non-instrument specific enough for just about any musician to use, so I’m glad it’s working! I do reference the piano a lot, but the layout of the piano just makes so much sense. I even tell non-piano players to “think in piano” with certain music theory concepts.
Absolutely agree! 🎵 Ear training is so crucial, and it's often overlooked in favor of music theory. This video is a fantastic resource to help shift that focus! These exercises are perfect for developing a strong musical ear. Thanks for sharing this valuable insight! 🙌
Thanks!
Interesting, I've been making dance music for over 10 years (not classically trained) and I tried doing the do-re-mi's with my mouth and missed every single one, lmao. I connected the midi piano and got them all within a couple seconds. Never too late to keep learning. Great job on these training videos! I'll be here practicing for a while 😉 Liked, subbed etc 👊
Why didn't my music instructor start me of w this over music theory? All the music theory I learnedl and I still feel I haven't developed as a musician 😢. Thank u for sharing!
Thank you so much, your Great
Quite interesting exercises. Thanks a lot !
I've been watching a ton of these ear training videos and they've helped so much. Thank you!
Glad to hear they have helped! Thanks for watching.
Keep this stuff up man it’s incredible. Thanks.
Thanks, will do!
Got through the entire video! Very challenging! Learned a lot! Thanx! 😂 ❤ 🎉
Ive finally started to move my way into professional orchestra settings, which has just made me anxious about my intonation since its always up and down and shifts drastically.
Time to buff my ears 🔥🔥🔥
Best of luck to you! You might be interested in this playlist I created of all of my ear training videos, sorted in order of importance/difficulty. ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlfiS6YGQ3zr9mQRj7naT19&si=lvxx9abgahmlDOTX
I play guitare but i like to see piano notes during your training. Excellent idea !
Guitar was my first instrument, but I still “think in piano” most of the time. The layout just makes the most sense.
Thanks so much. 😎🤓
thank you so much! I've been getting back to training my ear and this a great to practice. Gracias Joe!
De nada! Glad you have found this helpful!
an hour of the hardest hitting ear training content in the game right now...simply goated
Appreciate that
You are awesome! Thanks you
Pure gold! 🎹
“Ear Gold”
These are awesome. Kind of addicting. Thank you, I will be using for my Ear Training 1 class!
Thanks! I know another music theory teacher who plays this series in their classes: ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdnOR1cDcS_uQvW7Zff68xXT&si=eG3J2DVNp4VEUUeW
Each video I down how to hear a different specific interval. Still not done with the whole series.
Yes, I saw that one. Excellent. I think there will be a wide range of skill levels getting started, so I'll post this one for sure. Thank you! @@joeluegersmusicacademy
This is truly epic! 💥✨ thank you!!
Thanks for watching!
Great stuff, as always.
Omg do I need help. Thank you so much for posting this❤❤❤
Happy to help!
i hope people realize that this is what matters, not Lydian whatchamacallits or tertian this or thats. your relationship to sound!
I can’t agree more. I’m in a few music theory groups online and every day I see people talking about polyrhythms, serialism, weird scales, and so on, and I always hope to myself that they’ve really solidified their ability to hear basic concepts in action before digging into things that the average musician doesn’t need 99% of the time.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy its worse than that ! names dont matter and probably harm way more than they help. take a great church musician whos been making music in a practical way for years. you can add a bit of theory "oh we call that sound phrygian, like minor with the flat 2" in one second. the name has almost no value ! _the value is in having a deep personal relationship to the sound_ !
To counter that, I would say that the way the brain learns best is by putting vocabulary to things and chunking concepts into categories. Jazz musicians probably have the best ears out of any musician, and most of them know the terms, although they have also have the ability to put all of it in the back of their head and just play.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy thats probably right, but i think jacob collier has it right, _the order is critical_ after it has become your own you can label it if it helps you bracket and multiply and expand it etc *but* its a terrible thing to teach people the concept before they have any practical experience with it i really believe that is catastrophic and basically widespread in education !
You have a great thing going! 🎉 😊
Thank you!! 😊
Epic music academy!
Awesome!!!
❤ Joe pls send me here id iwant go for an advanced jazz chords progression pls
This is the best channel for musicians TQ 😊
This is pure gold! What do you suggest for the next step?
I made a playlist of all my ear training content in the order I suggest learning it. It’s not necessarily in order of difficulty, as lots of people find functional ear training to be difficult, but I do believe I put the most important skills first. The Ultimate Ear Training Playlist
ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlfiS6YGQ3zr9mQRj7naT19
Thanks
Really glad to know that this kind of thing is available, but I must be too new, cause I don't know where to start. Maybe I'll find a more traditional method? @Joe, feel free to hold my hand and learn me how to start!
Great question! I have a series of over 50 exercises on my Patreon that starts with the most basic skills and gradually ramps up the difficultly. The first couple exercises are free and then the rest are for my 5$ tier and up. Eventually this will be a purchasable E-book. Here it is: www.patreon.com/collection/90196?
And you could also work through this playlist I put together: ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlfiS6YGQ3zr9mQRj7naT19&si=v53NUYshDa3rUb1I
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Wicked! Thanks! Checking now!
Thanks!
That’s my first tip ever! You ROCK. Lots more ear training coming each month.
joe you kick ass buddy
That’s the goal! Thanks!
Great channel. I got 95% of them all correct. ☺️
Thanks! Good going!
Hi Joe great vid! Is the progression at 1:14:32 correct?
Thanks for pointing that out. The audio is correct, and the letter names displayed are correct. The chord progression is indeed D-Bb-C-D. For the Roman numerals it looks like I stopped typing too soon. Should be I-bVI-bVII-I
🙏
Yeah, this was a monster, but I loved it. 😎🤓
I have a similar one like this coming out in the future, and it’s 2 1/2 hours long
Excelente!! Muchas gracias🙂🎶🎵
De nada!
Agreed
It's about relative pitch witch one reference is great
I like teacher un muy celphone fantastic.
Should we be familiar with ear training first and then get into music theory or vice versa?
I believe learning to hear things first is far more useful and practical, although learning the theory and aural skills parts at the same time also works. What you don’t want to do is learn the theory without ever connecting it to what things sound like.
Could this help for figuring out the melody and chord progressions of any song?
This lays a solid foundation, although it probably doesn’t cover enough to help you easily learn complex jazz songs, atonal music, complex orchestral harmonies, and so on. But it’s a good starting place.
Do you have Apple music or downloadable?
I have about 20 more exercises in this series to finish, but once that is done I’m going to make it into an album on Spotify/Apple. Hands-Free Ear Training
ruclips.net/p/PL40pFkWbVtdlAY_g71Pf9RBy97mqXpQHK The first 21 of these have mp3 downloads on my Patreon for 1$ total.
What is purpose of interval training, Could you please explain for me . I can hear the functional note- scale degree, triad, and bass note in key however I think hearing interval is unnecessary. I am looking forward to hearing your answer . Thank you
Honestly, functional ear training is more practical than interval ear training, but I don’t think any one kind of exercise will give you everything you need. Learning intervals is all about helping your ear recognize precise distances between notes. It helps when you are working out the individual notes of a complex chord or learning music without an obvious tonic. Intervals are a basic building block, so it can’t hurt to know what they sound like. I have a vocalist friend who performed an atonal opera piece, and I asked her how in the world she sang the right notes since there’s no “key” to latch onto. Her answer was that she knew her intervals.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Great answer. Thank you so much. I usually ignore interval exercise because I don't know how to apply it. Usually I find the key and use functional ear training to find the note all it. Now I will practice interval exercise. Thank you
Uauuuu...
MINOR CORRECTION- At 1:14:32 The audio is correct, and the letter names displayed are correct. The chord progression is indeed D-Bb-C-D. For the Roman numerals it looks like I stopped typing too soon. Should be I-bVI-bVII-I.
LESSONS 1-3 OF MY EAR TRAINING COURSE ARE NOW AVAILABLE TO THE FREE TIER ON PATERON: www.patreon.com/collection/90196
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
The last chord in the progression at 1:12:28 seems wrong to me, too … F# = Vb … ?! 🤔🤷🏻♂️
Also, at 1:13:12 … Am7 = i7b … ?
The b being on the end seems odd, but you use different shorthand notation to me, so … ?
@@kierenmoore3236I have no idea why the bs are there. I believe they are correct minus the bs. Probably a copy of paste error. This was back when almost nobody watched my videos, and I’ve stepped up on editing process.
@@kierenmoore3236I have no idea why the bs are there. I believe they are correct minus the bs. Probably a copy of paste error. This was back when almost nobody watched my videos, and I’ve stepped up on editing process.
This helps for sing?
A big part of singing is having a good ear to figure out if you are on the correct pitch, so yes it should help, although I don’t really get into vocal technique.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy well, im gonna try it, thanks for answer ✨
opening is really epic.
Too epic, some might say. But not me.
For the first one how am I supposed to guess the scale degree without a reference point?
Good question- the chord progression in the background provides the tonal center. It would be easier if I played a scale or something first, but this is a more real-world example.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy thanks for the explanation :)
doesn't it make more sense for training to tell us the note, interval, chord etc first and then play it? with the sound first, it's more a test not training.
I guess is more useful like this because you train to recognize them. In the sense that when you hear something you there is nobody that tells you the intervals so you train to guess
Your descending interval exercises aren't really descending. I don't need the second tone to tell the interval. At the moment when I hear the first note I already know the interval. This is because I still have the base note in my ear which is lower than your first note. So in reality these exercises are ascending as well. I could propose you various fixes, but now when you know the problem you'll surely come up with your own solutions.
Wow. Wouldn’t want you as my doctor.
And they’re not ascending. He doubles the notes so you can hear them together as intervals. It’s called harmony.
พูดมากกว่าจะเข้าเนื้อเรื่อง
I found your video unreliable as you have matched wrong pitches to there corresponding notes.
Do you you have a specific time stamp with a correction? A common misunderstanding is that I speak the name of an interval and then immediately play it. Rather, these questions are a quiz. I play an example while you guess the answer and THEN I speak the answer.