Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
22:04 on Tuesday, July 24, 2007
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
22:12 on Tuesday, July 24, 2007
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
06:49 on Wednesday, July 25, 2007
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
07:30 on Wednesday, July 25, 2007
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
07:58 on Wednesday, July 25, 2007
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
19:43 on Tuesday, August 7, 2007
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
06:48 on Friday, August 10, 2007
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Dennis (587 points)
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Thanks azflutist! I wouldn't say it's simple to learn, but once you get the hang of it it comes more "naturally" even if not natural at all.
-Dennis
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
20:55 on Friday, August 10, 2007
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Account Closed (394 points)
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And yes for some people playing by ear can be a total chore. It comes down to what your natural gifts are to some extent. I was always a good ear player, sheet music was not beyond me, but my real strength was my ear. I still have tons of sheet music, and to make sure I am playing the correct notes I use it. I just pretty much memorize any song I perform, even when I have play in church every week. I can memorize the music really fast because I don't memorize the notes, I memorize the way the song "feels".
I think it is a little like speed reading. You read 3, 4 or more lines at the same time, and skip the words completely. Then you know what is going on in the end actually as well or better than someone who read it word for word. Don't ask me to explain this, I just know it works, really well. It all comes down to conceptualization. (Man, that word is way to long!)
Anyway, for people with weaker natural ears for music, you have like I said before, bridged the gap. I am still reading your posts on modes (Dorian, Ionian etc.) and you showed a clear understanding. I think you could also talk about memorizing the circle of 5ths as another place to teach ear training. The ability to understand a 4th from a 5th and the relative minors makes music break open even wider for the more scientific player, and allows them to jump into the fantasy world of ear training.
Again, keep up these kinds of posts Dennis, I am learning just from reading yours, and I like to see how other people approach music. It is clear that no matter who you are, no 2 people approach music the same way. That is why it is called an art not a science!
Ok, why are all my posts like some kind of soap box? What the heck is wrong with me!!???!!!
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
23:32 on Friday, August 10, 2007
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Dennis (587 points)
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well...if you believe that my scientific standpoints are bridging the gap...then I guess anyone who has questions regarding ear training and the like can open a new thread where I will answerquestions about how I think of things or about the way I use the theory behind the ear training. As far as the last post re: telling the difference between the intervals...there are corny songs that can help you pick out intervals. I am sure you can google "recognizing music intervals" and get something that will tell you. The main ones I use for pop music are:
Perfect 4th (P4)- "Here Comes" the Bride - the interval between Here and Comes is the P4. It is also normally the pick-up note (anacrusis) to a piece...scale degree 5 to scale degree 1 a la Appalachain Spring clarinet solo.
Perfect 5th (P5) - Star Wars Main Theme. The first two notes after the intro make the P5...if you don't know where this is exactly if someone can post a recording of this piece somewhere i can tell you at what second the theme starts.
Major 6th (M6) - "My Bon"-nie lies over the ocean. M6 between My and the first syllable of Bonnie.
Major 7th (M7) - 80's song by AHA...Take on Me. It's the first interval the first time they say "Take on Me"...those three words are scale degrees 1-7-1 respectively. So, Take and On are seperated by a M7
Perfect Octave (P8) - "Some-Where" Over the Rainbow. Some and Where are seperated by the P8.
I also think about the pattern of pop music..where thethree main chords are I, IV, and V. Let's use C major to make it easy:
I - C, E, G..or 1, 3, 5 in scale degrees.
IV - F, A, C...4, 6, 1 (Remember that 1 and 8 are the same note...but there isn't an 8 in scale degrees)
V - G, B, C...5, 7, 2
--Sometimes there is a V7 chord...which contains G, B, D, F...5, 7, 2, 4
In pop music more than not...the V or V7 chord will always lead to I...therefore when you break the music down into its 4 measure phrases you will frequently start on I and end on V (V7). That leaves 2 measures to figure out. There are 5 options...
I, I, IV, V
I, I, I, V
I, I, V, V
I, V, IV, V
I, V, I, V
I, IV, V, V
Once you figure out the 2 measures in the middle, the second set of the phrase tends to end on I...normally keeping the first three chords the same and changing the last one to I. If you go to a piano and choose one of the examples above andstart playing the notes in an arpeggiated fashion....where eachnote is played seperately and in some semblance of order, you will hear your own pop song phrase:
Eighth notes in 2/4...
(C, E, G, C), (C, E, G, C), (F, A, C, F), (G, B, D, F), (C, E, G, C), (C, E, G, C), (G, B, D, G), (C, E, G, C). Each is grouped into a measure of eighth notes....and each goes up an entire octave, and returns to the first octave when you repeat it. You'll notice I usedthe V7 chord in the 4th measure as this holds a lot of tension and gives your melody another chordal tone to use in it (^4). I also changed the third measure on the repeat...this is mostly because IV doesn't typically "like" to go to I...whereas V LOVES to.
Once you know what chords are being used...you can remember the pattern as it hardly changes...you can make up your own bass line and start fooling around with the melody that's being played. Trial and error on the key is okay, too. normally the first note is the tonic or first scale degree (^1). That normally tells you the key, but there are exceptions! If there is an anacrusis..normally it's ^5.
I hope this helps a bit, and let me know if there are more question...feel free to email/open a new thread concerning this topic.
-Dennis
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Re: Titanic - My Heart Will Go on , sheet please (x
17:59 on Sunday, August 12, 2007
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