The only way to learn the piano without reading music is to learn by ear. It essentially means to learn to play a song by combining a knowledge of music harmony (essentially, chords) and active listening to identify patterns and intervals (the relationship between notes in distance).
A dominant seventh chord, or major-minor seventh chord is a chord composed of a root, major third, perfect fifth, and minor seventh. It can be also...
Read More »The steps to memorizing can be broken down as follows: Put information into short term memory. Repeat the information in your short term memory...
Read More »Study Every Day: Establish a daily routine where you study in one place a minimum of 4 -5 hours each day. There are different kinds and 'levels' of...
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Read More »At a basic level - when you hear a major chords your emotional response is to feel happy, or right with the world. When you hear a minor chord, your emotional response is to feel sad, melancholy, or just not as happy as you did before. At the next level we can train our ears to recognise chord progressions by starting with the most common ones - we can recognise the way we respond to the change in chords and listen to, not only the harmony of the song, but listen to our inner-reactions to that part of the song. Using a mixture of listening to our emotional responses, and using what we know about music theory we can combine the two to decipher the harmony of a song. Training our ear to recognise intervals is less emotional and more about repetition.
Real yellow brick roads One account says it is a brick road in Peekskill, New York, where L. Frank Baum attended Peekskill Military Academy. Other...
Read More »Known as a I-IV-V (one-four-five') progression, or 'three-chord trick', the chords are built on the first, fourth and fifth notes of the major...
Read More »But, in fact, if we're talking about units per year, it's the harmonica that takes the title of the world's best selling instrument! Read on to...
Read More »For instance, the interval from F up to the B above it (in short, F–B) is a tritone as it can be decomposed into the three adjacent whole tones...
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