Playing by ear is a great way to pick up songs easily and quickly. You can both do it with notes and chords, and it can be nice and easy or really hard. You'll be able to start off with ease, but then it'll take practice…
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Read More »Playing by ear is a great way to pick up songs easily and quickly. You can both do it with notes and chords, and it can be nice and easy or really hard. You’ll be able to start off with ease, but then it’ll take practice… In this important guide, I’ll show you how to learn by ear through understanding how to recognise certain intervals. If you’re looking to learn by ear, then this guide will help you out!
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Read More »Interval training is used to get used to how certain intervals sound when in context. I’ll show you this through famous melodies you can use as a reference point, as well as giving examples of how to play each interval on a standardly tuned guitar. Unison: This is definitely the easiest interval you’ll come across as it is literally just the same note. This shouldn’t take any working out, as once you’ve heard the first note, the second will simply be exactly the same. Minor 2 nd : A minor second is movement of one single semitone. It’ll rarely come directly after the tonic note, as this wouldn’t be diatonic to the key, but it could appear here if using the Phrygian mode. A listening example of an ascending minor 2nd can be seen in the theme to Jaws; while a descending example comes from Beethoven’s ‘Fur Elise’. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Major 2 nd : This movement of one tone is much more common in music, and there are countless melodies that use them throughout. A tonic could easily move to the major 2nd, as that would be diatonic. An example of an ascending major 2nd comes from the classic tune of ‘Happy Birthday To You’; while descending can be shown in ‘Mary Had A Little Lamb’. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Minor 3 rd : The minor 3rd (or in some cases, augmented 2nd [they sound the same but appear in very different contexts]) is my personal favourite interval in music. It’ll appear diatonically from the tonic when in a minor key if you move up by one tone and a semitone. The example I always use is Axel F’s ‘Crazy Frog’ when ascending; while descending examples come from The Beatles’ ‘Hey Jude’. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Major 3 rd : Major 3rd intervals present themselves diatonically in a major key when moving from the tonic. It is a movement of 2 tones. The old tune of ‘Oh When The Saints’ opens with an ascending major 3rd; while ‘Swing Low Sweet Chariot’ has a descending major 3rd that’ll help you get used to hearing the interval. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Perfect 4 th : When you move from the tonic by 2 tones and a semitone, you’ll reach the perfect 4th interval. This appears in major and minor keys, as well as most modes. The opening leap from the Harry Potter theme is built around an ascending perfect 4th interval; while ‘Oh Come All Yee Faithful’ moves down a perfect 4th after the opening unison interval. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Tritone: A tritone (also known as an augmented 4th, diminished 5th or the devil’s interval) is the exact halfway point between an octave, and a semitone less than a perfect 5th. It has a large amount of dissonance, and is particularly hard to sing but is a defining feature of the Lydian mode. The opening chant of The Simpsons theme is a tritone; while Black Sabbath’s self-titled first song descends by a tritone after the initial octave leap. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Perfect 5 th : A jump of a perfect 5th is a simple interval that appears in almost every scale and most chords. ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’ opens with an ascending perfect 5th; while the theme to The Flintstones opens with a perfect 5th descent. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Minor 6 th : Minor 6th leaps are relatively rare in music as they are quite jarring, large intervals made up of a semitone more than a perfect 5th. Scott Joplin’s ‘The Entertainer’ has a very distinctive minor 6th ascension that you’ll be able to use as a reference point when learning by ear; while the “call me” of Carly Rae Jepsen’s ‘Call Me Maybe’ is a descending minor 6th. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here.
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Read More »Major 6 th : The major 6th is probably even more rare, and hence appears in relatively few well known pieces of music, unlike that shown above. ‘My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean’ has a distinctive jump of a major 6th; while ‘Nobody Knows The Trouble I’ve Seen’ gets a major 6th descent into the word “nobody” . Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Minor 7 th : Minor 7th intervals are just a tone away from being a pure octave, so it’s often quite a dissonant jump which appears in the minor scale. ABBA’s ‘The Winner Takes It All’ shows off the large leap with ease; while Herbie Hancock’s ‘Watermelon Man’ has a large minor 7th descent. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Major 7 th : A major 7th is essentially a reverse minor 2nd, as it is one single semitone away from an octave interval. It’s use often leads up to an octave, with the example of ‘Take On Me’ by A-ha doing exactly that; while one of the only examples of it being used as a descent comes from Cole Porter’s ‘I Love You’. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here. Octave: Finally, we’ve reached a common interval once again. An octave simply repeats the same note, but up a whole octave (AKA 12 semitones). ‘Somewhere Over The Rainbow’ opens with this huge jump, while the descent from ‘Willow Weep For Me’ is also an octave. Playing the interval based on the starting point of a ‘G’ on guitar is shown here.
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