• About
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact

Piano Music Chords QA

Find popular and new piano chords to play everyday.

  • Home
  • Ask
    • Ask Your Question
  • Answer
Home » piano chord recognition » How do you develop advanced tone recognition?

How do you develop advanced tone recognition?

Q. I have a pretty good musical ear. I can hear individual tones but I'm not to the point that I can easily hear intervals or chords. When trying to find them on an instrument, it's trial and error until I finaly find it.

One cannot be a performer if they can't recognise these things on demand.

A. It won't happen overnight, but practicing daily will improve your aural skills immensely. The most important part of ear training is audiation, which is a fancy word for your musical imagination, the tape recorder in your mind that holds the melodies that you hear. I'm sure you've had a song stuck in your head before. The trick to ear training is getting all of the musical rudiments (intervals, chords (arpeggiated, of course), scale degrees (using numbers or solfege syllables), and rhythms) stuck in your head one by one, over and over until you never forget what each one sounds like.

I don't recommend using well-known songs for identifying intervals. Here's why: Let's say you use "Here Comes the Bride" for an ascending perfect fourth. This is scale degree 5 ascending to 8 (or 1 an octave higher), or "sol do". Now that you've learned it, you can recognize that pattern whenever it happens. What will happen if you hear scale degree 3 jumping up to scale degree 6, though ("mi la")? (Listen to the beginning of Brahms's Intermezzo for piano in A minor, Op. 76/7 (http://music.barnesandnoble.com/search/product.asp?z=y&PWB=1&EAN=90266388622 click on track 6). This too is a perfect fourth, and sounds VERY different from "sol do"! Would you recognize that as a fourth? Only if you had also learned to hear that one too! Another different-sounding P4 is 7 to 3 ("ti mi")! When I teach ear training, I teach all of my students (and make them memorize) an interval drill that groups together all of the scale-degree combinations that form a single type of interval. My students sing this etude at the beginning of every class.

A far better approach to ear training than using intervals is using scale degrees. When you practice ear training, do identification drills, always singing what you hear (in a comfortable octave) after listening and then after you've learned the correct ID for the rudiment. Also do dictation. Try to write down melodies that you hear (and have the music for so that you can check your work when you are done). Finally, do a lot of sight-singing. Find melodies that you've never heard before and find out how they sound by singing them from the music. Try to avoid using the piano to help you sing, until you get lost. Then back up and find where you went astray using the piano. There's a difference between producing the right pitches for yourself and matching the pitches you hear. (You must be able to do one before you can do the other, of course.)

There are lots of great online ear training resources. One is http://www.good-ear.com/, and another is http://www.musictheory.net/. I'm sure you can find others on your own. Good luck, and let me know if I can help you in any other way!

Original Question

Could anyone tell me if there is any software for voice tones recognition for composing music?
Q. Hi, everyone. I'm quite lame and I can't play any songs on piano by ear. I need some program that could proccess voice records into tones or chords, in order for me to create music sheets from those melodies inside my head. I would be really really pleased if anyone could help. Thanks for any answers given. :)

A. Music is very complex, and analyzing it for pitches and rhythms correctly is an amazing technical feat.

Create a midi file (recording) and there are Midi-Sheet Music Converter to take standard midi files and converts them into sheet music.

Original Question

Could anyone tell me if there is any software for voice tones recognition for composing music?
Q. Hi, everyone. I'm quite lame and I can't play any songs on piano by ear. I need some program that could process voice records into tones or chords, in order for me to create music sheets from those melodies inside my head. I would be really really pleased if anyone could help. Thanks for any given answers. :)

A. What you are looking for would be an application that converts an audio file of a monophonic melody into midi data.

Try these

Melodyne (free trial) http://www.celemony.com/cms/index.php?id=demos
WIDI Audio to MIDI VST plugin (free trial) http://widisoft.com/english/widi-audio-to-midi-vst.html
http://www.xitona.com/products/voicecomposer/describe.html
Apparently Logic 8 has this function

Try googling "audio to midi"

For more information

Original Question




Powered by Yahoo! Answers
Posted by KickAnswers on - Rating: 4.5
Title : How do you develop advanced tone recognition?
Description : Q. I have a pretty good musical ear. I can hear individual tones but I'm not to the point that I can easily hear intervals or chords. ...

Share to

Facebook Google+ Twitter
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
View mobile version

Popular Posts

  • piano chord progressions in first and second inversions?
    Q. What are the notes for the left and right hands? Use F major and C-sharp minor as examples. I need the raised 7th and diminished 7th cho...
  • What instrument is more difficult, piano or acoustic guitar?
    Q. Also, is piano music and guitar music the same notes when reading music? A. Piano-you have to learn both the Treble Cleft and the Bass ...
  • Can someone help me list out some Jazz piano chord progressions i'll use for my auditioning...?
    Q. A. Fmaj7 Dm7 Gm7 Gbmaj7 Am7 Abmaj7 Dbmaj7 C7sus4 F6 F#o7 Gm7 C7 Eb7 Ab7 Db7 G7 C7 Fmaj7 Original Question I'm sort of new to the pi...
  • How Do you play the open scale notes (NOT Chords) C,D,E,F,G from Piano on the guitar?
    Q. The scale notes of C, D , E, F, G on piano to guitar. How do you play each one individually in guitar? Would it just be C chord D Chord ...
  • What does it mean when a Guitar/Piano chord has a number after it? e.g A2 D5 (i don't mean Aadd5, i know that)?
    Q. e.g A2 D5 (i don't mean Aadd5, i know about that) A. Hmm. Interesting question. Well, you could be referring to a single note, and ...
  • What is the B flat blues on piano?
    Q. thank you! A. Blues scale in Bb: Bb D Eb Enat F Ab Typical 12 blues chord progression in Bb: Bb Bb Bb Bb7 Eb Eb Bb Bb F7 Eb Bb F7 But y...
  • What does 48 note polyphony mean?
    Q. OK, well I'm getting this keyboard for Christmas (I'm learning to play piano) and listed on the features it says, "48 note ...
  • How can you determine what key a piece of music is in if you can't tell by looking at the Key Signature?
    Q. Say the key signature deviates from those that conventionally correspond to the keys. How do you figure out the key then? I usually do...
  • What do you call a dominant chord in a major key with the tonic as the root?
    Q. I am doing a harmonic analysis for Beethoven's Piano sonata no. 8 movement 2 op. 13, particularly with the first 22 measures. In mea...
  • Snow Patrol - Chasing Cars Piano Chords , for tomorrow !!!?
    Q. Does anybody have the chords on piano for Chasing Cars as i have looked on lots of websites but you always have to pay to get the music ...
Copyright © 2012 Piano Music Chords QA - All Rights Reserved
Powered by Blogger