The Instrument Inside You, with Ben Parry

New musicality video:

Today we’re speaking with Ben Parry, the Artistic Director of the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain http://musicalitypodcast.com/64

But as you’ll hear that’s just one of many musical roles he has, including formerly being a singer and arranger with the world-famous a cappella group The Swingle Singers, and directing the London Voices choir which has performed on many of the Hollywood film soundtracks that we all know and love.

We recently had the pleasure of attending a workshop Ben presented at the London A Cappella Festival and he had such a great way of getting people of all ability levels quickly singing some quite complex music, we knew we had to invite him onto the show to share his ideas with you.

In this conversation we discuss:

– His own journey from classical church music to cabaret and a cappella, and how it’s all informed the way he helps people sing now.
– Why having a choir get their tuning from a piano can be a really bad idea.
– The pros and cons of using intervals versus using scale degrees (such as solfa or note numbers)

Ben is clearly a man who has thought deeply about singing in all forms and brings his unique experience and perspective to all his roles to the benefit of his singers. We loved having the opportunity to pick his brains, and whatever kind of singer you might be – whether you’re a vocal pro or just do karaoke at the pub, or you sing with your local choir or in a barbershop group, or you’re only willing to sing in the shower but you wish you could do more – we know you’re going to really enjoy this episode.

Listen to the episode: http://musicalitypodcast.com/64

Links and Resources:

Ben’s website: https://www.benparry.net/

Swingle Singers: http://www.theswingles.co.uk/

Eton Choral Courses: http://etonchoralcourses.co.uk/

Choir with No Name: https://www.choirwithnoname.org/

The Choir of King’s College: http://www.kings.cam.ac.uk/choir/index.html/

National Youth Choirs of Great Britain: https://www.nycgb.org.uk/

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

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The Instrument Inside You, with Ben Parry

Sight Reading, Vocal Wisdom, Computer Creations, and Music at a Glance

When we’re engrossed in musical learning, we often forget to evaluate our progress and seek ways to improve or accelerate our trajectory.

This week, we’re encouraging you to reflect on your musical journey, and think about how you can take both your learning and your practice to the next level.

We examine how sight reading can become musical rather than mechanical, how one vocal instructor pushes the boundaries of teaching singing, and how you can use technology to push the limits of your songwriting process.

Sight Reading

Undoubtedly one of the most impressive musical skills out there is sight reading, or a musician’s ability to simply look at a piece of sheet music, take a deep breath, and play it as effortlessly and musically as if they had practiced it a hundred times before.

Sight reading and musicalityIn Musicality Means… Sight Reading, we examine this skill, the obvious and not-so-obvious musical benefits that come from mastering it, and how you can begin practicing it in a way that won’t leave you feeling discouraged.

Most importantly, we share a hidden “trick” to effective sight reading – an approach that goes beyond the note-by-note tactic, and gives you a deeper understanding of the music you’re playing.

Learning how to sight read doesn’t happen overnight. It takes years of deliberate practice to get comfortable and proficient with this skill. No matter your current abilities, there is always room for improvement – Peppermints and Cherries shows you how.

It’s such an interesting age to live in, with the explosion of mobile technologies! It seems like there is an app for nearly everything, and this includes sight reading. The Curious Piano Teachers take you through a review of a new sight reading app from ABRSM.

Becoming a great sight reader is a neverending journey, which is exciting because you know that there is always something new to do! The Hoffman Academy discusses how to improve your reading skills by building a solid foundation.

Vocal Wisdom

For those who use their voice as their primary instrument, there are considerations that no other musician needs to even worry about. For starters, getting in tune and staying in tune isn’t as easy as just finding the note on your instrument.

Ben Parry interviewAnd naturally, things get more complicated when you put singers together in a group and ask them to sing in tandem; how does a choir or an a cappella group stay in tune?

In The Instrument Inside You, with Ben Parry, the veteran choir director, singer, and arranger shares a goldmine of wisdom on the unique challenges of a cappella singing, the pros and cons of the two approaches for learning relative pitch, and how the lessons learned through his rich music career have influenced his supportive and accessible (yet totally boundary-pushing) teaching style.

Ben has such an personal inspiring story that it may encourage you to explore your own singing. For some musicians, discovering their musical voice is full of self-doubt about their abilities and comparing themselves to other singers. But as Steven M. Demorest discusses, ultimately, everyone can sing!

Like many of the musicians that we talk to on the podcast, Ben initially discovered his love for music as a child. Children are naturally curious about a great many things, and discovering their singing voice can be exciting and rewarding for their overall growth. Ashley Danyew discusses more about how to help children start singing.

Here at Musical U, we share a passion with Ben for a cappella music, and we are always encouraging other musicians to explore this unique musical expression. Become Singers discusses singing a cappella, with some tips on how to sing professionally.

Computer Creations

The advent of digital audio workstations (or DAWs, for short) has made electronic music production accessible, intuitive, and fun. No longer do you need a collection of synthesizers, drum machines, samplers, and effects pedals to make tunes – it’s all there for you, waiting in Ableton, Garageband, Logic Pro X, or whichever software suits you best.

Making music with DAWsLearn about the basics of computer-based musicmaking with The Beginner’s Guide To Creating Music On Your Computer, which covers everything from the gear you’ll need to get started, to the types of audio files that you can work with and the ways in which DAWs make arranging, mixing, and adding effects a breeze.

If you’re more interested in using a DAW to compose and arrange with an instrument you already play, then don’t skip this guide – we also explore how this software can help you create music with a non-virtual instrument, with the use of recording, arranging, looping, and effects!

It’s truly a fascinating time to be a musician, as technology has allowed us to do things that weren’t possible only a couple of years ago. In no way is that more apparent than in the evolution in home recording technology. For an in-depth discussion on how to create a professional recording studio at home, we turn to Bree Noble at Female Entrepreneur Musician.

If you have already set up a recording studio, no matter how basic or complex, it’s time to lay down some tracks! The process to record music is different than how you would rehearse. It’s best to think of a strategy for getting the most out of your recording sessions, as Music Tech Student discusses.

The same technology that allows us to easily record music has also permitted us to share and collaborate with other musicians via the internet. One example of this is the number of teachers that teach exclusively online. For some suggestions on how to get yourself set up to stream your music performance, we turn to Emily Dolan Davies and Airgigs.

Music At A Glance

Learning to sight read in the traditional way involves a lot of trial-and-error and a lot, lot, lot of repetition. The result? You can play a piece note-by-note as you are reading the sheet music, with your brain translating each note on the page into movement of your fingers.

The skill of sight readingThough this is certainly impressive, it’s hard to play in a musical and expressive manner if you are stuck in this note-by-note mindset!

In About Sight-Reading Music, we go beyond the bare-bones skill of playing from the page, and share the secret of infusing your sight reading with musicality – something that will improve your playing and deepen your understanding of the music.

In your musical toolbox, the ability to sight-read is some kind of Frankenstein combination all-in-one craftsman super tool. You can apply this skill to nearly every aspect of your musicality! Read Melanie Spanswick’s 15 top tips to successful sight reading to get you started.

Learning to be a music teacher has helped many musicians improve their confidence as a musician. However, sight reading is a particularly difficult skill to teach. Diane Hidy has ten tips for effectively teaching sight reading.

No matter how long you have been sight reading, or how proficient you are at this task, there is always more work to be done. Indeed, sight reading is a foundational skill and is best if practiced a bit every day. Start Piano Studio explores making sight reading an everyday exercise on their blog.

Remaining A Step Ahead

Get into the habit of looking at your musical journey and asking yourself the question, “How can I learn this skill or concept in a way that will most benefit my musicality?”.

Keep the idea of deliberate practice in your head. While adding a skill to your musical toolbox is an accomplishment in itself (and one you should be proud of!), think about how you can learn the skill as effectively as possible, so you can apply to it to a broad range of musical situations.

This sort of pragmatic thinking is what will take you from a technically skilled player to an expressive musician.

How do you evaluate your own progress? Writing in a journal about the skills you are learning, how you are learning them, and the progress you are making is a fantastic way to critically examine your learning journey.

The post Sight Reading, Vocal Wisdom, Computer Creations, and Music at a Glance appeared first on Musical U.

About Deliberate Practice in Music

New musicality video:

You may be putting in the practice hours, but are you getting the results that your hard work deserves? In this episode, we take a look at the concepts of deliberate practice and purposeful practice, and how to integrate the two in order to make the most out of your practice time. http://musicalitypodcast.com/63

Have you ever felt frustrated or disappointed by the results you get from your music practice? Like you’re just not making the progress you feel you should, for the time and effort you’re putting in?

What if there was a way to get dramatically better results without spending dramatically more time?

The answer is what has become the “gold standard” for how to acquire skills quickly: deliberate practice.

Deliberate practice is a particular way of spending your practice time which can be applied to almost any skill. It applies in fields as varied as medicine, sports, and of course music.

It was developed by Professor Anders Ericsson who we spoke with on our last episode, in collaboration with his research team over the years, and has become a universally respected model for how we should think about getting the most from our practice time.

There are a number of aspects to deliberate practice which we’ll be talking about but if I had to sum it up in a nutshell it would be: practice the hard things. Of course by definition that’s going to require more effort from you, but this change alone can transform the results you get from your music practice.

The biggest cause of wasted practice time is that we fall into the bad habit of letting practicing really just be “playing”. Meaning we have our agenda of what we’ll work on in each practice session but those are actually just things you intend to play through, generally several times in a row. Unless you are in a lesson with a teacher the chances are you play, you make mistakes, there’s plenty of room for improvement – but then you just play the same thing again or move on to the next item.

Playing is not practicing. And it’s certainly not deliberate practice.

Listen to the episode! http://musicalitypodcast.com/63

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

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Learn more about Musical U!

Website:
https://www.musical-u.com/

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http://musicalitypodcast.com

Tone Deaf Test:
http://tonedeaftest.com/

Musicality Checklist:
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About Deliberate Practice in Music

About Sight-Reading Music

Are you intimidated by the idea of sight­ reading music, finding the skill to be intimidating and unattainable? This podcast episode explores how you can get started with learning this skill through musicality training, and the endless benefits that this ability yields.

Listen to the episode:

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Links and Resources

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Transcript

Today I wanted to talk about sight reading – a musical skill that a lot of musicians find intimidating, difficult, or even impossible.

On our last episode with Ben Parry we talked about a particular kind of sight-reading: when a choir singer looks at traditional sheet music they haven’t seen before and can directly sing the notes on the page. But sight-reading is something that’s useful beyond classical music, applies on any instrument, and although I’m going to be talking in terms of traditional “score notation”, everything we’ll discuss is relevant for chord charts, lead sheets, guitar tab, or any other form of written music.

Sight reading is a valuable skill for any musician to add to their toolkit, and learning to do it doesn’t have to be dry or difficult. Today I’d like to share with you three ways that musicality can enhance and accelerate the process of learning to sight-read for you.

First of all, let’s make sure we’re clear: Sight-reading is different from simply reading music.

Reading music means you can interpret the written symbols on a page and know the musical notes they represent. You might sit down with a piece of sheet music and spend 30 minutes deciphering it note by note – and you are reading the music. But that’s not sight-reading.

Sight reading music means you play it as you read it. You’re essentially performing the music directly from the page, the first time you see it. That obviously requires a much greater familiarity and speed of reading music than the slow-methodical “figuring it out” which also counts as reading music.

Learning to read music is very quick. You need to understand the concepts and the symbols but you don’t need to practice it very much to say that you can read music and to take that skill to any new written music you encounter.

Learning to sight read music on the other hand takes a lot of time and practice to master. This is why it’s typically included as a short test as part of an instrument exam, you get given some notated music you haven’t seen before, normally at a level a couple of notches below what you’ve been carefully learning to play for the exam, and after a short amount of prep time to examine the sheet music you’re asked to play it.

Learning to sight read music is traditionally just a process of repetition. You practice it as a skill in itself, and your brain gradually gets faster and faster at translating the visual symbols on the page into the correct movements of your fingers on the instrument.

This is a pretty well-established process and it works fine. There’s a website I recommend for learning this way, SightReadingMastery.com. They have a really nicely designed database of exercises to take you from the very basics through to quite advanced sight reading, on a variety of instruments. So check out SightReadingMastery.com for lots of material to practice with.

Today though, I wanted to help you see beyond this traditional approach by asking the question: what does this have to do with musicality?

This isn’t the “Music Podcast”, it’s not the “Sight Reading Podcast” and it’s certainly not the “Pass your music exams Podcast”! So why are we talking about sight reading on the musicality podcast?

Well, apart from the fact that being able to sight read is a valuable skill for any well-rounded musician because it unlocks such a vast treasure trove of music to you in books and downloadable sheet music, for you to instantly play and add to your repertoire. Apart from that very good reason to learn to sight read, it’s relevant for musicality because the way to accelerate learning to sight read is to work on actually understanding the music within the symbols.

Traditional sight reading is very mechanical. You mentally translate dots and squiggles on the page into the corresponding finger motions and you reproduce the music with your instrument.

But wouldn’t it be better if those dots and squiggles meant something? If you actually had a deep understanding of why it’s those particular dots and squiggles that are on the page?

As you’ll know if you’ve been listening to this podcast for a while, we’ve set up Musical U as the home of musicality training online, and so to help explain the musicality of sight reading I’m going to share with you three ways that Musical U’s training can help you become a better sight reader – even though we don’t specifically have any sight reading material inside Musical U at all.

The first way Musical U helps you sight read is the one that’s most relevant to what we were talking about with Ben Parry: and that’s the pitch skills needed to interpret written note pitches. If you’re a singer then learning to sight read is actually a much bigger challenge, because you don’t just need to know which fingers to put where to produce the notes on the page – you actually need to know in your head how those notes should sound. It’s 100% up to you to produce the right pitch for each note – that’s quite different from say piano, where you see a written “C” so you press the “C” key on your piano keyboard and you know the right note pitch will come out!

So the first way musicality training can help you sight read is by training your sense of relative pitch. We have two methods for this at Musical U, intervals and solfa, and whichever you pick they both enable you to look at the dots on the page and imagine in your mind how those notes would sound. So that’s obviously hugely useful for a singer trying to sight read – but it’s actually really valuable for any instrumentalist, because imagine how much more musical you can make your performance if you could actually hear the music in your head before you play it, rather than having to wait until your fingers hit the keys to know how it will sound.

By developing your sense of relative pitch and practicing the skill of audiation, meaning imagining music in your mind, you become able to just look at a page of sheet music and hear the right note pitches in your head.

Of course there’s another dimension to every note on the page, and that’s rhythm. This is the second way musicality training can help you with sight reading. At Musical U we have a “Speak Rhythms” module which is essentially the rhythm equivalent of what we just talked about for pitch. We teach two methods you can use to look at written rhythm notation and hear in your head (or speak out loud) how those rhythms would sound. So combine this musicality skill with the relative pitch training and you can look at a piece of written music and hear exactly how those notes should sound, both in their pitch and in their rhythm.

Pretty cool, right? I know that for a long time I thought it was astounding to imagine that some expert musicians could flick through sheet music in a shop and would actually be hearing that music in their head as they looked at the page. And that other singers in choir with me could be handed new sheet music and immediately sing their part, even though they’d never heard that piece before.

With your pitch and rhythm ear skills connected to notation the way we teach it at Musical U those seemingly-magical abilities are well within your reach.

The final way that musicality training helps you with sight reading is the most closely related to what I said about understanding the music you’re sight reading. The pitch and rhythm skills are great for translating what you see into something you can hear in your head. But you don’t necessarily know what’s going on in the music at all, just how it would sound.

One popular technique for speeding up your sight-reading is the idea of “chunking”, where instead of reading one note at a time, you break up what your eyes are taking in into “chunks” of several notes at once. And this is where musicality training can really help. Imagine a bar of piano music, for example, played both hands together with the left hand playing chords and the right hand playing a melody. Without musicality training you might have to decipher a dozen different notes for the left hand and another half dozen for the right hand. But if you’ve studied melodies and harmony the way we teach them at Musical U then you could glance at that same bar of sheet music and immediately see that actually it’s just two chords in the left hand, C major followed by F major, and it’s mostly just a little section of the ascending melodic minor scale in the right hand. You’ve converted a large number of dots into a few simple concepts – and not only do you know how those sound in your head, but you’ve played them so many times that it’s easy to just run your hands through playing them, without having to think about each note in turn.

An equivalent on guitar would be if for example you’d done some training on scale degree recognition and learned particular fretboard patterns for common scale types. You could glance at some guitar tab and instead of just seeing an overwhelming assortment of different fret numbers your eyes would perceive the underlying shapes and patterns and you could immediately make your fingers do the right things – again, without having to think through it carefully, one note at a time.

Or supposing you’re a rhythm guitarist presented with a new chord chart. Without musicality training you might look at the page and see 20 or 30 different chord symbols you’d have to play through and pay total attention to every change. But after training in chord progressions and song structure you could look at that same page, immediately see that there’s an A section and a B section, and each one is a simple 1-4-5-6 progression in a particular key. Again, you’ve distilled down a large amount of information into something you could say out loud in a sentence or two, making it dramatically easier to play through – and, by the way, dramatically easier to memorise, another skill that can otherwise be very slow and challenging for musicians to learn.

So musicality gives you the insight into the underlying structures and patterns that music is made from, and that lets you translate what initially seems like a ton of information notated on the page into the simple, larger chunks it’s composed from. That lets you more easily play it on your instrument because your brain has much less to juggle and you’re able to take advantage of all the practice you’ve had playing those same chunks in different music before.

So those are three ways that musicality training can really speed up the process of learning to sight read music – as well as making it a lot more rewarding and enjoyable, and letting you make your sight-read performances sound much more musical too.

On this show we talk a lot about the ear skills of music and things like playing by ear and improvising which don’t require you to read music. But that doesn’t mean that the other, more traditionally-taught skills aren’t incredibly useful too. So if you’ve shied away from sight reading because it seemed difficult, or you’ve been learning but finding it slow-going, please do check out SightReadingMastery.com for some step-by-step practice material, and explore the three ways that musicality training can help speed up the process and make it a whole lot more fun too.

Enjoying the show? Please consider rating and reviewing it!

The post About Sight-Reading Music appeared first on Musical U.

The Beginner’s Guide To Creating Music On Your Computer

Learning to create music on my computer has been one of the most creatively fulfilling experiences of my life. I’m here today to convince you that it’s not as difficult as you may think. In fact, many of you will be able to get started making music today.

If you have a computer, you only need a few other pieces to get started. This article will cover exactly what you need (as well as what you don’t need). I’ll provide a quick introduction to the different recording options, as well as tips for arranging and mixing your tracks on the computer.

The goal of this article is to inspire everyone from those new to making music to seasoned pros. You don’t have to buy an expensive home studio, nor do you have to be technically gifted – all you need is a love for making music.

With that, let’s jump right in!

Gear Overview

Before we dive into the meat of the article, a quick gear checklist is in order. You may be surprised to find that you have most of the gear you need. However, there are a few pieces of equipment that you need to consider, and a few you can ignore while you’re just getting started. This includes:

  • DAW (digital audio workstation)
  • MIDI controller
  • Audio Interface
  • Mixing Equipment

Your DAW

As you would expect, the most crucial piece of the puzzle comes in the form of software. Namely, DAWs, or digital audio workstations. DAWs are programs that run on your computer that allow you to record, edit, and produce audio files. As you may expect, there are a number of different options on the market. The good news is, you can always get your hands on something for free. Here are my recommended free options:

There will be limited capabilities with each of these free DAWs, but they’re a great way to get a feel for what creating music on your computer is like.

Alternatively, for those who want the full versions, some of the most popular DAWs for creating music are as follows:

  • Logic Pro X
  • Fl Studios
  • Ableton Live
  • Reason
  • Cubase

Most of these options will have a free trial period where you can test them out. Another great way for you to get your hands on a DAW without spending any of your hard earned cash!

This list isn’t comprehensive – there are plenty more options available. Make sure you do your research before pulling the trigger. Keep in mind that some DAWs are better than others for certain genres. For example, Ableton is often the choice of DAW for creating electronic music.

MIDI Controller

The next piece of equipment you need to consider are MIDI controllers. MIDI (short for musical instrument digital interface) is a protocol designed for controlling digital instruments. It does not produce any sound, rather, it simply transmits information on how the music was produced.

MIDI keyboard

In other words, MIDI is what allows your electronic instruments and your DAW to communicate with each other.

The easiest way to create MIDI information is with a MIDI controller. MIDI controllers usually come in the form of basic keyboards. The main difference is the MIDI controller only produces MIDI information and no sound.

Your MIDI controller doesn’t have to be complicated. I recommend getting something with just the basic MIDI features – something like the AKM320 midiplus. All of the other bells and whistles that come with fancier MIDI controllers can easily be controlled in your DAW.

If you’re really on a shoestring budget, you can skip the MIDI controller altogether. It will make things a little harder, but there are plenty of producers I know who only use their keyboard and mouse.

Audio Interface

Anyone who wants to record their instrument needs an audio interface. Audio interfaces provide the link from your computer to any of your external hardware. This includes your piano, guitar, headphones, monitors, and microphone.

The quality of audio interfaces today is at a point where you can get professional results from entry-level interfaces.

Again, there are plenty of options for you to choose from. Getting something with just the basic features is a great place to start. Make sure the interface is able to accommodate any instrument you’d like to record. Recording Revolution goes through a quick rundown of some of the more popular options:

Mixing Equipment

Many artists who begin making music on their computers fail to realize one very important thing: mixing is almost half the battle. They underestimate the power that mixing has on the overall sound of the track.

This is why mixing equipment is widely discussed amongst the DIY community.

What kind of equipment are we talking about here?

Most of us will be able to get away with two pieces of mixing equipment:

  1. Mixing headphones
  2. Studio monitors

We can ignore the expensive multitrack mixers, analog reverbs, compressors, etc. Most of this hardware has now moved to digital and will be included with your DAW.

Audio earphones. Home recording studio with professional monitors and midi keyboard.However, headphones and monitors are essential for getting quality mixdowns. The good news is, you won’t need to purchase mixing specific equipment to get things moving. I waited a few years until I had the production side of the coin under wraps before I bought my first set of mixing headphones.

Why can’t you just use your regular headphones or speakers?

Well, the short answer is: accuracy. Consumer headphones and speakers have their frequency spectrums adjusted in order to color the recording. The end result is the tracks usually sound “nicer” on consumer products.

Unfortunately, mixing with colored frequency spectrums makes it incredibly difficult to accurately hear what you are mixing. You want what is called a “flat frequency” spectrum. Mixing headphones and monitors provide this flat frequency spectrum for the best accuracy possible. The idea is, if you can get the mix sounding good on studio monitors, it will sound fantastic on consumer systems. I’ve created a beginner friendly guide on selecting studio monitors.

That wraps it up for the gear required. I suggest starting off with one of the free options for DAWs and working your way into getting the other gear required.

Types of Audio Files

Now that we’ve got our gear situation sorted, let’s understand how music on your computer is stored as files.

There are two different types of audio files you will be using to create music: MIDI and audio. They both have pros and cons, and producers usually have a preference for which file type they like to work with.

That being said, most projects are a mix of audio and MIDI files, so it’s important to become familiar with them both.

Audio

When you think of a recording of audio you are probably picturing the audio file format. It can look something like this:

Audio file format

You see a visual representation of the audio wave, as well as information of the stereo field and gain of the recording.

This is the kind of file you will record whenever you are using physical instruments. Many of the sample recordings (professional recordings of instruments) and loops will be recorded as audio.

Producers generally like to work with audio because it’s much easier on their computer’s processor. It’s also much easier to mix and clean up audio files. You can easily remove sections, blend things together, change the length, pitch and tempo. The only downside to audio files is you cannot change the musical aspect of the recording.

MIDI

This is where MIDI files start to become beneficial. Here’s what MIDI files look like:

MIDI file example

Because the information is recorded in MIDI, you can use the same file to control any style of digital instrument. You can change the overall musical structure of the recording, such as the note arrangement, the chords, and the velocity.

The downside is MIDI takes a lot of processing power if you are running multiple MIDI tracks concurrently. It’s also more difficult to make adjustments to the midi recording. The good news is, once you are happy with the musical arrangement of the file, you can easily bounce the MIDI down to audio and finish your editing.

Having a basic understanding of the two main file types will go a long way when you are beginning to make music. In summary, MIDI is to be used to control any digital instruments and audio files will be used to record any physical instruments.

Arranging and Layering

A huge advantage to modern DAWs comes in the form of workflow. The modern interfaces make recording and arranging your songs incredibly intuitive. Have a quick look below at a new track I just started working on:

Arranging a new track on a DAW

The different tracks can easily be arranged and layered. You can copy and paste different sections and easily loop different components.

Each track can be edited individually, or as a group of tracks.

Producing and editing tracks is extremely intuitive once you get a hang of things. The entire process, from recording to mixing, can be completed all within the DAW.

It can be as easy as picking a tempo, key, two to three chord progressions, a melody, and a lead. You can easily blend natural instruments with digital instruments. You can mix and match different loop files (recordings from professionals that come with your DAW) with different sample files. The possibilities are endless.

Nearly every genre of music can be created in a computer. All it takes is a little patience to learn the technical side of the software.

Mixing and Effects

Mixing is a complicated subject that would require an entire book to cover. However, I’ll provide a quick glimpse of how you will use mixing and effects to improve your tracks.

Each instrument fits within a certain frequency range. When you layer multiple instruments in a recording, these frequency ranges can sometimes clash. This results in complicated phase interactions that can lead to your mix sounding muddied and unclear.

This is where your mixing talents are used. Each track will have to be mixed individually to fit within the larger whole.

This primarily involves digital EQs, faders, compressors, filters and other mixing components. You will use your ears to cut or boost certain frequencies so that the track blends well with the others. You will also use the volume faders and digital pan settings to place the track in pleasing locations within the mix.

The digital mixer looks something like this:

Digital mixer on a DAW

Mixing is an advanced skill that you generally pick up along the way. There are many courses and online tutorials to help you with the entire process.

Another added benefit of making music on your computer is digital effects. These include things such as reverb, delay, chorus, distortion, compression, and every other effect you can think of.

These effects will play an important role in making your track sound professional. It’s as easy as adding the effect to the track and playing around with a few settings.

Your DAW will come preloaded with most of the basic effects and mixing features. Of course, you will want to selectively upgrade certain features as your need grows. You’ll be happy to know that many producers still use a lot of the stock plugins when they are making their tracks.

Sound System

Beware, making music on your computer can be incredibly addicting. I will often start working on a track only to look up and see that four hours have disappeared. That being said, it’s one of the most creatively fulfilling skills I have learned.

No matter what your style of music, I’m sure you can start making it on a computer. As I mentioned above, get your hands on one of the free options available and get a taste of how satisfying it can be.

Thanks for reading – I hope this has inspired you to give making music on your computer a shot!

Making music on the computer is not reserved for the electronic musicians among us! Whether you play the electric keyboard or the tenor saxophone, you can take advantage of looping, EQing, effects, and all the other tools that DAWs have to offer.

Glen Parry has been a musician for over 15 years. He’s done everything the hard way so you don’t have to. You can find more musical and audio gear advice over at AudioMastered.com

The post The Beginner’s Guide To Creating Music On Your Computer appeared first on Musical U.

The Instrument Inside You, with Ben Parry

Today we’re speaking with Ben Parry, the Artistic Director of the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain – but as you’ll hear that’s just one of many musical roles he has, including formerly being a singer and arranger with the world-famous a cappella group The Swingle Singers, and directing the London Voices choir which has performed on many of the Hollywood film soundtracks that we all know and love.

We recently had the pleasure of attending a workshop Ben presented at the London A Cappella Festival and he had such a great way of getting people of all ability levels quickly singing some quite complex music, we knew we had to invite him onto the show to share his ideas with you.

In this conversation we discuss:

  • His own journey from classical church music to cabaret and a cappella, and how it’s all informed the way he helps people sing now.
  • Why having a choir get their tuning from a piano can be a really bad idea.
  • The pros and cons of using intervals versus using scale degrees (such as solfa or note numbers)

Ben is clearly a man who has thought deeply about singing in all forms and brings his unique experience and perspective to all his roles to the benefit of his singers. We loved having the opportunity to pick his brains, and whatever kind of singer you might be – whether you’re a vocal pro or just do karaoke at the pub, or you sing with your local choir or in a barbershop group, or you’re only willing to sing in the shower but you wish you could do more – we know you’re going to really enjoy this episode.

Listen to the episode:

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Transcript

Christopher: Welcome to the show, Ben. Thank you for joining us today.

Ben: I’m delighted to talk to you.

Christopher: So you have had an incredible career over the years, a real range of roles and projects and types of music. It was hard for me to know where to start but I suppose one easy option is to start at the beginning. And I’d love to know, you’ve become this incredible musician and artistic director and nurterer of young singers in particular but what was it like for you growing up? Was music always a part of your life? Was it a late discovery? Did it all come easily? Tell me what that was like.

Ben: I come from a very musical family. My dad was a music teacher and church organist all of his life and my mom was a keen amateur singer and in fact I guess I’ve been surrounded by music ever since birth, actually. Interesting — I’m asked this question a lot, you know, what was sort of my first musical memories and there are many of them and there are some of them which are really quite sort of pivotal to my career or my wish to be a professional musician, not least because dad was a church organist. I and my three sibling all sang in the church choirs in Ipswich where I now live and I remember at a very early age I was too young to sing in the choir so my three siblings were in the choir and I would sit next to Dad on the organ bench while he played.

One of the most abiding memories was them singing in a choral evensong, and this will be for sort of choral evensong nerds, if you like. But there is a Magnificat & Nunc dimittus by Stanford, Stanford in C Major, which starts with a huge, great organ chord and the choir come in and I was age four and I turned to my dad and said, “Oh, Daddy, what lovely music!” and clearly it had a real effect on me. Sorry, that is terribly nerdy, isn’t it? But it’s a really important thing because I think at really quite a young age I realized that music was going to be a massive part of my life and fast forward a few years, just when I was seven or eight years old we were very involved in music at Snape Maltings, which is up in Suffolk where Benjamin Britten lived and worked and ran his wonderful Aldeburgh Festival that still goes on to this day and Mom used to sing in the Aldeburgh Festival Singers. She sang with Benjamin Britten conducting many times and I remember her coming back from concerts and telling me all about it. And we went to Snape one day to this amazing concert hall that that Benjamin Britten built and he was there and I met him. A lot of other contemporary colleagues of mine are really sort of quite jealous of the fact that I actually met Benjamin Britten which was amazing and I remember him talking and I remember going into the hall and we sang some of his music. It was an opera that he’d written called The Little Sweep and the audience has these audience songs and I remember singing this song all about birds singing in the night and I thought, “I want to do this,” you know,” as a grownup. I want to be a musician.” So that was really sort of quite pivotal. So music was always around in the family. We used to sing, we used to play, we all played instruments so yeah I was surrounded by it.

Christopher: Wonderful. And so given that musical beginning I have to jump quickly to one of the big questions I wanted to ask you, which relates a bit, I think, to your work with the National Youth Choir. Given that you were immersed in music from the beginning and you also came from a family who were themselves musical, what’s your opinion on talent, you know, if someone’s gonna become an incredible inspiring musician and composer and arranger like yourself, or one of the leading singers in the great choirs of the country, do you think it takes talent? Is it a natural thing or is it more nurture than nature?

Ben: Well, I was just about to say, nurture or nature and it is one of those things. I mean, if you’re surrounded by it, obviously, you know, you’re going to engender a sense of what’s around you but there is such a notion as a gift, isn’t there? There is, you know, talent. It has to be a natural thing as well but that doesn’t preclude people from doing it. Say, for example, you know, you wanted to sing in a choir but you felt that you hadn’t had a background in it. Well, join a choir, you know, it’s not — it’s as simple as that, actually, and actually with singing — this is a big thing, I have constant arguments with my wife, who is a professional violinist and she will say, you know, the thousands of hours of work that she’s had to put into practicing and she gets so frustrated because singing is such a natural thing. We can all do it, and this notion — I remember my dad talking to me many times about the notion of tone deafness, and actually he didn’t believe that tone deafness existed. Anybody can sing. If anybody can talk, anybody can sing and in fact, we all have voice boxes, so, you know, that ability to be able to just make that leap from talking to vocalizing to understanding, you know, how it works is a really interesting thing. Actually it’s — just leading on from that, one of my nephews is an amazing percussionist and he found it really difficult to sing simply because he hadn’t exercised these muscles that we have in here so he talked very quietly, very slowly, and it’s all down here and I gave him some exercises in how to sing and I could see it, actually, it was a visible thing, that he simply didn’t know how to use that muscle and how to hear in his ear how this was working out as an aural example of sound and it took, what, five minutes for him to work out and — a note like, “laaa” and he would sing, “laaa” and it would be well over an octave below but once he worked out the notion of what was going on in here and how to hear it we’d beaten it. We’d cracked the code and I think it’s possible for everybody to do that. Of course, you know, musicians, if you’re going to do it at a professional level or at a pretty high level then talent’s going to help but it’s nature and nurture in equal degrees, I would say.

Christopher: That’s really interesting to hear and we’ve had a lot of that same experience at Musical U with reluctant singers that it’s partly emotional or psychological and it’s partly physical. You know, if someone hasn’t moved their voice through their possible pitch range they simply have no chance of hitting a note.

Ben: Exactly.

Christopher: But some very simple exercises can give them that freedom.

Ben: Yeah.

Christopher: So coming back for a minute to your own journey, you were clearly diving into the world of what I would consider kind of classical church music in England growing up. Where did things go from there for you?

Ben: I studied music at Cambridge University. I was very lucky. I would say that I was a reluctant student, nay, perhaps a bit lazy and I say that simply because I’m not — I wouldn’t have classed myself as an academic. I’d been much more a practical musician.

I think if I could go back and do it all again now, I would find it so brilliantly fascinating but unfortunately I think I’m a bit too old to do that. But at university of course I was put together with all these amazing other people who were keen musicians and not just that. The thing about university in particular for me was that, you know, you’d be making music with chemists and lawyers and scientists and all these other people and linguists which, again, you know, from a singing point of view, it’s amazing if you’ve got a singer in a choir who’s studying Italian or German or whatever, you know, that’s golden, really, isn’t it. So at university I wasn’t a model academic student but there I found my love of a whole raft of other things that I hadn’t been exposed to before. Like you say, I grew up with church music and I grew up with my parents singing and there was lots of music in the house.

I was not a bad violinist, actually. When you line me up with my wife then I’m hopeless but I remember turning up to university in fact where I met my wife and I thought, “Yes, I’m going to be a violinist now,” and of course there millions of brilliant instrumentalists, so singing was the thing that I then began to get really interested in and possibly most importantly actually — I haven’t thought about this for a long time but in my first year I was asked to do a cabaret. Now, I’d never really done any light music so here I was singing some sort of cabaret songs and close harmony and I thought, “Wow, this is amazing,” because I’d never done this stuff before. Now the really important part of that was a group who some of your listeners if they’re as old as me might have heard of which is called Harvey and the Wall Bangers. Now, Harvey and the Wall Bangers were a group in the 1980’s who were ex-Cambridge choral scholars and they got together and they formed a close harmony group and then they got really kind of funky and they started learning instruments and it was a kind of jazz-pop-rock and roll combo and a friend of mine who was at university said, “You’ve got to come and hear this group Harvey and the Wall Bangers,” and I went to this theater and sat down and this thing started and it was close harmony and it was rock and roll and I thought I’d died and gone to heaven. This was just amazing and I thought, “This is the sort of music that I want to get into.” Years later — we’re fast-forwarding a huge amount — actually a couple of the group, Chris Purves, who is now a major opera singer and Harvey Brough, who started the group, a brilliant composer and very good friends of mine and I would not have imagined in a million years that those guys would have been friends. I worshipped them from afar in the audience while they were onstage.

So, you know, that whole kind of melting pot of being at university and meeting different people and different musical styles was something that was very, very important to me.

Christopher: Hm. And it’s funny that we had kind of the same choral blend as it were in that I grew up in the chapel choir singing a lot in my school days and went on to barbershop and a cappella and really loved that and I found it stretched me in a very different way as a singer and one of the things I was excited to talk to you about was just how you found it transitioning form that world of classical choral music that can be quite formal and precise to a cappella which is precise in its own way, you know, it’s precise in a very expressive, stylistic way and obviously a capella can be any genre, anything from classical to jazz to pop to rock to anything you imagine, so how did you develop as a singer through exploring that different direction?

Ben: That’s a really interesting thing to talk about because basically, you know, one informs the other and vice versa. I mean, what I do now is very much sort of akin to what I was doing at university so one day I’d be singing in King’s Choir and singing in — and just getting off of the fact that I was in this amazing beautiful building singing the most fantastic music. The next day I’d be writing a music essay on, I don’t know, Mahler symphonies or whatever and listening to Mahler’s 9th Symphony. In fact, a friend of mine had to listen to it on 45, you know, when we used to have records? He ran out of time and ran to the library and had to listen to it on 45 instead of 33 to try and get through it all. And then the next day I’d be doing a cabaret and singing jazz songs or, you know, singing in a close harmony group. It’s basically what I do now, actually, is, you know, from one day to the other I have this — for me, I’m so lucky because I have this interesting, eclectic career where I’ll be touching on all these different sorts of music, but like you say, you know, the discipline that is required to sing in a choir like King’s College Choir is obviously going to inform you in a way you might rehearse an a capella piece, you know, the kind of — all of the attributes that are there, the style, the blend, the precision, the way that you rehearse it, the tuning listening out for different parts, how the balance might work and all those sorts of things so I’ve been blessed that I’ve been able to have that and as a student but then that’s informed totally the way that I’ve worked as a professional musician as well.

Christopher: And on paper my impression is your career kind of went deep into the a capella world with your time with The Swingle Singers before circling back into that world of choral music and — is that right?

Ben: Yeah, very much so. I mean, the year after I left university — so I was doing some cabaret as a sort of young freelancer and earning absolutely no money whatsoever and then a job came up in The Swingle Singers and I thought, “This is something that I should be throwing my hat into the ring for.” I was only 22, but I did get the job. They were really mean to me, actually. Do you know, they gave me five auditions, which was just — they kept bringing me back and saying, ‘Well, can you sing this song? Can you sing that song in a particular style?” and in the end I think — which is sort of quite unlike me because I’m sort of quiet and unconfrontational, but I said to them, actually, “Could you just stop doing this and if you want me to do the job, just give it to me, or if not, just tell me to leave?” but I did get it and I spent five brilliant years in the Swingles.

Interestingly and ironically the one thing which I didn’t really enjoy was touring and being away from home and I have to say probably nine, ten months of the year wewere away from home but it was, again, an amazing kind of training ground for me even though I was doing it professionally, you know, from the likes of arranging for an eight-part a capella group doing some albums, recording techniques, producing, rehearsing, arranging a piece of music and then rehearsing it with the group so you had to be the leader. I really cut my teeth on how one does that in a very effective, proactive way. Having said that, during that time I was in the Swingles I still actually was singing church so I had a job with the Tower of London. They have a brilliant choir there in the chapel within the tower and this was in the days when you could actually drive your car right into the Tower of London and you could park outside the chapel. You can’t do that anymore. So I kept that job open and so if there was a Sunday where I was free I would go and sing some wonderful church music. I mean, church music has been, you know, the love of my life for as long as I can remember, you know, back in the days when — Stanford in C and sitting on my dad’s stool on the organ, you know? So I’ve always shared that love in tandem with everything else that I do, but yeah, it was a really interesting five years of real total discipline and understanding of that particular art.

Christopher: Yeah. It sounds like it could be a real trial-by-fire. You know, we come back again and again on this show to the importance of your ear and your brain’s awareness of music as being critical to everything you do in music and, you know, to go so quickly to being part of one of the top groups in the world of all time in a capella music and not only performing but arranging and composing, that must have really pushed you to your limit in terms of your aural understanding of music.

Ben: Yeah, I think possibly, you know, there’s a degree of just thinking, “Well, that’s what I did. That’s what I’m good at.” It’s typical sometimes as a musician to say, “Actually, you know, I’m quite good at that,” but I think that’s where my metier was, you know, and I was given the opportunity to do that. It was an interesting time actually to join the group because they hadn’t sort of really made their mark, particularly in the U.K. and the American market had dried up and so we were sort of slightly at the lower end and we took it upon ourselves to pay for a flight out to New York and do a showcase in New York for Columbia Artists, who are a massive concert agency and we set our store up, basically, the eight of us. We were all quite young, you know, and we thought, “Right, okay, this is an opportunity for us,” and we did exactly that. We thought, “Right, what are we good at? Let’s show the Americans what we’re good at,” and we put together, I think it was 20 minute, half hour little showcase of our best arrangements. We rehearsed it and rehearsed it. We flew ourselves out to New York, put ourselves up in a cheap hotel went and did the showcase and that really was the making of the group from the time I was in it because Columbia Artists thought we were best thing ever since sliced bread and from that we then toured the States four times a year regularly doing twenty, thirty concerts, I mean, we were there four or five weeks at a time. Absolutely saved our bacon and from that we then increased our repertoire massively of course but we then got a recording contract with Virgin Classics and on it went. So, you know, that was a really good for me but it was interesting being part of that so actually taking it upon ourselves to be proactive as a musician and like you’re saying, you know, just that whole idea of rehearsing and really listening to each other and understanding how our voices were going to work most effectively as an eight-part a capella group. Often, you know, we’d rehearse or record something and we just did it in intuitively because we’d worked together so much. We were just naturals at tuning, you know. I remember we were a bit singing in unison and two of the altos had to sing sort of the same note at one point and one sang a bit sharp and one sang a bit flat and the two of them within a split second — there’s a recording of it. It’s a bit of Debussy that they sang and they sang this note and within about a nanosecond they’d each found the tuning exactly because they were both wrong and they righted themselves within less than a second. It was extraordinary and I thought, “Wow,” you know, “that’s real, kind of, aural discipline,” and that’s something that only comes obviously with really hard work and a lot of regular singing but it’s something that, you know, if you join a choir, I mean, I find this with choirs that I’ve worked with all over the place, you know, if they do that regular thing singing week after week, you’re gonna get better individually but also as a team and that’s one of the joys of singing in a choir, isn’t it?

Christopher: Absolutely and I love that you highlighted that because that, to me, you know, I sang barbershop and a capella to an amateur level but one of the abiding memories is how unique that situation is. You know, you can sing as a soloist. You can sing in a choir as a part of a large number but it’s only really a capella when you’re one of maybe four people and you can all look at each other in the eye and you can be so in the moment, all performing with the same instrument essentially and it requires so much of you to be present and react to one another in a way that I think performing in an instrument ensemble or a large choir just, it doesn’t, it’s not quite the same.

Ben: We did that little exercise at the end of the workshop where I met you the other day where we were tuning. This is something that I’ve really become interested in, this whole idea of what’s called just intonation and so if you play the piano, the piano is tuned with what’s called equal temperament, so the distance between every single note is the same. Now if you play a chord — we’re quite used to hearing it nowadays, when you play it on the piano and we say, “Oh, yeah, that’s a nice chord,” well actually it’s not in tune because it’s false to have the gap between each semitone exactly the same. It means that if you play a certain interval and we’re talking about a third, so you go, (sings) 1,3 on a piano if it’s tuned, and I think I talked about this in the workshop, actually the third is always really sharp (sings) 1,3 and everybody kind of likes sharp thirds because they sound really good. It’s only because our ears have been tuned to what’s holding the temperament.

Actually if you sing in a choir and you tune a chord and actually you make the third lower than it would be on a piano and the fifth (sings) 1,5 nice and bright which on an equal temperament piano is flat the chord sounds like much more in tune. It’s got the natural harmonics within it and that to me is something really interesting and I think what you were talking about just then with singing in an a capella group, particularly when you’ve got one part per voice, spending a lot of time doing that sort of thing can be really, really rewarding. We’re so used to hearing equal temperament. The piano is my least favorite instrument (laughs) you know, it’s — but do you know what I mean?

Christopher: Absolutely.

Ben: When it comes to tuning, I think that’s a really, really important thing and particularly when you’re — you can do it in choirs, as well. We do it with the National Youth Choir all the time in fact in my choir at King’s College, the mixed choir that sings on Mondays, even though we have very limited rehearsal time we often just balance and tune some chords so we’ll sit on a chords. We’ll take the people who are out singing the key note, like, if it’s in C major, people singing C, just make sure that’s in tune. Then we’ll put a nice, bright G in which is the fifth and then we’ll have a nice centered third and you can really tell the difference and I don’t think there are many choirs who spend much time doing that but I would encourage all choral conductors to work much harder at that because I think that’s a whole minefield of wonderful stuff we can research.

Christopher: Yeah. What a beautiful example of how you’ve drawn on your a capella experience to inform how you direct your choirs now because, like you say, we take for granted that the piano is the correct answer, you know, you play the piano chord, that’s what you’re aiming for but of course if you’re just four people in a room and it’s up to you to make the major chord you find the tuning, you trust your ear and you adjust as needed.

Ben: Yeah, and there is one professional choir that shall remain nameless who I guest-conducted and they were, we were rehearsing a piece and the pianist was playing along and, you know, just helping them to find the notes and I asked him to stop playing, actually, and the choir were really offended that I’d — they said, “But we,” you know, “but we’re sightreading this,” and I said, “Well, yeah, you’re a a professional choir. Come on, sight read it and don’t rely on the piano.”

It’s actually one thing that’s really, really interesting, a really interesting exercise and of course, we didn’t — in that workshop where I met you we didn’t use any piano, you know? We just did it all with the voices and I think that’s a really good discipline for some choirs, actually. Just part with the piano. Close the lid, just get on with the singing. Listen and hear what’s going on and use your voices to create the sound rather than relying on not only the tuning of the piano but of course it’s also, it’s the percussive effect. So the rhythm of the chord goes down and you hear it and you go, “Oh, that’s where we need to sing.” Actually if you watch the conductor or you watch each other you should be able to internalize the rhythm as well.

Christopher: Hm.

Ben: And we’re getting deep, we keep getting deep into the semantics of my approach to choral direction now. (Laughs)

Christopher: I hope so. You mentioned sight reading there and that’s something else that I think causes a lot of people angst when it comes to singing and particularly singing in a church choir where you may be handed a thick wad of manuscript paper and be expecated to somehow magic up the notes and you know at Musical U we focus a lot on relative pitch and helping people to understand the relationship between the notes in the scale and you had a really elegant exercise at that workshop which, I say elegant because I think it’s something you could explain in a few moments but someone could go away and practice every day and develop a really valuable skill withn I was wondering if you could just share the singing of scale degree numbers and then starting to take them out and remix them in different combinations.

Ben: Yeah, absolutely, and before I do that I should say that when I was really young my dad tried to teach me the piano. He failed dismally like all parents do trying to teach their children instruments but he started me at an early age, right about five and I did everything by ear so I can still play by ear but I could not sight read when I was five and my dad didn’t realize this. He started the first two weeks and he’d say, “Right then, here’s a little tune written down. Would you like to play that to me?” and I’d go, “Will you play it to me first and then I’ll do it?” and he literally played me the tune or the piece and I would play it back note perfect but I was doing it by ear. I wasn’t reading the music. And he, after after a few weeks he caught on and he said, “No you do it first,” and I said, “Well, I can’t really do it,” and he used to make me — this is really horrible and I love my dad, really, but he used to play piano duets with me where I’d have to keep going and he said, “Come on, keep going, keep going,” and I remember being in tears. So, you know, I could not sight read and I had to learn how to do that because my ear was very keen and I could just pick things up all the time. I’m still not the greatest sight reader on the piano. I can sight read, I can sight sing really well and it’s an easy thing to pick up. I mean, obviously there’s the whole solfa system which is fantastic. It’s not something I’ve ever done so I’ve never used it although I do understand how it works, but what we have done — I’ve picked this up more recently with the national youth choir, is using the number system. So you take your do, if you like, your one, and you use that and you can tune and you can think about the degrees of the scale very easily in whatever key it might be so if one is there, and you can literally do a little pattern, just going 1-2-1-3-2-1- 4-3-2-1, you can carry on going 5-4-3-2-1 but you can actually go, 5-6-7-1-6-7-1-7-1-1-1.

Then if you want to do a little exercise, which I think we did, take out 3 and go 1-2-1, clap on 3, 2-1 then you goto find 4. 4 (clap) 2-1. Perhaps 5 is a click 4-2-1-6 and you’re taking out various notes. You’ve got to find where 4 is but you always relate it to 1 and that’s basically what I do if I’m reading as well. So you’re sight reading and you know where C is if you can understand that. So C is the one that hangs down below the line and it’s got a ledger line through it. If that’s middle C, that’s always going to be your 1 so you can work out 3 or 6 or 4 and 7 and 2. It’s really as simple as that and if you change key it’s suddenly G becomes 1 and A’s gonna be 2 and B’s gonna be 3 and so on. So that little exercise I think is really helpful.

The other thing that we did was just call out four numbers between 1 and 7 so you go 1-5-7-2 and you just got to work out 1-5-7-2 or whatever else and just give yourself this little exercise and you’ll very, very quickly attune to where you are in the degree of the scale.

Christopher: Fantastic. Well for any listener —

Ben: Lesson over.

Christopher: Well, it’s a beautiful lesson. It’s something that I think any listeners can start to experiment with, you know, even if you just start with 1, 2, and 3, whether you’ve ever sung before or not you probably know the sound of 1-2-3-2-1…

Ben: Or 3-1-5-7.

Christopher: …just play around with that for a day.

Ben: 3-5-9’s, exactly.

Christopher: Mm-hm. 3-5-9’s, exactly.

Ben: Or go 1-3-2 or 2-3-1 or 3-1-2. You just, you know, combination locks. That’s all it is. Unlock them.

Christopher: Absolutely, and it’s the kind of instinctive understanding of the scale that I so wish someone had explained to me when I was growing up singing because I was immersed in singing all day, every day trying to sight read from sheet music using intervals and using reference songs and it was such hard, intellectual work trying to figure out what the music should sound like from the sheet.

Ben: I would love to talk to you about intervals because intervals is a really interesting thing because, yes, intervals are useful if you want to read from music but there is a slight misnomer I feel about trying to work out what intervals are so you go, “1-2-3-4-5-1, that must be a fifth,” and try to count it up. Now, it is a way of doing it. I’m not saying it’s wrong. I’m very much of the opinion, and we’ve been talking about, you know, our aural perception but actually intervals and interval recognition is much easier if you can use sonic recall. I once had the most fascinating conversation with someone who was writing a film script about a child who had sonic recall. Now this wasn’t a musician, it was something else. It was a spy film, some kind of crazy stuff but he’d heard that I went on about sonic recall a lot and I had a chat with this guy who was writing this fascinating script and he understood where I was coming from with this because of course all intervals sound the same. Now, the one that you can really hear is the minor second descending sound, so (sings) bah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah dum. If you play those together you can hear the beats because b-r-r-r-r-r-r-bah-bah. If you played a major second you could almost hear them. It goes really fast because obviously there is a wave sign that’s going really fast and you can actually hear it but if you can work out — stay with me, go with me on this — if you can work out what a fifth sounds like, not the two notes separately but actually walk the actual sound of what an interval is then it’s easy. So you could actually do worse than to actually sit at day in front of the piano and play major thirds and go, “Oh, that’s what a major third sounds like,” and sometimes — of course the famous French composer Messineau believed that all music was just colors so you could assign yourself a color.

If you thought that a major third sounded, yellow, you know, yellow then that’s yellow. It’s gonna sound the same wherever you play it or wherever two people sing it. If you thought that a perfect fifth, a note, two notes, five notes apart sounded grey then listen to greys all the time. You know, major sixth, minor sixth and all those sorts of things, I think that’s really helpful and I would maintain that that’s an even better way than counting up intervals. I hope that kind of makes sense. It’s always been something that I’ve really latched onto and that’s how my three children, if you play them intervals, they’ll just go, “Yeah, that’s a major sixth,” because they know the color of it, they know the sound of it. They’re recalling the sound.

Christopher: Hm. We’ve definitely seen that with ourmembers at Musical U going between what we would call the melodic form where it’s one note and then the other note and then the harmonic form where it’s both notes together can definitely help people tune in, you know, if you get the sound of that blend of the two notes into your ear it becomes much easier when you hear them.

Ben: Absolutely.

Christopher: I think for us the limiting factor in intervals just tends to be putting them to use, you know, and naming them in isolation is one thing and you can get very good at that but we’ve found people really then have a gulf when it comes to using them to play by ear or recognize chords. It takes a lot of work to bridge that gap and for usd, with our members, anyway it just seems like the solfa approach or numbering the scale degrees like we’ve been talking about, it gives you a much faster route to understanding the melodies and the chords.

Ben: Absolutely. But I think the sonic recall leads on from that you see, so…

Christopher: Hm.

Ben: ..once you’re learned where a third is, then if you start playing thirds and you go, “Oh, yeah. That sounds the same as that third,” it’s always going to. But no, absolutely, I agree that the numbering system or the solfa is definitely the best approach to that.

Christopher: Hm. So you’re one of those fascinating music educators who has the kind of top-level experience in terms of expertise and, you know, being a world-leading performer but actually works with some of the most beginner-stage musicians. You know, you work with the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain. Obviously, those are very high-level choirs but you’re taking very young singers who don’t have that expertise or experience yet. I’d love to hear how you approach that, you know, what’s your attitude when you’re directing one of these choirs and welcoming new singers in? Do you find it’s a challenge to get them up to scratch? Do you have particular approaches you use to get them into the choral setting rapidly, or…?

Ben: Well that’s really interesting because one of the things we haven’t mentioned, the choral courses that, one of which I run in the summer. These are run by — they’re called the Eton Choral Courses simply because they were founded by Ralph Allward who was the director of music at Eton College. There are five courses each year and the interesting thing about these courses are, in the past these were sensibly designed to offer experience to people who wanted to do choral scholarships and particularly at Cambridge and Oxford. Now we know, of course, the landscape with choral singing has changed completely now in a very, very positive way and so what we’re finding now with the Eton Choral Courses is that, you know, you have a much broader range of abilities and people, young people wanting to go into different areas so, you know, there will be other universities. There will be some who don’t necessarily want to go to university. They might want to go to music conservatoire they might want to go on and do some vocational training or whatever but they share a lot of singing. The fascinating thing about the Eton Choral Courses is that they are on auditions so a group of fifty young singers between the ages of 16 and 18 will turn up, never having sung together before and our challenge is that by the end of the week they’re going to be doing a concert or an even song in somewhere like Eton College Chapel or King’s College Chapel, Cambridge or St. Paul’s Cathedral and some of them do actually a live broadcast even song on BBC Radio 3. It’s got to be that good and so their trajectory, it’s fascinating to watch over the years. This is actually, this year is the 20th year I’ve been directing courses and watching that trajectory from a young group of singers, who’ve, they start there and there are some who’ve actually never sung in a choir. They’ve been signed up by their school because they loved their singing and they may have had some singing lessons but they’ve never sung in a chapel choir, if you like, and getting them to sing Anglican songs to the degree to where they sing it live on Radio 3 is some challenge, I can tell you, but, you know, invariably they go with the flow because their minds are so open to adaptation and development and inquiry. There’s a wonderful sense of cohesion as you go through the week and they do get terribly tired. I remember the first time I did it, the first couple of years, by about day five of a eight-day course they were on their knees and I thought, “Oh, no, they’ve lost interest. Cmon, stay with me,” but I realized that it was just that they were tired and they were loving it but, you know, their level of concentration was waning through fatigue.

Then as we know with all young singers, you know, they pull it out the back at the last minute, as well, so there’s an element of that but just going back to what you were saying about, you know,working with people who are at the very beginnings of their journey with music, that’s a challenge, as well. That’s where the workshopping for me has been so interesting because, you know, there are no barriers there, you know, you’re standing. There’s no piano, there’s no music stand, there’s no music, there’s no sense of a language barrier, you know, we’re doing exercises that don’t require that. We sang some African chants where you don’t learn the syllables, you know, it’s not a language that we speak so there’s no barrier there, either and particularly the round that we did — we did a six-part round and suddenly you’re singing in six-part harmony but actually you’ve only just learned one tune by ear and suddenly you’re creating six-part harmony. I think it’s a really interesting way of just engendering an enthusiasm and a response from young people. I remember doing a workshop years ago in Scotland where we used to live in Edinburgh and I’d chosen this song. It was a Christmas concert and it was with primary children and it was in 5-8 and it kind of went, “Christmas time is party time a deedle a deedle dum. Doodle do…

And I thought, “Oh, no, why have I chosen to do something in 5-8?” you know, “It would be much easier to go 1-2-3-4.” These kids had obviously had no perception of what 5-8’s was. It didn’t matter and they just did it completely naturally. They just understood the rhythm of the words and they just latched on to it straightaway and I remember coming out of that thinking, “Oh my God, that would test some professional adult choirs,” but for the young kids, you know, for the young kids, they are amazingly adaptable and malleable in their approach to their music-making so we needn’t be frightened of that.

Christopher: Fascinating. Why is there not a contradiction there, you know? You have studied classical choral music in the very rigid, formal traditional sense where there is a way of doing things step by step. People are taught very carefully and perform in a very polished way and at the same time you’re talking about, you know, any group of 50 people coming into a room and performing six-part harmony. You’re talking about a group of young singers coming together for a week and performing on Radio 3 but how is there no contradiction there? How have you managed to reconcile those two, the very careful, structured traditional approach to singing and teaching singing and this much more inclusive, encouraging and effective way of getting a group of people singing together?

Ben: Simple answer? I don’t know. I don’t know. I’ve always latched onto that notion and I mentioned earlier of one informing the other. This whole thing of, you know, the discipline of singing in a professional choir or conducting a professional choir informing the way I might work with a bunch of young primary children and I’ve talked about this before, actually, where, you know, sometimes it surprises me. I could be doing [Unintelligible [00:39:16] with my London Voices Choir, which is a group of professional singers who is mainly a recording choir so we do a lot of film sound tracks, and you will have heard London Voices, you know. Anybody who is interested in film will invariably have heard London Voices doing singing on film, so, you know, I mean, the likes of Harry Potter and the Hobbit and even the latest Bond film, you know, we were singing on that. There you have the sheer discipline of being in a recording studio in London, the light going on. There is no rehearsal, they’re sight reading and it’s got to be perfect the first time to the opposite end where, like we say, you know, you’ve got a group of primary kids who just want to come in because their teachers told them and you’ve got to infuse them for forty minutes and they come out absolutely buzzing. Both groups come out buzzing. That’s great and sometimes I’m really interested by that notion of sometimes you’ll get a better sense of application from the young singers than you would from the professional singers because they do it as a job, some of them, and then sometimes, you know, you’ll get the more enthusiastic approach from the professional singers rather than the kids. It’s kind of topsy-turvy and that’s what fascinates me with the work that I do because there are always those challenges. It’s never, it’s never the same one day to the next and I guess like you say it is a bit of a contradiction, because, you know, how can you stack up singing an African chant with a bunch of schoolchildren just singing choral even song at King’s College Cambridge? Well, they do because singing in a way it’s just a natural thing. It’s part of us, always has been for thousands and thousands of years and in that sense, you know, I think that’s a really wonderful thing that it’s actually, you know, one sharing the other, I think.

For me personally I don’t know why I haven’t really reconciled within myself why I do the both and the two inform the other, but, hey, I’m lucky, I guess. As long as I do, I think the thing is with being a musician, one of the most important things is, you know, a lot of people say as an actor, you know, “Oh, well it’s down to luck and who you know.” Well, yeah, okay, it might not be but there’s also having a natural talent. There is also being in the right place at the right time. There’s also doing a very good job and making people feel good about themselves. So when you turn up — I remember asking a Hollywood composer this once for one of the soundtracks that we were doing. I said, you know, “How do you end up writing for Harry Potter when it used to be John Williams?” and he said, “Well, it’s because I do a really good job,” and people can rely on that composer to deliver the goods and I think as musicians, you know, whether we’re amateur or professional, that’s the thing, you know, you’ve got to engender a sense of enjoyment and inclusivity and understanding and empathy, particularly if you’re singing in a choir. Soloists is a different thing, but if you’re playing in a choir or playing in an orchestra, have an understanding with your fellow musicians and just find that sense of enjoyment as well because enjoyment has to be part of it.

Christopher: Fantastic. Well I had a final question which was how can listeners know that they’re good enough to go and join a choir but I feel like it’s somewhat redundant to ask it given our conversation.

Ben: I think anybody’s good enough and I mean, of course the thing is that singing is, it’s always been a cool thing to sing but it’s becoming increasingly cool with the likes of, you know, the T.V. series and the things that happen on the radio and the a capella competitions and choirs, office choirs, you know, what a brilliant thing that is as well. So there are opportunities there for anybody at whatever level. I mean, just a really sobering thought was a conference I went to the other day where I heard about The Choir with No Name, which is the choir for homeless people and, you know, we had a presentation from the woman who runs the organization and she was saying, you know, that in any one night there are 3,000 homeless people on the streets of London. That’s just in London, I mean, and then you’ve got Birmingham and Liverpool and all these other places. You know, there may be, they don’t know, but there may be, you know, up to 2 million people homeless but they’ve got this thing called The Choir with No Name. I would urge your listeners to go and look them up online and it was so sobering and empowering and thought-provoking that, you know, here are people who are at the rock bottom with life in general, you know, whether through money problems, family problems, mental problems, but The Choir with No Name, they don’t purport to be able to put people back off the streets and get them into work and all this sorts of things, it’s just an empowering thing that people come to sing together and that’s all it’s about. Some people actually they say they have the success of them actually turning up to the rehearsal whether or not they sing, you know, that is a challenge in themselves. When they do sing, and they showed this video of these people and they were saying, you know, “This is the highlight of my week,” you know, “This is the thing which makes me feel happiest,” and they sing together, they’re given a hot meal and they talk to each other and there’s that sharing of just this love of singing and that to me — we kind of all sat back on our chairs and went, “Wow,” you know, “there but by the grace of God go I,” you know? Extraordinary. So I just mentioned that because at any level you can find the opportunity to make music together and we all know how good music is for us and the making of it and how it stimulates our brains, so, yeah, there’s opportunity for everyone there and particularly with singing, because the instrument’s within you.

Christopher: Fantastic. Thank you so much for joining us on the show today.

Ben: Not at all.

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The post The Instrument Inside You, with Ben Parry appeared first on Musical U.

3 Singing Exercises to Improve Your Vocal Pitching

New musicality video:

There are probably few things more painful to listen to than a singer who is out of tune. Today we’ll look at 3 simple exercises you can use to refine your vocal pitch control and practice singing in tune. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/3-singing-exercises-to-improve-your-vocal-pitching/

When people start out singing, a common problem is not knowing how to use their muscles to produce different notes. A good way to overcome this is to free up your voice rather than restricting it to certain notes (like with a piano where you press a key and the note just sounds).

Getting more precise

As you get comfortable moving through different parts of your range, you will probably find you open up your voice to singing more notes than before, expanding your range. Then it’s time to start focusing back within certain boundaries.

Singing scales

Finally, it’s time to get even more precise, using semitones and tones. The exercise is similar to before: we will sing through an octave in your range, but this time progress by steps, either semitones or tones. That means singing 13 semitones or 7 tones.

Your singing practice may move on to more advanced exercises, but remember to practice these fundamentals too. Singing a complex piece is no use if it sounds out of tune to the listener! It’s a great example of the musical principle that the details can be just as important as the overall sound!

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/3-singing-exercises-to-improve-your-vocal-pitching/

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3 Singing Exercises to Improve Your Vocal Pitching

Musicality Means… Sight Reading

The lights in the hall blind you. The slightly inebriated audience is excited. It’s your first time playing with the band, but you are just filing in for a player who got sick at the last minute. It’s ten minutes till showtime and you still haven’t seen the book for tonight. Minutes tick by and the drummer shoves a mass of sheet music your way.

You race to your spot on the stage to raucous applause. Quickly you glance through the first page, just in time to catch beat one from the lead instrumentalist. You’ve never seen the music before this moment, haven’t even played with this group before, but you’re a pro and play your heart out. And why?

Because you have mastered the skill of sight reading.

“Sight reading is as much an attitude as it is a skill.” – Saxophonist David Hughes

What is Sight Reading?

In the simplest terms, sight reading involves playing through a piece of music that you have never seen before. You have never practiced the piece, or prepared the work for performance. The piece might be easy or difficult, it might be in your range or a little beyond your skills, and can be in any style.

Watch pianist Tom Brier sight read the Super Mario World Ending:

Musicians run into sight reading in a number of situations, from filling in for a missing player in a live performance, to recording studio scenarios, to music exams. Music colleges require their students to sight read regularly, and every serious player who wants to build high levels of musicality practices sight reading on a daily basis.

Learning how to sight read well is a key to good musicianship. Start with learning the basics like reading music, music theory, rhythm, and scales. Then you can start working on sight reading as a part of your daily practice routine. If you already know how to read music or play a rhythm in time, then you are already halfway there!

To sight read, musicians must:

  • Read music with high proficiency
  • Play their instrument or sing well
  • Be familiar with common musical rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic patterns
  • Have confidence in live performance
  • Listen to other members of the ensemble

But it is difficult to practice sight reading? Not really. Try out this simple example below.

Exercise 1: Easy Sight Singing

Follow the steps below when you are sight reading.

  1. Look at the score below
  2. If you need to, play the first note on a piano or guitar to find your first pitch
  3. Record with your smartphone or other device
  4. Sing through the simple exercise on the neutral syllable “la
  5. Listen to the Score Audio to check for accuracy or play the melody on an instrument

Sight singing exercise

What Are the Benefits of Sight Reading?

But what if you play by ear? What’s the point of learning how to sight read?

Well, while there are some incredible musicians worldwide that don’t read sheet music, the truth is that learning how to read music and sight read has many incredible benefits for musicians, both musically and professionally – and now is a great time to start exploring good musicianship in sight reading.

Here are just a few of the benefits of sight reading:

1. Explore New Music That You Have Never Read Before

One of the biggest benefits to learning how to sight read is that it allows you to explore new music from anywhere. As long as it is written down, you can play it through, and learn new music.

This is great for any musician, whether you sing in a choir, play in a band, or perform with a symphony orchestra. With the internet at your fingertips, you can find sheet music in any musical genre from any part of the world, download the music, and sight read through scores.

2. Improve Your Hand-Eye Coordination

Because you have to concentrate on reading the music in front of you, instrumentalists can improve their hand-eye coordination when they sight read.

3. Spend Less Time Practicing

When your musicianship skills include good sight reading, you will find that you spend less time in the practice room and in rehearsals. Why?

Because you are accustomed to reading new unfamiliar material on a daily basis, reading through your regular music with your band, choir, or even on your own will seem easier in comparison. This can result in shorter rehearsal times, which in some cases, might save time and money.

4. Broaden Your Range of Styles

When you practice good musicianship through sight reading daily, you will broaden the range and difficulty levels of what you play. Many times musicians have a few styles that they love, or a few riffs that are their go-to solos in a jam.

If you practice sight reading, you get exposed to musical ideas and techniques that you might not be if you stuck to your favorite music. If you are a jazz player or rock musician, then pick up some pop or classical music. Are you a classical violinist? Tune your ears into some ragtime, classical Indian music, or bluegrass for a change of pace and play on through. You won’t play perfectly the first time, but you still will develop your musicality just by sight reading.

5. You will Be More Marketable and Have More Musical Opportunities

Because you can sight read, other musicians will know that you are someone that can be called in a pinch. This is great for recording studio situations, when you are playing or singing with a group for the first time, or just when you are trying to explore an unfamiliar musical opportunity.

Finding Music to Sight Read

So you now that you’ve decided to begin honing this skill, where do you find material to learn with?

With the internet at your disposal, there are some fantastic sheet music resources for every instrument and genre. All you have to do is start browsing…

Exercise 2: Explore the Petrucci Library

One of the greatest free sheet music resources today is the Petrucci Library, an online library of public domain sheet music covering thousands of composers, every region from around the world, and for almost any instrument, choir, or ensemble. Explore the Petrucci Library for this exercise.

  1. Go to the Petrucci Library
  2. Search for your instrument or voice type
  3. Out of all of the results, select a composition at random
  4. Download the score (or play from your device)
  5. Play or sing through the composition once, from beginning to end, if possible
  6. Make a note of difficult sections
  7. Play through one more time
  8. Find two or three other random pieces
  9. Use the Petrucci Library and other resources to practice your sight reading every day

You can find examples of free music at the Petrucci Library like this simple piano excerpt from Turtle Songs Suite by S. Peña Young for beginner piano.

Floating by Sabrina Pena Young

Besides the Petrucci Library, there are many other places that you can find free or affordable sheet music:

  • Scribd – Search the popular website for free and affordable sheet music
  • Archive.org – This online database endeavors to archive everything on the Internet, including thousands of free scores
  • Noteflight Public Scores – The popular music scoring software has a long list of arrangements and sheet music by Noteflight users

How to Practice Sight-reading

If you have never practiced sight reading before, you might need some direction the for the first time you sight read. Follow these steps, using them as a warm-up or exercise on a daily or weekly basis:

  1. Find new music for your voice or instrument that you have never played through before
  2. Set the metronome to a slower setting than required (anywhere from 50-80% of the actual MM marking)
  3. Play through the piece once, aiming for the highest accuracy possible
  4. Record your playing
  5. Listen to the recording
  6. Listen for any problem areas or techniques that stumped you
  7. Play through the piece all the way through a second time, trying to fix problem areas and attempt to be more musical in your playing

Professional Tip: If you keep making the same types of mistakes when you sight read, take the time to practice just that section. It might be a scale that you need to practice until it is second nature, maybe a chord progression that is a little difficult, or a note that is just beyond your range. Isolate and practice these sections until you are comfortable playing through them. That is how you build your musicianship.

Exercise 3: Simple Vocal Sight-Reading

Take the time to practice some simple sight singing in this exercise, even if you are an instrumentalist – developing sight singing skills enormously helps build your musicality! For the purposes of this article, we will just use the neutral syllable “la” as a starting point.

  1. Look at the score below
  2. If you need to, play the first note on a piano or guitar to find your first pitch
  3. Record with your smartphone or other device
  4. Sing through the simple exercise on the neutral syllable “la
  5. Sing from beginning to end
  6. Listen to the Score Audio to check for accuracy or play the melody on an instrument

Voice sight read exercise

As you listen to your recording and compare it to the score audio, ask yourself:

  • Did I sing the correct pitches?
  • How did I do with rhythm?
  • Did I follow dynamics?
  • What did I do right?
  • What do I need to work on?

For more advanced sight reading, use solfa. Find more resources on solfa and sight reading with these helpful articles:

Exercise 4: Simple Keyboard Exercise

In this example, you can play on a keyboard. While both hands are provided, if you need to just practice with one hand, then play only the melody in the treble clef. Then try to play the left hand by itself. Once you are comfortable, try to read it through once with both hands. If you play a different instrument, try to play the melodic line on your instrument.

  1. Look at the score below
  2. Record with your smartphone or other device
  3. Play the exercise from beginning to end
  4. Listen to the Score Audio to check for accuracy or play the melody on an instrument

Piano sight read exercise

How did you do on this piano exercise? Were you able to play with both hands together, or did you have to play the piece hands separately? What are some skills that you need to work on to learn how to read through a piece like this?

Play On Sight

How did you do on your musical exercises? If sight reading is difficult for you, there is a supportive community at Musical U that can help you develop your musicality. The Musical U community has a unique blend of everyday musicians from students to professionals and everyone in between. Additionally, Sight Reading Mastery offers a targeted and personalized way to hone this particular skill, with sheet music, a performance tracker, and expert help included.

Some of the resources below might be helpful as you develop your musicianship through sight reading. Find even more great online sight-singing resources at Musical U, including helpful articles to help develop your musicality like:

Had a tough time sight reading? Keep up the hard work. Start slow, maybe with easier pieces once or twice a week. Eventually, you will find that playing through music will become easier, and who knows, you might eventually fall in love with sight reading!

You don’t have to tackle learning the skill of sight reading alone! A membership at Musical U provides you with a supportive network of fellow musicians learning the same skill as you, as well as expert help for when you get stuck.

The post Musicality Means… Sight Reading appeared first on Musical U.

The Truth About Talent, with Professor Anders Ericsson

New musicality video:

This episode was a really exciting one for us because we got to speak with Professor Anders Ericsson, the leading academic researcher on the topic of “talent”. http://musicalitypodcast.com/62

If you’ve been listening to the Musicality Podcast for a while, then you know we have a particular perspective on “talent”, and we’re often asking our guests their opinion on how important talent is to become a great musician and learn the skills we associate with being a “natural” in music, like playing by ear, improvisation, song writing and more.

So for a long time we’ve been wanting to speak with the man who’s done more serious research on this topic than probably anyone else.

Professor Ericsson has been researching talent for over 30 years and has become famous for two things: the so-called “10,000 hour rule” for becoming an expert, and the idea of “deliberate practice”. We actually did a whole episode of this show on the 10,000 hour rule, and deliberate practice is an idea that runs through all of our teaching at Musical U. So you can imagine what a treat it was to get to talk to the man himself!

He recently published a book titled Peak sharing the biggest findings from that research, co-authored with Robert Poole, and if you enjoy this episode then you must check it out, it is packed full of more information, explanation and examples of everything we talk about today.

We were determined to make the most of this conversation and we asked Professor Ericsson the big questions we knew that you would be interested to hear the answers to…

Questions like:

– Is there such a thing as musical “talent”?

– If you don’t have talent for music, will that affect what you’re able to accomplish?

– Do you need perfect pitch to become an expert musician?

– What’s the most effective way to spend your practice time – especially considering the vast abundance of tutorials and other resources available at our fingertips online these days?

His answers were just as fascinating as we’d hoped. We were looking forward to this interview for ages and it did not disappoint.

We should mention there’s a brief section towards the end where we have some noisiness on the audio. We apologise for that, we had real technical issues on this one but Professor Ericsson was really gracious and patient and in the end it turned out really well apart from that one glitchy section.

We hope you’ll enjoy this episode and feel encouraged and inspired by the proven truth about musical “talent” and what it really takes to develop your musical skills.

Listen to the episode: http://musicalitypodcast.com/62

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

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Learn more about Musical U!

Website:
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Podcast:
http://musicalitypodcast.com

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http://tonedeaftest.com/

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The Truth About Talent, with Professor Anders Ericsson

In Good Time, The Talent Myth, No Pain – All Gain, and Deliberate Practice

This week, we’re exploring how to measure – in all musical senses of the word.

Learn how to measure rhythm with our guide to time signatures, uncover the truth behind the “talent” myth to get a better idea of how to measure musical mastery, learn how to avoid pain by measuring the risk behind the technique you’re using, and explore the idea of measurable results with the concept of “deliberate practice”.

Let’s start with this week’s offering of music theory…

In Good Time

The rhythm of a piece all starts with two little numbers, written in right at the beginning of the piece of sheet music you’re about to play. This is the time signature, your guide to the structure and the beat of the music.

Key change in musicWhether the concept of time signature is new to you, or you’re having trouble telling your 4/4 from your 2/2, or you just want a refresher, you’ll find an excellent primer in Introduction to Time Signatures.

This easy-to-understand guide will teach you what those two numbers mean and what they tell you about a piece of music, and provide you with real-life examples of music written in the most popular time signatures. By the end, you’ll be able to use counting to determine time signatures, and differentiate between simple, compound, and complex time.

Time signatures aren’t as difficult as one may think. With a little bit of study and practice you’ll have the basics down and will be well on your way to rhythmic mastery. Making Music presents a quick guide to time signatures that perfectly complements ours.

Compound meters allow you to create some really interesting rhythmic variety in your music. Plus they are really fun to play! But why do they involve a change in time signature when the number of beats remain the same? Music Training Club shows you how to understand compound time signatures.

There’s the good, the bad, and… the odd. You shouldn’t feel restricted to only simple or compound meters – not when there are so many possibilities! Jeff Schneider takes us through his process of making beats in odd time signatures.

Busting the Myth of Talent

In spite of the mountain of evidence against the idea that “natural talent” is instrumental (pun intended) to becoming a great musician, the myth unfortunately persists.

Key change in musicTo settle the matter once and for all, we spoke with the man who has dedicated over 30 years to the study of talent, and how much of a role it plays in success.

Tune your ears into The Truth About Talent, with Professor Anders Ericsson, where you’ll hear a fascinating, in-depth take on the importance of natural talent vs training – straight from the ultimate authority.

The debate over musical talent will certainly continue. But looking back at some of the most seminal musicians of all time, it is easy to see how they were groomed and began practicing their musicality at a very young age. Benedict Westenra explores this fascinating topic, using famous musicians such as Mozart and Aretha Franklin as examples.

The world of professional singing perpetuates many myths that can be harmful to a vocalist’s journey. Molly from Molly’s Music discusses the myth that singing is a natural talent, and argues why it can be acquired through practice.

Having the right music teacher can make a massive difference in your musical progress. Though there are more options than ever for finding a good teacher these days, it can be difficult to know where to start. Piano Power explains how to find a good fit – whether online, at a studio, or at the local music school.

No Pain – All Gain

What is the difference between good technique and bad technique? How do soreness and pain compare, and why is one a marker of progress while the other is a red flag? How can we play in a way that maximizes our comfort, while still maintaining “good technique”?

Key change in musicI Will Teach You To Play Guitar’s Max Chiossi answers all these questions and more in How To Avoid Guitar Injuries, using science, philosophy, and examples of famous musicians to refute the statement “no pain, no gain” and show you how to tweak your guitar technique for maximum efficiency and enjoyment.

Holding the guitar incorrectly can not only make your playing sloppy, but even lead to injury. Even if you follow all of Max’s suggestions, there is always the threat of repetitive strain injury. Last Minute Musicians provides some tips for preventing this.

Doctors can be specialists in hearts, sports, medicine, and… musicians? The Artists’ Health network is devoted to helping musicians’ recover from injuries and get back to their art. The CBC caught up with them in this interview.

We spent a lot of time exploring how to properly hold a guitar in this article, but what about that other essential accessory for most guitar players? We’re talking about your picking hand! Here are 5 tips on using a guitar pick correctly from V Picks.

Deliberate Practice

We’re sure you’ve heard the phrase, “It’s not the time you spend practicing – it’s how you use it”.

This is far from a platitude – it is actually the most important piece of advice you will ever get regarding your practice time.

Key change in musicOur podcast episode About Deliberate Practice in Music takes a deeper look at using your time wisely, outlining the difference between practicing and playing, how to allocate your time during practice, and the secret ingredient that will take your practice from purposeful to deliberate.

Perhaps nothing is more harmful to your musical progress than believing that certain practice methods or techniques are reserved for the “professionals”. You should use everything you can to improve in your art! Harp Mastery discusses deliberate practice and why it is for everyone.

While practicing music can be hard work, there is so much more that you can bring with you into the practice room to enhance the experience. Remember to think about the emotions behind a piece of music, and to share these feelings with your listener. Meludia explains more about learning music through sensations and emotion.

Deliberate practice can help you to learn faster! As Modacity explains, “deliberate practice is like the scientific method for music.” Get started by practicing smarter with Modacity.

Review and Refine

Whether you’re learning a new theory concept, tweaking your instrument technique, reorienting your musical mentality, or altering your practice routine to get the most out of your time, the trick to progressing in your musical journey is to constantly and honestly measure your progress and your approach.

We talked about deliberation – now apply that concept to every facet of your musicality, and map out a deliberate musical journey for yourself!

How do you keep track of your musical progress? We at Musical U encourage you to keep a journal of your achievements, setbacks, and goals. You’ll be amazed at what a difference this makes.

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