Musical Entrepreneurship, Dynamic Music, A Musical Toolbox, Keep An Ear Out, and Scales to Chords

Regardless of whether you play the guitar, piano, violin, or hurdy-gurdy, there are some skills that are helpful to all musicians, and can be translated from instrument to instrument.

This week was about developing four of those core skills: including dynamics in your playing, learning the basics of playing, working on active listening, and making the connection between scales and chords. If you’re looking to deepen your understanding of how music works and play naturally and expressively, this is a fantastic place to start!

But before we dive into all that…

Are you interested in what goes into running a company like Musical U? This week, Musical U founder Christopher Sutton gives two interviews about why he started Musical U, the highs and lows of the entrepreneurial journey, and the tools he uses to keep the company running.

Musical Entrepreneurship

musicality and entrepreneurshipThis week, Musical U founder Christopher Sutton heads over to The Music Entrepreneur HQ and Midnight Music for guest podcast episodes on musicality and entrepreneurship.

On Music Entrepreneur HQ, he discusses his own music journey, why he started Musical U, the tools he uses to run his business, the entrepreneurial decision-making process, and the ups and downs of running your own company (and advice on getting through the lows!).

Head over to The Music Entrepreneur HQ to listen to How to Become a More Confident Musician & Living the Entrepreneurial Life – with Christopher Sutton of Musical U!

improving musicality with musical uMeanwhile, over at the Music Tech Teacher Podcast, Christopher is interviewed by Katie Wardrobe, music technology education trainer, speaker, and consultant from Midnight Music. On Improving Musicality with Christopher Sutton, he discusses musicality, ear training as a means to an end, and how to tie your training to what matters to you, whether that is improvising, playing by ear, or learning the Für Elise.

Christopher and Katie also talk about how technology can help in your ear training progress, with the availability of ear training apps and games that help contextualize and liven up the learning process.

Last but not least, Christopher shares some lessons and anecdotes from his entrepreneurial journey – from his transition from a day job to running his own company, to his early aspirations of starting a porridge blog!

Dynamic Music

Out of the countless ways you can add interest, variation, and expressiveness to your playing, dynamics are one of the most powerful and immediate – you can build and release tension, change the mood of a piece, and effectively tell a story with your music.

Dynamics in musicIn this month’s Instrument Packs, our guitar, bass, and piano pros show you how to train your ear to better recognize dynamics and apply them in your playing, provide practice tracks to give you a place to start, and teach you instrument-specific techniques for controlling dynamics.

Head over to The Power of Dynamics: Resource Pack Preview to read more about how Dylan Welsh, Sara Campbell, and Steve Lawson can help you express yourself musically through dynamics, and to learn more about Musical U’s offerings for instrument-specific training!

As we are all too aware, most musical notation relies upon Italian musical terms to convey how loud or fast a song is to be played. Skype Guitar Lessons Online has a quick cheat sheet of the dynamics you can expect to see in your musical reading.

Dynamics play such an important role in music, and not just from the individual musician’s perspective. An entire band’s dynamic presence and contrast can greatly enhance the listener’s experience. Production Advice recently discussed this topic in relation to the new Foo Fighters album, and how lowering the volume created a more powerful recording.

The Musical U Resident Pros talked about how dynamics are not just about a volume knob, but in how the instrument itself is played. In no instrument is this more true of than the drums. Online Drummer shows how dynamic contrast can be achieved by playing the drum set in a particular way, and how doing so greatly enhances the drum parts.

A Musical Toolbox

Countless mental roadblocks may stop people from picking up music: they think they are “unmusical”, too old to learn a new instrument, or that they’ll never understand music theory.

Musical toolbox

The truth is, anyone who enjoys music can successfully teach themselves to play an instrument, improvise, and write music. Sometimes, all it takes is a little help.

Scott Sharp understands these mental roadblocks from first-hand experience, and has created a wonderful resource called Fretboard Toolbox to help musicians understand notes, chords, scales, and the ways in which the three go together. This, as he explains in A Toolbox of Musical Understanding, with Scott Sharp, is the foundation for playing by ear, improvising, and writing memorable melodies and chord progressions. Best of all, the Fretboard Toolbox functions as a musical shortcut, and will have you playing in no time, without needing to understand complicated music theory.

Starting with the basics when learning to play music will help build a solid foundation for later skills (and build your confidence!). Scales are an excellent place to start to get your fingers moving and acquainted with your instrument. Many of us begin with the major keys when first learning scales. Fretboard Toolbox has developed major scale worksheets to give you a leg up!

Scott talked about how he accidentally learned music theory from one of his students. While theory may be intimidating to learn, it is largely based upon practical application of musical techniques from generations of musicians. Check out Online Piano Coach’s set of resources to get a solid start on your theory journey.

After understanding how chord progressions work within their corresponding scales, you are well on your way to creating your own masterpieces. Many musicians have developed their own systems to understand what chords work well together. This is a great way to help develop your own sound and basis of music theory. Born Hero talks about how he has created chord maps that speed up his music creation process and help ensure his creations always sound great.

Scott talked about how useful jam tracks were to his growth as a musician. In our digital era, jam tracks are very easy to find, and can be a great tool for your musical growth. To get some blues music under your fingers with a jam track from Next Level Guitar.

Keep An Ear Out

When was the last time you really listened to a piece of music?

Active listeningNot as background noise while you were commuting to work, cleaning the house, or doing your taxes. But putting your headphones on, tuning the world out, and listening to a song completely undisturbed.

This sort of deliberate listening is called active listening, and it greatly pays off for anyone wanting to deepen their understanding and appreciation of music.

In Getting Your Ear In Gear, pianist and music educator Ruth Power shares the secret of listening in layers, and the power of repetition in active listening. Showing you what to keep your ear out for with each consecutive listen, she provides thought-provoking questions that you can ask yourself as you listen.

A recent article indicated that streaming services have resulted in more music being listened to than ever before. But most of the times we are listening to music for recreation, in a very passive way. Learning to actively listen to music can be difficult for many, but there are specific qualities that you can pay attention to that will enhance your understanding of a piece of music. For more tips, check out Adam Estes Windslistening points!

Ruth discussed that is important to practice mindfulness when consuming music, and deliberately working to be “present in the moment”. This can not only be applied to listening to music, but also playing music, as JB Music and Mindfulness discuss.

With all this talk about learning to hone your musical ear, have you ever thought of deconstructing your own musical consumption? This will help you gauge just how much active music listening you do per day, and figure out how you can increase your intake of learning through listening. Looking for a way to begin? Follow the example of Dan from the Composer’s Toolbox, as he examines and analyzes his own music listening habits!

Scales to Chords

Scales are often the first thing we learn on our instrument – a sequence of notes that sound good played together and that can be used as a basis for improvisation.

Making the connection between scales and chordsOut of these scales, we can put together combinations of notes that also sound good when played together and can be put to good use in improvisation: chords!

The connection between scales and chords is tighter than you think, and every scale has certain chords that can be built on each scale degree. Understanding this relationship will help you create chords on the fly, write memorable songs, and combine chords and scales in your improvisation.

In the Musicality Podcast episode About Finding Chords in Scales, we share one simple trick you can use to build a chord on any note in a scale, to get you started!

As discussed in this podcast, chords have specific qualities depending on the scale that they are based on. For most musicians, the major scale is the first that you must master to be proficient in scales. Oliver at oolimo.com has created an interactive tool that will spell out the chords that can be found in the major scale.

The next step to chord and scale mastery is to be able to use your chord progressions as a foundation for creating a solo. This was touched upon in our podcast on chord tones, but is expanded to include the full pentatonic scale in this fantastic lesson from Eric Haugen.

When learning to play chords within scales, you may find yourself referring more to what scale degree the chord is based upon instead of a chord name. This is often called the numbering system, and is discussed in detail by Instant Piano Lessons.

Basics to Masterpieces

Including a range of volumes in your playing, getting a solid grasp of musical building blocks such as scales and chords, and learning to actively listen to music (including your own!) are basic things that can make the difference between uninspired, by-the-book playing, and a relaxed, natural, confident, and moving performance.

Take the time to learn the basics, and watch it work wonders for your improvisation, playing by ear, and songwriting!

The post Musical Entrepreneurship, Dynamic Music, A Musical Toolbox, Keep An Ear Out, and Scales to Chords appeared first on Musical U.

Mindfulness for Musicians

New musicality video:

Mindfulness can transform your effectiveness and enjoyment as a musician because it’s so often our automatic thoughts which slow us down, hold us back and trip us up. http://musicalitypodcast.com/25

Mindfulness isn’t just for buddhist monks; for musicians, mindset is just as important as your chops. Stewing on your mistakes and thinking pessimistically about your progress aren’t just bad for your brain – they can have a real hindrance on your actual progress.

In this episode, we discuss how mindfulness can help you ignore that negative little voice and focus on your playing.

http://musicalitypodcast.com/25

Links and Resources

Interview with Lisa McCormick: http://musicalitypodcast.com/24

Meditation for Beginners, by Jack Kornfield: https://jackkornfield.com/meditation-beginners/

The Power of Now, by Eckhart Tolle: https://www.eckharttolle.com/books/now/

The Untethered Soul, by Michael A. Singer: http://untetheredsoul.com/untethered-soul

Calm.com – to aid your meditation and relaxation: https://www.calm.com/

The Headspace app, with guided meditations to get you started: https://www.headspace.com/

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/

Podcast:
https://www.musical-u.com/podcast-insiders/

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

Musicality Checklist:
https://www.musical-u.com/mcl-musicality-checklist

Facebook:
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Twitter:

YouTube:
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Subscribe for more videos from Musical U!

Mindfulness for Musicians

Introduction to Blues Music

New musicality video:

There’s no other musical genre quite like the blues. Steeped in lyrical emotion and sultry melodies, it’s easy to understand why blues music has had such a deep and lasting impact on the music of the United States, the UK, and beyond. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/blues-music/

Its name notwithstanding, blues music can invoke a range of emotions: joy, anguish, triumph, or plain old sadness. As Nina Simone demonstrated, the blues can feel really, really good.

Blues music instrumentation is as varied as its lyrical content, its influence is more widespread than you would believe, and best of all, the genre lives on in contemporary music styles that top the charts today!

So, let’s dive in. By the end of this article, you’ll know what blues music is, how and when blues music developed, why the blues are still important in modern music, and how to play and write blues tunes of your own.

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/blues-music/

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

===============================================

Learn more about Musical U!

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

Podcast:
https://www.musical-u.com/podcast-insiders/

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

Musicality Checklist:
https://www.musical-u.com/mcl-musicality-checklist

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/MusicalU

Twitter:

YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/c/MusicalU

Subscribe for more videos from Musical U!

Introduction to Blues Music

About Finding Chords in Scales

Though you may think of scales and chords as two separate entities, they are very closely intertwined! In fact, chords are very easy to construct if you already have a scale in mind. In this episode of The Musicality Podcast, we discuss how to go from scales to chords with one simple trick, and the practical applications of this skill in playing by ear, songwriting, and improvisation.

Listen to the episode:

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Links and Resources

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Rate and Review!

Transcript

Have you ever stopped to ask yourself where chords come from?

In our recent interview with Scott Sharp of Fretboard-Toolbox.com he explained that understanding how chords are constructed and in particular their relationship to the scale of the key was what let him finally break into improvising and playing by ear – and has been the basis of his popular “Fretboard Toolbox” books for guitar, piano and other instruments.

So today I wanted to talk about the connection between chords and scales. How you can start from a scale and “find” the various chords hidden in there. And, most importantly, why you might want to do this – aside from just intellectual curiosity about music theory!

How to find chords in scales

A big part of what makes Scott’s Fretboard Toolbox books useful is that they have one page for each key showing the scale and all the chords that are commonly used in that key. As you probably know, a key is just the set of notes that are used in a song or piece of music, with one of them being chosen as the “tonic”, the most important note.

If you arrange all the notes of the key in pitch order you get the scale. For example, here’s the scale for the key of C Major:

[ AUDIO EXAMPLE: C Major Scale ]

And, as Scott pointed out, there are also certain chords that belong to the key. When we talked with Sara Campbell about her “Four Chord Songs” camp, that’s referring to using the four most common chords in a key.

But how do you know what chords those are for a given key?

The answer is that they can be found in the scale.

Supposing we didn’t know how chords are built and we wanted to build some chords from the scale. We might begin by deciding to build one chord starting from each of the seven notes of the scale.

We know that “chord” means multiple notes played together and two-note chords sound a bit boring so we’ll aim for three-note chords. Our first try might be to just pick adjacent notes. For example if we’re starting from the first note, C, in the C Major scale we might try making a chord from C, D and E.

Now anyone who’s seen a young child go up to a piano and shove the palm of their hand down to play a bunch of notes together knows that the resulting sound is not so great! Here’s that C, D, and E for example:

[ AUDIO EXAMPLE: C D E chord ]

So using adjacent notes from the scale, what are called intervals of a second sounds too close and awkward.

The next most obvious thing is to just skip a note – so we could play every other note from the scale. That’s called an interval of a third. In our example that would be C, E, and G:

[ AUDIO EXAMPLE: C Major Triad Arp then Harm ]

Ah, much better!

This is still a really simple idea, and in fact in my interview with Jermaine Griggs he mentioned this was something he picked up as a child just by noticing that was what his Grandmother’s fingers were doing when she played chords: skipping every other note.

So that’s how we build chords from the scale: we choose a root note from the scale and then add every other note above it, and our basic chords use three notes in total. Do this for each of the seven notes of the scale and you get what are called your diatonic triads, which just means the three-note chords which belong to the scale. Three of them are major chords, three are minor, and one is a diminished chord. Let’s listen to those for C major:

[ AUDIO EXAMPLE : Triads in C Major ]

If you want to build the next most complicated type of chord, a seventh chord, we actually just do the same thing again, adding another third on top of each triad.

So how does that work in practice on an instrument?

I mentioned piano a couple of times there and it’s an easy visual because of the way the keyboard is laid out. Whether or not you play piano you can probably imagine yourself picking every other note from the keyboard. But this works exactly the same on any instrument.

If you know your scale you can find the chords. If you play a monophonic instrument, meaning it plays one note at a time, like the saxophone or trumpet, then you are probably used to playing scales and you can try this out. Start from any note of the scale and play up the scale skipping every other note. You’ll be playing the arpeggio (meaning one note at a time) version of the chord!

If you play a polyphonic instrument (meaning one that can play more than one note at once) then you’re probably used to thinking about chords as shapes, for example fingering patterns on the guitar or ukulele. But you probably also know how to play a scale and you can construct chords this way too, by skipping notes in the scale. That can give you a whole new perspective on how to play chords in interesting and versatile ways on your instrument.

Why should you find chords in scales?

I just mentioned that musicians who play instruments that can produce chords tend to think in terms of the fingering shape for that chord, rather than in terms of the scale.

So what’s the point of talking about finding chords in scales?

Well, with my music theory hat on I’m obliged to say how valuable and important it is to understand the theory of where chords come from. And that’s true! But there are also some pretty cool practical benefits of thinking about chords in this way.

The first is related to that intellectual understanding: you’re empowered to figure out the main chords for a key from scratch yourself. Just by listening to this episode you’ve learned everything you need to know: Start from a note in the scale, add two more notes above it by skipping every other note – and you’ve formed the chord.

Suppose you’re sat with your instrument trying to figure out the chords of a song by ear. If you want to play along with the recording you’ll need to know the key it’s in – you can figure that out by ear too, we have a module about that in Musical U – but if you’re playing solo you don’t even need to know that. You can pick a key yourself that you know the scale for. And now you know how to construct the chords for that key from scratch, which are most likely the chords being used probably 95% of the time in most genres. Build your chords from the first, fourth, fifth and sixth notes of the scale and you’re ready to tackle any of the thousands of four-chord songs out there.

Of course this is also super useful for song writing. Want to come up with a sequence of chords that sound good together? Find the chords in the scale like we’ve talked about and you’ve shortcutted your way to a nice-sounding progression.

And it’s not just about figuring it out from scratch yourself. As we learned in the episode with Scott, you can get a quick-reference sheet that reveals to you at a glance what chords go in each key. But there is still great value in understanding how the chords fit into the scale.

For example, that can give you insight into how the melody and chords relate to each other. We talked about this in our recent episode on chord tones. To play melodies by ear or improvise well it really helps to know which notes are in each chord. That may sound basic but it’s easy for musicians who play polyphonic instruments like guitar or piano to think just about chords as a whole object and lose sight of which notes belong to each chord. Getting your head around how those chords are derived from the scale helps give you that shared mental framework for how harmony and melody are connected. That goes for your brain and your ears. I was a guest on Tim Topham’s “Creative Piano Teaching” podcast recently talking about solfa and one thing we talked about was how helpful solfa can be for understanding harmony – because it really hammers home that connection between the notes of chords and the notes of the scale.

This connection works both ways. You can get insight into how the melody or an improvised solo works by knowing how the notes of the chords fit into the scale – but you can also understand the chords better. For example, harmonising a melody: if you just have an unaccompanied melody then a pretty good way to start putting chords to it is to just look at which notes the melody is landing on in each bar and choose the chord those notes mostly belong to.

I mentioned improvising a couple of times there. That’s another big area where understanding how chords come from the scale can really help you. An important factor in whether your improvised solo sounds good or not has to do with how well it matches the chord progression you’re playing over.

At Musical U we teach an approach to improvisation which makes use of “playgrounds” and “patterns” – things which can help you go directly to sounding good while still giving you space to explore your own musical ideas. One example of that is to start improvising by sticking to the notes of the scale for the key you’re in. That makes sure you won’t play any “wrong notes” (if there is such a thing as “wrong notes”!) But to sound one notch better you want to actually think about which notes from the scale will go best with each chord you’re soloing over. And, as we talked about in the chord tones episode, that means thinking about which notes are actually in each chord.

So learning to find the chords in the scale can help you match up your improvisation with the underlying chord progression. And actually you can get a bit more sophisticated and make use of those chords hidden in the scale whether or not they match up with the chord progression. That’s something we’re going to be talking more about in an upcoming interview with Steve Nixon of FreeJazzLessons.com, he has a great tip for doing exactly that.

Summary

Alright, let’s do a quick recap.

Although you might think of chords as each being a whole musical item, like a single blob of notes all together, they are actually constructed note-by-note from the scale.

The method is simple: For each note of the scale we can construct a triad (meaning three-note) chord just by adding every other note above it. For example in C Major, you can start on D, skip E, add F, skip G, add A, and you get D-F-A, the D Minor chord.

[ AUDIO EXAMPLE: D (E) F (G) A ]

Doing this for each note in a major key you get three major chords, three minor chords and one diminished chord. These chords (or possibly small variations on them) are going to be used for 95% of the harmony in most genres of Western music.

Learning to think about how chords fit into the scale can benefit you in a lot of different ways. On chordal instruments like piano or guitar you get a very different perspective on how you can play chords aside from the simple shapes you might have learned. On non-chordal instruments like saxophone or clarinet you get an insight into how the notes you play belong to chords and how you can imply harmony with the notes you choose even if you’re not playing all the notes of a chord at once.

You’re equipped to figure out all the most likely chords in a key from scratch yourself – great for playing by ear or writing your own music.

You learn to connect the melody notes with the harmony, so that you can harmonise melodies yourself, or improvise melodies in a way that connects musically with the chord progression underneath. And you can even take it a step further, making use of those relationships without necessarily matching up the melody and harmony notes exactly.

I hope this episode has been enlightening for you, either about how chords can be found in scales or about the why of this actually being a useful and practical thing to wrap your head around. Or maybe both!

Next time you sit down with your instrument, try finding some chords yourself. Just pick a key, play through the scale and then try finding each chord that belongs in that key. You might be surprised how this can change your perspective and deepen your understanding of how music is put together!

Enjoying the show? Please consider rating and reviewing it!

The post About Finding Chords in Scales appeared first on Musical U.

Getting Your Ear Into Gear

When was the last time you listened to a piece of music with your eyes closed?

Blocking out distractions and inviting no other mediums to crowd your senses, putting on your favourite record, sitting comfortably somewhere quiet, closing your eyes, and just listening…

Like most people, you probably can’t remember the last time you did this.

For many, consumption of music is either an accompaniment to visual media, or a soundtrack we play in the background while we multi-task.

The Art of Listening

Most of the time, we are doing what is called passive listening: music is secondary to whatever activity we are primarily engaged in. Seldom do we engage in listening as the primary activity. This sort of listening is intensive and active – the kind of listening that pays off in learning and understanding music.

Woman listening to music on the radioActive listening in music is similar to active listening in conversation. Hearing doesn’t guarantee listening; we have to put some effort in! Active listening in both music and conversation requires undivided attention, reflection, reinforcing the message by repetition, and in some cases, deferring judgement until the piece is over. 

Active listening can be a doorway to a deeper musical understanding, as it focuses our mind on aspects we often wouldn’t otherwise notice. It also helps with the skill of learning to play music by ear, a term that simply means actively listening and translating what you’ve observed onto your instrument.

Listening in Layers

The first step is to get your musical “ear” prepared (prepeared?) for more intensive listening. To do that, we can carry out a few simple activities to get our ears and mind working together! The key here is listening in layers. We listen to the song multiple times, and each listen uncovers a new layer to draw our focus to.

The Set Up

The first thing you need to think about is readying your environment.

It won’t help you to be bombarded by outside noises and movement, so find somewhere quiet and comfortable – but not too comfortable! To complete this exercise you’ll need to be relatively still for 15-20 minutes, so sit upright rather than reclined to avoid falling asleep!

Playback Method

Headphones for active listeningYour playback method can make listening easier or harder for you. The better quality stereo or headphones you can afford, the clearer you will hear different aspects of the music.

As audio engineer Kane from Musicians Map puts it, “If all you have are the headphones that came with your device, or the stereo your mum got you for Christmas when you were 12, then so be it. It’s still better than a smartphone speaker.”

Avoid bothering your neighbours and housemates: have your headphones or a stereo at moderate volume and behind closed doors. Full volume is not necessary to listen carefully and it’s important not to feel self-conscious. Being mindful of others gives you the freedom to focus fully on your listening.

Ready, Set… Listen!

Now that your environment is ready, we’re going to listen through a song five times, focussing on a new layer with each listen, so choose something roughly three minutes in length and get ready!

Listen #1: Mindfulness

Once you’ve chosen a song, it’s time for your first attempt at active listening, but don’t dive straight in just yet! There are a few things you’re going to pay attention to.

The mindfulness adage “be present in the moment” is appropriate in this context.

As you listen, close your eyes and allow yourself to be open to how your body and mind react to the music. Be free with your body movement, mirroring outwardly how it makes you feel and take notice of how the feeling changes at each new point in the song. Think:

  • How does the song make me feel to begin with?
  • When does this feeling first change?
  • Do I want to dance/cry/smile?
  • What memories does this song stir up?

This phase is called affective listening – you guessed it, it’s about focusing on how the music affects us.

EXTRA TIP: What is the first thing you hear and naturally focus on? Take stock of this because in your subsequent listens you’ll need to fight your natural urge to focus on this aspect in order to explore others!

Listen #2: Deconstruction

On the second listen, we’re focussing on two things at once because we don’t want to be here all day! Those two things are instrumentation and form.

Various instrumentsAs you listen through the song, take note of the different instruments that are playing. Try to focus on each instrument individually and hear what is happening:

  • Do the instruments come and go throughout?
  • Do some instruments feature predominantly in one section and less in another?
  • Which instruments are playing actively and which less so?
  • Try to visualise each of the instruments being played in a band or orchestra

Now, I’ll contrast my earlier statement about closing your eyes to truly listen – sometimes this particular exercise can be assisted by watching a video of a live band playing the song. As the camera changes to a different instrumentalist, focus your ears on what it’s playing.

In this listen, you should also think about the form of the song:

  • How many different sections do you notice?
  • Is there repetition of sections?
  • Does it follow a normal verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/chorus structure, or are there some unique surprises?

Now you have an idea of the structure and tools that were used to build the song. Let’s look at the substance of the music:

Listen #3: Meet the Melody

After listening to the song twice you’ve probably noticed the melody in the chorus and can roughly hum the tune. This means it’s a good song. Any song worth its salt will have a catchy chorus or refrain, and two listens is enough time for that to turn into a proper earworm.

In this listen, we’re going deeper than earworm status. Here, you are going to focus on the melody throughout and purposefully recognise its characteristics and movement. Think about the following:

  • How does the melody enter the song – boldly and soaring at heights, demure and delicate movements, or somewhere in between?
  • Does it move around through a broad range or does it mostly hang around one note?
  • Does it mostly go upward, downward or all over the place?
  • Does it move in small steps or great leaps?

These questions should be repeatedly asked at each new section in the song. We are dealing with a fair amount of detail at this point: if you intend to learn the song by ear, it’s a good idea to make a note of these observations from here on.

Before we move on to rhythm and harmony, let’s take closer look at the practical uses of active listening skills:

Why learn active listening?

Songs by Ear learn to play by earActive listening is the first step to really playing by ear.

Imagine putting an end to:

  • Being overwhelmed with theory & learning to read sheet music,
  • Trawling endless YouTube tutorials that teach you the song but not the skill,
  • Spending thousands of dollars and many years attending private lessons… and still not playing the music you really want to play.

Songs By Ear is the quick, easy, fun way to get started teaching yourself piano songs by ear.

Listen #4: Feel the Rhythm

The tempo and rhythm of a song can take it from ballad to R&B to EDM and back again. This sort of turnover of rhythmic pace is not uncommon in today’s pop songs specially crafted to hold your attention.

Whatever song you are listening to, the rhythm is integral to the overall feel. It’s important to listen and make observations of how the song’s feel has been achieved through its rhythm (or lack thereof). Here are some questions you can ask yourself:

  • Beat of a songDoes it have a slow, medium, or fast tempo?
  • How many beats to a bar does the rhythm divide into?
  • Is there a steady pulse on each beat, or does it go off-beat as well?
  • Can you hear the bass drum “kick”? If so, on which beats?
  • Where does the sharp sound (snare or clap) come in?
  • Is the pulse constant and steady, or does it pull back in certain sections?
  • Are the drums electronic or acoustic?
  • Are the drums a main feature of the song (they sound loud or forward in the mix) or less of a focus?

Listen #5: Living in Harmony

Now that we have an idea of the melody and the rhythm of the song, we can start to look at the harmony. However, once we come to analysing the harmony, we are getting into an area where we need some extra skills to define what we hear. This is where knowledge of your instrument, music theory, and your ear training all start to come in.

This is less “prepearation” and more the skill of learning by ear, which we’re not into just yet. There are, however, some initial questions about harmony and melody that we can ask before we go down that road.

When we think about harmony in relation to rhythm, we can make observations that will help us on our learning-by-ear journey:

  • Do the chords linger or do they change frequently?
  • Does the duration of the chords differ throughout each section?
  • Where are they held for longer or shorter?
  • Do the chords change on the beat or off?
  • Is the melody generally on the beat, or is it more syncopated?
  • Does this change throughout?

Extra Tips for Active Listening

Now that you’re acquainted with the method of listening in layers, try it out on one of your favourite tunes! Here are some additional tips to make the most out of your time spent on active listening: 

Less is More

Spending time actively listening to your whole music library may be a tad unrealistic! Instead, focus your attention on a select few artists, albums, or songs that you love. Practise active listening with that music and you’ll find an even deeper appreciation for it.

See Live Music

Going to a live concert, or watching a video of one, helps us gain a sense of what each instrument brings to the song and when. Linking the visual source of the sound to what we hear helps us to listen more effectively. In this context, the eyes assist the ears, rather than distract them.

Silence To Help You Listen

Our days are filled with noise and invasive sounds coming from all directions. To combat this we need to give ourselves a break! Make sure that each day you have periods of total quiet. Balancing this discipline with active listening improves the ability to turn our ears on and off at will.

What An Earful!

You’ve listened to the song five times and have a good idea of how the song has been constructed, what it’s made of, and how it makes you feel. With this overall understanding of the song, you are perfectly positioned to begin translating from inner-hearing (what your mind hears) to your instrument.

The next step in learning songs by ear is to build a knowledge of your instrument, music theory, and ear training skills to apply with a systematic workflow. You will be unstoppable! And if your interest is in learning songs by ear on the piano, I can help you with that!

For now though, focus on completing this activity for a number of different songs. Eventually your ears will be off-the-couch, prepeared, and in gear!

Active listening will serve you in numerous ways beyond helping you gain a deeper musical understanding of your favourite tunes – it’s also one of the most important skills for helping you succeed in ear training. So find yourself a quiet place, put on that song, open your ears, and let the music in!

Ruth Power of PianoPicnic.com

Ruth Power is a lifelong pianist and piano-music enthusiast from New Zealand.

After studying classical piano throughout her youth, Ruth obtained her music degree and embarked on a career in publishing: first, as a developer of the highly successful “Rocket Piano” (teaching 90,000 students worldwide); then in London, as music and education editor for Europe’s largest sheet-music publisher, Music Sales Group.

There she created some of the most widely-used educational resources & repertoire for piano and voice.

Ruth now heads up PianoPicnic.com, an online piano learning hub. And after years in the publishing business, she’s launching Songs by Ear – a new teaching website and app that will help you say goodbye to sheet music.

The post Getting Your Ear Into Gear appeared first on Musical U.

Bass: The Power of Dynamics Resource Pack Preview

New musicality video:

In simple terms, “dynamics” just means how loud or soft each note is. But don’t let that simple definition fool you. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/power-dynamics-resource-pack-preview/

Dynamics are one of the richest tools a musician has to bring expressiveness to their performance and add their own style to a piece of music.

In this month’s Instrument Packs we looked at this important but often-overlooked topic: the power of DYNAMICS!

Let’s take a peak! https://www.musical-u.com/learn/power-dynamics-resource-pack-preview/

Learn more about Musical U Resident Pro Steve Lawson:

Welcome!

Twitter: @solobasssteve

→ Learn more about Instrument Packs with Resident Pros including Steve:
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/introducing-musical-u-instrument-packs/

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Subscribe for more videos from Musical U!

Bass: The Power of Dynamics Resource Pack Preview

Piano: The Power of Dynamics Resource Pack Preview

New musicality video:

In simple terms, “dynamics” just means how loud or soft each note is. But don’t let that simple definition fool you. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/power-dynamics-resource-pack-preview/

Dynamics are one of the richest tools a musician has to bring expressiveness to their performance and add their own style to a piece of music.

In this month’s Instrument Packs we looked at this important but often-overlooked topic: the power of DYNAMICS!

Let’s take a peak! https://www.musical-u.com/learn/power-dynamics-resource-pack-preview/

Learn more about Musical U Resident Pro Sara Campbell: https://sarasmusicstudio.com/

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/sarasmusicstudio/

Twitter:
https://twitter.com/SaraMusicStudio

→ Learn more about Instrument Packs with Resident Pros
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/introducing-musical-u-instrument-packs/

===============================================

Learn more about Musical U!

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

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

Musicality Checklist:
https://www.musical-u.com/mcl-musicality-checklist

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/MusicalU

Twitter:

YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/c/MusicalU

Subscribe for more videos from Musical U!

Piano: The Power of Dynamics Resource Pack Preview

Guitar: The Power of Dynamics Resource Pack Preview

New musicality video:

In simple terms, “dynamics” just means how loud or soft each note is. But don’t let that simple definition fool you. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/power-dynamics-resource-pack-preview/

Dynamics are one of the richest tools a musician has to bring expressiveness to their performance and add their own style to a piece of music.

In this month’s Instrument Packs we looked at this important but often-overlooked topic: the power of DYNAMICS!

Let’s take a peak! https://www.musical-u.com/learn/power-dynamics-resource-pack-preview/

Learn more about Musical U Resident Pro Dylan Welsh:
https://www.dwelshmusic.com/

On Twitter:
@dwelshmusic

→ Learn more about Instrument Packs with Resident Pros
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/introducing-musical-u-instrument-packs/

===============================================

Learn more about Musical U!

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

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

Musicality Checklist:
https://www.musical-u.com/mcl-musicality-checklist

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/MusicalU

Twitter:

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Subscribe for more videos from Musical U!

Guitar: The Power of Dynamics Resource Pack Preview

A Toolbox of Musical Understanding, with Scott Sharp

Today we’re talking with Scott Sharp, the creator of Fretboard Toolbox – an innovative way to explain the notes and chords in each key for guitar, bass, piano, banjo and more.

Interestingly, Scott started learning music later than you might expect and really didn’t consider himself all that musical. But an impactful experience in his day job as a high school biology teacher unlocked music theory in a way that let him start improvising, playing by ear, and being creative and confident in music.

He built on that insight to create his “fretboard toolboxes” for a range of instruments, and provides them online at fretboard-toolbox.com. He’s also just released a very cool “Theory By Hand” eBook that makes it easy for you to figure out the scales and chords in any key.

In this conversation we talk about:

  • The big theory insight that let him start playing by ear and improvising and led him to create a whole new way to show how music theory works
  • Why learning to play a whole bunch of instruments isn’t nearly as hard as you might imagine
  • And the advice Scott would have for anyone who fears they’re “unmusical”

Scott’s Fretboard Toolboxes are an amazing resource for any musician looking to explore the more creative side of music-making and give themselves a shortcut to sounding good and understanding what they’re doing with the notes they choose to play. Please enjoy this conversation and come away inspired to explore this approach to theory yourself!

Listen to the episode:

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Transcript

Christopher: So Scott Sharp, you have a great name for music education. I presume there must be a Scott Flat out there somewhere that’s your arch nemesis.

Scott: Yeah, exactly.

Christopher: Let’s start at the beginning, if you wouldn’t mind. How did you first get started making music?

Scott: A friend of mine in college played guitar and lots of great Neil Young tunes. And I always thought I’d love to play the guitar, but I was 22 and I thought, “Well, it’s just too late to start,” and he made a mockery of me and said, “You’ve got plenty of time left.” So I got started with it and have been going ever since.

Christopher: Fantastic. And how did you find that experience of learning guitar? Did it come easily to you?

Scott: Absolutely frustrating and absolutely difficult for me. I’ve always loved music, but aside from a few months of trombone in fourth grade, I have no musical training. And those first few times trying to play chords on a guitar are just brutal on your fingers and my ear was not developed at all. I had no clue about how notes relate to each other, so it was a lot of years of just fumbling around.

Christopher: And how did you think about that? Did you worry that maybe you didn’t have what it took to be a guitarist? Were you thinking about talent and having a gift or were you kind of comfortable with the fact that this was just gonna be something that took a lot of work?

Scott: No, I thought that there was definitely just there’s musical people and non-musical people and I was in the latter group.

Christopher: But clearly, you loved music enough and I guess you were seeing a bit of progress to stick with it year by year.

Scott: Yeah, just enough to keep me going at it. But then I’d take long period off and then pick it back up, but just kind of felt like I’d plateaued at a really low level for a lot of years.

Christopher: And music was a hobby for you? Guitar playing was something you did in the evenings and weekends, was it?

Scott: Absolutely, yep. Just for fun and just songs, Bob Dylan songs I like or Neil Young songs I’d like and look up the chords and try to fumble through it.

Christopher: And obviously now, with Fretboard Toolbox, you’re somebody that people look up to as a music educator and are inspired by. How did you get from there to here? Where did you go next with your guitar learning?

Scott: Well, I teach high school biology and I have, this’ll be my 17th year. And about 10 years ago, I had a student who would… I’ve always had a classroom guitar, just something the kids could noodle around on or I could noodle around on. And I had a student who showed me… Phenomenal guitar player, and he showed me that there’s certain chords that go together in a key and this was towards the end of year, maybe March or so and it was mind boggling for me. Like, “Oh, there’s rules to which chords go together and you can predict what chords sound good together?” I had no idea.

Christopher: So take me back to that moment, how did that conversation come about? Why was your student suddenly telling you about all this?

Scott: He had taken music theory class at school and was just playing and he knew I was a frustrated guitar player. And he just casually mentioned one day, like, “Certain chords go together in a key,” and I thought, “What? Are you kidding?” And so then he wrote out a chromatic scale for me and then I took a sheet of paper and made marks where the I and IV and V chords were, ’cause he told me what those I, IV, V chords are. And then I saw that if I could slide that piece of paper back and forth on a chromatic scale, that it would show me what the chords were, those three chords were in every key. And I just thought, “Wow, this is the coolest thing I’ve ever heard.”

Christopher: And had you dived into theory before that? Had you studied a bit of theory but not come across this particular way of thinking about it or was theory just not a part of your guitar learning up until then?

Scott: Never even thought about it. I never gave it one… I had heard of do, re, mi, fa, so, la, ti, but that was the extent of what I had heard of.

Christopher: And what did it feel like to see that and realize there was some kind of structure underlying all of the stuff you’d been learning?

Scott: Oh, I thought it was so beautiful. I didn’t realize there was all this mathematics that underlies all of music. And it was so empowering to be able to play G, C, D and have that sound good and then play C, F, G and then have that sound good. Like, “Oh, well, I can figure this out in any key,” and it just blew my mind.

Christopher: So explain a bit more. We’ve said a few things there that some of our listeners might not be familiar with, so the chromatic scale and the idea of a I, IV, and V chord. Can you describe a bit more, what was it that your student communicated to you that let you have that understanding of which chords go together? How did that work in your brain or what was it he particularly pointed out to you that made it click?

Scott: Well, just I could tell that G, C, and D sounded good together and then he introduced me to this idea of each chord has a number. And then the first, fourth, and fifth chords played as major chords all sound good together and then that the second, third, and sixth played as minor chords sound good together. And if I could make that little slide rule, I could see what those chords would be in every key and that was an absolutely pivotal moment for me.

Christopher: Terrific, so it sounds like it was those two concepts. It was the idea that certain chords go together, but also that that’s something that can be carried across keys quite easily. I remember from my own experience, I started out with cello and clarinet and so key signatures were really intimidating and big part of what you had to think about when you were playing. And it took me a long time, certainly, to realize that keys, in a sense, are all the same and the things that work in one key will work in another key. It sounds like you had that kind of insight too that suddenly this idea that G, D, and C go together could be carried across to any other key. Is that right?

Scott: Yes, absolutely. And I wish it was something that people would teach right at the beginning for kids and maybe not the whole theory of it, but just that, “Hey, there’s these certain chords that go together. And so the first three chords we’re gonna learn are G major, C major, and D major, and those will sound good. And you can just strum those in different orders and you’ll start hearing, ‘Oh, that kinda sounds like this song or that song.’” And just realize, “Okay, so there’s certain chords that go together and we’re gonna learn one key and learn three of those chords and then start branching a bit from there.”

Christopher: I’m absolutely with you on that one. I think the way we teach guitar in particular could be a lot more rewarding and a lot quicker if the teachers took advantage of this idea and showing kids that they can go a lot further with just a few chords than the traditional method would have them believe. So why do you think that had been missing from your guitar studies up until then? ‘Cause clearly you had been working away at it year by year, why do you think it took so long for this to come in front of you and suddenly make sense to you?

Scott: Well, I think that the way that music is typically taught is, “Here’s this song you want to learn, here’s the chords that are in the song.” And there’s no real talk of what key this song’s in and or what scales would sound good with this song, but just, “Here’s the notes or here’s the chords. Play those in this order and it will sound good.” And that’s really exciting and you can play the song that you want, but if you can’t sing in that key… At least I was, I was powerless to then say, “Well, maybe I could try that song in a different key and maybe that would be better for my voice,” and so it was stifling. It was my fault for probably not seeking it out sooner, but there’s not a ton of places that teach the theory in a way that is understandable. So often, you look up theory online and it just gets so dense so fast. I mean, it’s even tiring for me and I’ve studied it for years and years now and it’s like, “Wow, it’s just so much drudgery. It’s no wonder people have such a bad taste in their mouth about it.”

Christopher: Absolutely. And I think we’ve inherited a lot of baggage from the classical music world in terms of how theory is taught and while that, as you say, is very valuable and there’s useful information there, it can be a lot to process as a beginner musician. There are, thankfully, some sites, like your own, and one I like called HookTheory that does focus on a kind of more practical approach to music theory. But like you, it took me a long time to realize that music theory, it could be something that made music more enjoyable for me and actually made it easier to do musical things rather than being this whole other world that was intimidating and overwhelming.

Scott: Absolutely. Just even getting the basics of theory is so liberating. Sometimes I’ll have students just play a few notes from the G major scale while I play some chords from the key of G major and they just get so excited ’cause they’re kind of improvising. And they’re nervous at first to just try these random notes, but then it’s just so exciting and you think, “Oh, this note sounded really good right there.” And it’s just like learning to walk, you need to stumble a lot. And so often in music, we’re taught to try to play the perfect version of something and we didn’t see the composer, all the mistakes they made and the different things they tried out when they were writing the song. “No, I don’t like that, I’ll try this,” and that’s such a critical part, but we tend to overlook that and just try to cut straight to the perfection, which is, to me, really stifling and not tremendously helpful.

Christopher: I agree and when we teach improvisation in Musical U, we often use this idea of playgrounds. The way to get past that overwhelm and intimidation of improvisation is to give yourself constraints that actually make sure you’ll sound okay. I like your example with sticking in G major and that’s something that is just often not taught. A teacher will kind of help you start to improvise, but you’re still left in this mindset of, “I can play any note and it might sound terrible.” Whereas setting up kind of a playground and a safe area where you know things will sound more or less musical, it makes it a whole different experience, right?

Scott: Exactly. So often, I feel like when people teach improvisation, they’re like, “Just try notes out,” and so you’re like da, da, da, ehh. And you just hit all of these bad notes and then it’s this negative feedback that builds, like, “Oh, I can’t improvise.” But I love how you describe it as a playground ’cause same kind of thing I’m doing, when you can see, “Here’s all the notes in the key of G major all up and down the fretboard. Now when I play stuff in G major, I want you to just hit those notes.”

And then when they’re playing that, they’ll inevitably hit a wrong note or a note that’s not in the key and then I’m like, “Stop right there. Now see how that one’s not in the key?” And then they think, “Oh, okay. So I didn’t expect that one to sound good,” or they’ll find a rule breaking note and they’re like, “Oh, but I kinda like that sound.” And then, “Well, the next level is what rules can you break? Now that you know the rules, what can we break?” And then that’s where the fun happens for me.

Christopher: For sure. So tell me, when you had this insight and things started to click in your head in terms of the notes in a key and the way chords were built, how did that change your relationship with music?

Scott: Oh, it changed it just dramatically because once I saw the chords that fit together in a key, then I went and figured out what notes make up the chords. And I saw that the notes that make up the chords are all from the scale, so the chords that make up the key of G major, those notes are from the scale. And then I was able to see, “Okay, G major, the chord is always built of the notes G, B, and D, so then if I can see Gs, Bs, and Ds, I can really understand the chord.” And so I looked at the G major I’ve always played and, sure enough, I’m playing Gs, Bs, and Ds.

And then I looked at some different shapes up the neck and, “Wow, those are Gs, Bs, and Ds too.” So then I thought, “Well, can you do it with a mandolin?”, and then laid out a fretboard of a mandolin and once I could see the Gs, Bs, and Ds, I didn’t have to look up how do you play these chords. It’s just, “Where can my fingers grab them and I can see 20 different places to play them,” and then it just really opened up from there.

Christopher: And were there places you went to learn this? Was it a matter of sitting in a room by yourself and kind of figuring it all out or were there useful books or resources? How did you learn over the next year or two?

Scott: Lots of Google, lots of Wikipedia, lots of just every source I could find that would give me some information on it. And what struck me was that there wasn’t any place where all that information was in one spot and so that’s kind of where I saw an opportunity just because I made the books for myself ’cause I wanted to see. I need to see what notes build the chords. I need to see what chords fit together. I need to see some common chord progressions and then I need to see where those notes found all over the fretboard. And I set up pages like that for each key ’cause once I set it up with one key, I was like, “Wow, this is so exciting. I wonder what it looks like in the other keys,” and then it just really opened from there.

Christopher: And a lot of people, if they were lucky enough to have this kind of breakthrough in their music learning, they’d set themselves up with those reference sheets and they’d figure it all out and they’d just go off and play their instrument and that would be that. But you actually took that breakthrough and developed an extensive website, a YouTube channel, the range of books to help others learn this too. Why did you go to all that trouble?

Scott: Well, the truth is I take my son to karate and during karate time, I was reading a biography on Ben Franklin and I was just impressed with what a renaissance guy he was and just how many different things he invented. And I thought, “Well, I’d really like to invent something,” not having any idea how much work all of the business and the creation and things were, but it’s just been absolutely fun. It’s been an opportunity to meet people all over the world and to help expand people’s vision of music and to tell people who think, “I can’t improvise or I just can’t play an instrument,” like, “Sure, you can. Just start with some things that are safe.” And you let them know some safe places and then it build from there, I feel like.

Christopher: Great. And I’d love to talk much more about Fretboard Toolbox in a moment, but you touched on something there that I don’t want to pass by, which is you thought to yourself, “I wonder if I can do this on mandolin too.” And you, I believe, now are someone who plays guitar, bass, piano, mandolin, banjo, and more.

Scott: To some extent!

Christopher: To some extent, sure. That’s something that a lot of people, particularly those who took up one instrument a bit later in life, they weren’t a childhood prodigy, they maybe found learning music tough, would assume was really out of reach for them. To play multiple instruments, be able to pick up something they don’t play regularly and just kind of strum sound good sounding chords. Was it surprising to you to find that actually you could start picking up other instruments like that?

Scott: Oh, absolutely. I was shocked and every instrument I would do was just so exciting. And then it just made me wonder, after the mandolin book, “Can it work on ukuleles? What’s a baritone ukulele or a tenor guitar? Or how is this thing tuned or that thing tuned?” And then I thought, “Well, I’d love to figure out piano too.” And then it’s just so beautiful when you understand those pieces that build the music, then picking up something new is just a matter of, “Where are my Gs, Bs, and Ds? I want to play a G major chord,” and it gets really fun.

Christopher: Great, I was kind of a casual multi-instrumentalist myself. I totally relate to that. It is fun to learn a new instrument and particularly when you can carry over some of your knowledge or experience. I think what stood out to me that was really interesting was that piano was in there because I think when you look at music instruction sites, it’s not unusual to see banjo alongside guitar or guitar and bass together, but to take the concepts you’ve been working on and apply them to such a different physical layout on an instrument I think is really interesting. Can you tell us a bit more about that?

Scott: Yeah, I became really curious about… I know guitar’s low note is an E and I know the bass’s low note is also an E and a ukulele’s is a G, but I wanted to see where are all of those notes laid out. And so just for myself, I took a photo of my keyboard and then I started learning about C3, C2, the various different octaves that are on a piano. And then I wanted to see, “Well, where are all these notes on a guitar fretboard? Where do they relate to the piano?” And so I created a sheet like that and color coded it and made some color coded arrows for my piano so I could see that this C is the same as that C. And then it just made me look at the fretboard in a whole different way instead of just knowing there’s C in these six different positions or so, which Cs are those? And this is the same C as that C and things like that.

So the piano really opened up a lot of it because it’s so beautiful, it’s so linear, and then it just kind of made all the other stringed instruments make so much more sense once I could see that layout.

Christopher: So, in fact, the piano was a new insight into the stringed instruments as much as you were taking your fretboard knowledge and applying it to piano.

Scott: Right, exactly. And then I saw if I could play a chord on a guitar, I could figure out what notes those were and play the same chord on a piano and vice versa, and then that kinda opened up a lot for me too.

Christopher: And I guess that comes from the fact that you have this connection to the underlying theory of it. That it’s not about this finger shape on the fretboard that makes it a G chord, it’s actually about the fact that it’s a G, B, and D note and that’s what you can transfer to any instrument, really.

Scott: Precisely.

Christopher: Very interesting. And I suppose why I find that interesting is that there’s a lot of guitar and bass instruction that thinks purely about patterns and it’s like, “Here’s your pentatonic scale pattern. Go and learn it and then play the pentatonic scale.” Whereas you have that level beneath that says, “Well, what are the notes in the pentatonic scale and can we start from any note and build a pentatonic scale,” which gives you that flexibility and that power to a level that just a purely pattern based approach really doesn’t.

Scott: Absolutely. And then if there’s kind of a bluesy riff off of a pentatonic scale, I know what are those bluesy notes and what rules of the pentatonic scale are we breaking? And pentatonic scales are interesting because people that I talk with often are so intimidated by the sound ’cause it’s just such a big, powerful sounding word, but most folks aren’t too intimidated by the idea of a major scale. But then when you tell them a pentatonic is just cutting two notes out of the major scale, it’s always the same two notes, the fourth and the seventh, cut them out and then you’re playing a pentatonic. And it’s like, “Oh, well, I can do that.”

Christopher: Absolutely. And it’s a stepping stone we use in Musical U for a lot of our scale based skills, like note recognition, because it’s so powerful and versatile, but it is just that notch easier than the major scale. And as you say, so many instrumentalists are taught, “Now it’s time to play scales, here’s the major scale,” and actually that’s quite a big jump to take.

Scott: Right, absolutely, and the pentatonic scale just doesn’t have many sour notes. Any chord progression in G, if you’re soloing with G major pentatonic, it’s gonna sound okay. It may not blow away the pros, but for someone, like me, who’s just playing in their house and wanting to good around, it’s like, “Oh, that was kinda some neat stuff.”

Christopher: And it can be a great framework too for, as you say, introducing other notes or understanding how to throw in that IV or the VII from the full major scale. It’s such a great baseline to begin with.

Scott: I agree.

Christopher: So we’ve touched a few times there on Fretboard Toolbox and I’d love if we could just talk a bit more about it because for the listener who hasn’t seen it, it’s maybe a bit hard to imagine what would be in one of these books that would give them this insight we’ve been talking about into how the scales are put together and how you can play chords that sound good in any key. Could you just describe for us what is a Fretboard Toolbox?

Scott: Yeah. I started out with these, what I call the complete edition, which is, on one page, there’s the G major scale and then what’s called the E minor, which is the relative minor of G major. And then on the page next to it is the G blues scale ’cause I wanted to see those major and blues scales next to each other. And they’re super intimidating when you open up a toolbox, it’s like, “Oh my gosh, there’s just so much information.” So I really, I like best when I get to be with someone when they’re checking one out, which is why I have all the YouTube channels ’cause I can kind of do videos so I can be with them while we’re looking at this and we can break it down.

But it’s mainly three parts, the top section of each page is this big grid that shows the chords that belong in the key and then their roman numerals, like the I chord, the II, the III, IV, V. And then there’s the notes that build up the chords and so it’s just a way to be able to see quickly, “Okay, G major, here’s the notes I need. C major, here’s the notes I need.”

Christopher: Sorry to interrupt, but visually, they’re looking at a fretboard diagram there, would they be?

Scott: No, but that’s what a lot of folks think that they’re looking at and they’re just looking at a big grid that shows chords and then notes that make up the chords. And then the middle section is chord progression, so if I learn these chords sound good in the key, what are some different common ways I can arrange those chords? And then the bottom section is a layout of a fretboard that shows where’s my major scale notes, where’s my major pentatonic notes, where’s the natural minor notes, the minor pentatonic. And then I can see the different locations of the notes that make the chords I want to make and then soloing notes that will sound good with those chord progressions.

Christopher: I see. And so it’s probably that bottom section, then, that means you have a different book for each instrument because that fretboard or, in the piano case, the keyboard would be different. Is that right?

Scott: Exactly, so everything else in the books is the exact same. So if I’m on page 19, it’s C major on any instrument ’cause I just want to be able to find them quickly ’cause I made these books for myself. And so the only things that differ really are the fretboard layouts at the bottom and then that color page that shows the piano layout and then where all those notes are found ’cause those vary per instrument.

Christopher: That sounds like a very powerful reference sheet. To have all of that on one page is a dream, I think, for a lot of people for whom theory has seemed like a lot of hard work. Could you give some examples of how someone would use this? If they sit down with their Fretboard Toolbox, what are they gonna be doing with it?

Scott: Yeah, so in that chord progressions section, on my website, I’ve got free jam tracks that’s me playing through all of those chord progressions at different speeds. So I would say level one would be I learned some chords that are in the key of G major and then I go to the G major jam tracks and then I’m gonna just work on strumming along with those chords and just getting comfortable moving from a G to a C or a C to a D. And training my ear to hear, “Okay, this is the sound of going from a I to a V chord or this is the sound of a I to a VI minor chord.” And I’ve got some chord progressions that break rules so you can hear, “Oh, well, I can play this chord as a major or that chord as a minor,” once you kinda get those basics down.

But the basics is how do I play… is being able to strum along with some chords, common chord progressions and learning those roman numerals ’cause it’s so helpful if someone can know I’m going from a I to a IV to a V. ‘Cause when you play them for a while, you start realizing the IV has a special sound to it and a V has a special that makes you want to go back to the I and you start seeing those connections.

And then for more advanced students, you can use those same jam tracks and then if I want to work on improvisation or soloing, I click on the G major jam tracks and then now I’m just gonna work on messing around with the major scale or the major pentatonic and see how does it sound over this chord progression. And then, hopefully, people will start seeing, “Okay, when I play an A note, it sounds really good over the D chord.” And if you can see D major’s made of D, F#, and A, you start realizing, “Wow, melodies are really tied in with what chord’s being played. And if I know the notes of the chord, it makes it really powerful for finding melodies.”

Christopher: Wonderful. I think what I love most about that is that what you’ve described, it’s all kind of starting from scratch. Someone is sitting some with a Fretboard Toolbox and they’re starting to make music without learning anything beforehand in terms of what notes to play or what chords to play. They’re kind of just using that reference sheet to tell them what’s safe to play and then they’re creating their own music. Whether it’s playing through a chord progression and experimenting with the role of each chord in that key or improvising over a jam track, it’s all that kind of from scratch creative output. That’s wonderful.

Scott: I spent a lot of time on it too. I set those jam tracks up for myself too ’cause it’s hard to find a good friend who will play hours and hours of G, C, D for you so that you can noodle around over, “Hey, let me try that one more time.”

Christopher: So if we imagine you a couple of decades ago learning guitar and really going from the song by song approach where you’re gonna learn what chords to play to play the Led Zeppelin track you love or whatever it may be. For a musician like that, is there a way they could incorporate Fretboard Toolbox to that kind of rote learning where they know how to play this song or they know how to play this solo? Could they connect that back to this more kind of creative and free approach?

Scott: I would think so, but what I find with… And like I said, I’m a high school teacher, and what I find with lots of the younger folks is that they want to be able to…. Like, “I want to play this cool song at the lake with my friends,” and that’s kind of the… They don’t see, a lot of times, the value of, “Okay, I’ve gotta put in some time to learning how these things fit in,” and I wish they would because it’s so much more liberating. When you know those rules, you can create and that’s the thing I couldn’t do with the rope method is I could learn a complicated arrangement and I could play it and it would sound like, “Oh, he can play guitar.” And then somebody plays something different and they’re like, “Play along with me,” and, “Oh no, I can’t.” And that was so stifling for me and I don’t like to be stifled. I like to be able to just, like, “Here’s what’s safe, go out and make something up,” and that’s the fun for me.

Christopher: And you’re getting that message out in a terrific way through the website and through your YouTube channel, which is very popular. What’s next for Fretboard Toolbox given that you’re already reaching a lot of kind of passionate amateur musicians who are teaching themselves and looking for a new way? Where are you gonna take this in the future?

Scott: Well, I would love to see the younger folks start to learn these things too and I think that… And maybe not how Fretboard Toolboxes are set up, but just in however it’s done, help the kids from early on do the things like you’re talking about where here’s this playground. And I would like to see kids have that because the kids that I teach with the toolbox, it’s intimidating for them at first, but then it’s really so fun to see them making progress and to be able to speak music too and understand what a V chord is and IV chord. And, “Hey, I made up this new chord progression. Check this out,” and, “Here’s some soloing notes that sound good over it,” and that’s when I see them really light up. It’s fun to find some good tab and to be able to play the song that you want to play in that one key with the one location of the fretboard, but it’s really fun when you can create.

And so I would love to see that and I would love to see an app someday. I think that if I could just make it happen immediately, I would have an app where you could pick any instrument and you could pick any tuning and any number of strings. I get people all the time who… I’ve got a guy from Puerto Rico that said, “Do you have a book for a cuatro, a right handed cuatro?” And I look up what the arrangement is and, for me, I made my books initially on Microsoft Word, so it takes me months to create a new edition. But if we could just have a way to say, “Here’s this tuning and here’s the key you want to play in and then here’s your G, B, and D notes. Okay, and here’s your G major scale.” And then I would be more apt to want to experiment with alternate tunings because I can just quickly take a brand new tuning and then see, “Okay. Oh, here’s a weird shape that will give me a G major and there’s a D major right next to it,” and then I think it would just open up a lot of things for me.

So I would love to see that one day, but I’ve just gotta find… It would have to be someone who’s deeply passionate about music and programming to be able to make something like that.

Christopher: Okay. Well, we definitely have some deeply passionate people listening right now and maybe a few of them are apt developers in their spare time. If anyone listening wants to help develop the Fretboard Toolbox app, don’t be shy, do reach out to Scott. I’m sure he’d love to chat to you about that.

Scott: Absolutely.

Christopher: From what you said, it sounds like you currently find that Fretboard Toolbox is mainly used by adults. Is that right?

Scott: Yes, yes, and that’s not something I realized going into it. I found most of the folks tend to be in their 50s and 60s, which I love. I love that people that are heading towards retirement or just into retirement are just finding something that’s just gonna give them a lifetime of enjoyment and passion and they’re some of the most passionate learners that I’ve come across.

Christopher: For sure. But I think at the same time, in my experience anyway, there can often be a bit of a fear that learning is not as easy as it used to be and that maybe they are past the point of learning new tricks as it were. But it sounds like that’s not the case with Fretboard Toolbox, the kind of epiphany you had several years ago can happen at any time in life. Would that be right?

Scott: Yeah, absolutely. And I just want to let people know that if you think that you’re not musical, you cannot start much less musical that I am. There was a time that I was tuning the high E string of a guitar and if you hit the fifth fret of the B string, it’s the same E note as the guitar. And I was playing da da, da da, da da, da da, and I’m like, “Nope, it’s still not there.” And I just kept tuning it up and then the string snaps. I can’t even guess how far apart on a piano those notes would’ve been and I was trying to match the note ’cause I just had no ear training at all. And that part is really fun, it’s really fun to be able to hear a song…

That’s another thing that I do with the toolbox a lot is I’ll put music on shuffle and then I’ll find the key, find what note brings it home. Like da, da, da, “Okay, it’s that last note that brings it home.” And then I’ll find what that note is on a fretboard, flip to that key’s page, and then start messing around with the notes. And if I’m in the right key, they’re gonna sound good. And lots and lots and lots of hours of that leads to being able to find the key really fast and when you can find that key and then you know the chords that are most likely in that key, jumping into a song that someone’s already playing is so much easier.
It was never possible before. I would see folks at jam sessions, a song would get started that they hadn’t played before and then they’d jump in and start playing and soloing and I just thought it was black magic. And what I found is that even if they can’t describe it, and lots of the great players can’t describe it, they just know it ’cause they’ve done it so much. But they just get, somehow, the idea of what chords sound good and what scales go with the different keys and then they can just take off from there.

Christopher: Wonderful. I think you’ve created such a valuable tool there to help people at whatever stage they’re at and however musical they may or may not feel to kind of shortcut that process of getting that intuition or the kind of play by ear black magic. And I know a lot of our listeners, what you’ve just described is a dream come true for them to be able to hear a song and then sit down within 30 seconds and be able to play along with the chords or improvise a solo or figure out how the melody works. So I highly encourage any listeners who are feeling inspired to head on over to FretboardToolbox.com. And maybe, Scott, you could just give us a few pointers, how can they dive in best with Fretboard Toolbox?

Scott: What I would do is… There’s a link called Pick Your Instrument and then you can go to the instrument. I have guitar, mandolin, banjos, pianos, tenor guitar, ukuleles, bass. So you pick whatever instrument it is and then I’ve got links that say, “Look inside,” and you can download every bit of instructions for free and then the key of G major page is for free. So people can mess around with the key of G major and see, “Is this useful?” And if not, then they’re not out anything and hopefully they read through some of the things, like, “Oh okay, I picked up a couple things,” and then just discard it. But if they find it useful and they want to see it in other keys, then there’s links right there where they can purchase the book. And I would say that that’s a good place to start.

Christopher: Fantastic. Well, from what you’ve told us today, I imagine someone could spend quite a few happy hours just playing around in G major using that Fretboard Toolbox sample, so I think that sounds like a very easy and enjoyable way to get started and see if this is a good fit for you.

Scott: Well, I think so. I hope so, at least.

Christopher: Terrific. Thank you again, Scott, for joining us today to share your story and your insights on musicality. We’ve just told people they can visit FretboardToolbox.com for more information about these fantastic reference guides. Are there any last parting pieces of wisdom or guidance you’d give to our listeners?

Scott: No, I would just like to thank you for what you have put out because the ear training is just so powerful and being able to hear those intervals. And I haven’t come across many sites that have as much information as you have that is so easy to navigate. And I love the checklist that you have so I can see, “Okay, here’s where I need to be working,” ’cause I read on your bio that you struggle with focus sometimes too and I do as well and so it’s just perfect for me.

Christopher: That’s great to hear. Thanks so much, Scott. Thank you again for joining us.

Scott: Thank you.

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The post A Toolbox of Musical Understanding, with Scott Sharp appeared first on Musical U.

The Power of Dynamics: Resource Pack Preview

In simple terms, “dynamics” just means how loud or soft each note is. But don’t let that simple definition fool you. Dynamics are one of the richest tools a musician has to bring expressiveness to their performance and add their own style to a piece of music.

In this month’s Instrument Packs we looked at this important but often-overlooked topic: the power of DYNAMICS!

Guitar

In the guitar pack Resident Pro Dylan Welsh covers three different ways you can control your dynamics effectively, with each hand and also your equipment.

Including:

  • Use of the right hand in playing single note lines, and how to make a simple adjustment to your technique and mindset to give you more control over your dynamics.
  • Use of the left hand in playing chords, in order to reduce the size of your voicings and help you sit back in a mix.
  • Use of your equipment to dial in your setup in a way that will allow you the maximum amount of dynamic control.
  • Practice MP3s covering a dynamic scale exercise and the altered chord voicings covered.

If you’ve ever felt like strumming through chords was a bit dull or your solos were a bit monotonous then this pack will show you a way to bring new life and interest to it in a variety of ways!

Piano

Resident Pro for piano, Sara Campbell, approaches the topic of dynamics in terms of storytelling and what a musician can accomplish musically through effective use of dynamics, and she shares exercises you can use to develop your skill with both the core techniques and the musical application of dynamics.

Including:

  • Dynamic Overview: A quick run-down of Italian dynamic signs and terms that you may come across in sheet music.
  • Storytelling with Dynamics: What we can learn from acting and script analysis when it comes to dynamics, and how we can apply these concepts to enhance our own storytelling abilities at the piano.
  • Messa di voce: A simple dynamic exercise based on a term that comes from the Italian school of singing.
  • MP3 Practice tracks demonstrating and providing backing for the dynamic exercises covered.

Although any pianist can and should learn to accurately reproduce the intended dynamic levels in a piece, from pianissimo to fortissimo and beyond, you’ll take your playing to another level of musicality when you learn to really use dynamics in your own way to bring the music to life.

Bass

Steve Lawson our Resident Pro for bass breaks down the topic of dynamics into control and variation, how you can and should train your fingers (and ears) to produce exactly the volumes you intend to bring out the desired musical expression on bass.

Including:

  • Dynamic Control: Fingering techniques that will created accented and unaccented notes.
  • Dynamic Variation: Levels of dynamics and playing techniques that can produce different dynamic results.
  • Mechanical Control: How to use equipment to control dynamics.
  • Practice MP3s demonstrating techniques used for dynamics for you to practice with.

Bassists are often underappreciated when it comes to dynamics due to the widespread reliance on compressor pedals and expectation that notes are as consistent and unvaried dynamically as possible – but Steve cracks that assumption wide open and shows what’s really possible for you.

Coming up next month…

We’re going to be focusing on an interesting topic which was the subject of a recent podcast episode: How (and why) to improvise using chord tones.

Interested in getting access to these resources and much more, with an Instrument Pack membership? Just choose that option during checkout when you join Musical U, or upgrade your existing membership to get instant access!

The post The Power of Dynamics: Resource Pack Preview appeared first on Musical U.