https://www.musical-u.com/learn/7-creepy-tricks-and-treats-for-writing-halloween-horror-music/
Learning how to write music that is perfect for Halloween horror is easy and a lot of fun! Follow these 7 simple tips about how you can use sound effects, instrumentation, harmony and more to create a convincing scary song this Halloween. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/7-creepy-tricks-and-treats-for-writing-halloween-horror-music/
Too many people go through life worried that they can’t s…
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/11-tips-to-help-the-tone-deaf-sing-in-tune/
Too many people go through life worried that they can’t sing. The reality is that they just haven’t learned how to yet. Even the most seemingly-tone-deaf singers can learn to sing in tune. Here are 11 tips which can help anybody learn to sing in tune. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/11-tips-to-help-the-tone-deaf-sing-in-tune/
Halloween is just around the corner! So how do you go abo…
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/spookify-songs-halloween/
Halloween is just around the corner! So how do you go about creating some spine-tingling sounds? We’ve rounded up some of the best ideas from around the interwebs for some ways to spookify your songs. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/spookify-songs-halloween/
What makes a Halloween film score creepy? Use ear trainin…
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/halloween-ear-training-insider-horror-film-music-secrets-uncovered/
What makes a Halloween film score creepy? Use ear training and your aural skills to learn some of the key elements of Halloween horror film music. Then create your own Halloween film music at home. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/halloween-ear-training-insider-horror-film-music-secrets-uncovered/
Halloween is upon us, and with Halloween comes a creepy p…
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/7-strange-musical-secrets-for-making-your-own-scary-soundtrack/
Halloween is upon us, and with Halloween comes a creepy plethora of freaky cult films, scary soundtracks, and a fascination with the horrific and the macabre that overtakes culture by a storm. Learn how to write your own disturbing retro Halloween soundtrack with these seven secrets inspired by the theme from Stranger Things. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/7-strange-musical-secrets-for-making-your-own-scary-soundtrack/
October’s Offerings, Jazz is for Everyone, Spookify Your Songs, and Escaping the Trap
As the fears gather force in anticipation of Halloween, Musical U is facing those fears, taking the mystery out of some concepts that have intimidated and frightened aspiring musicians since the dawn of time.
We deconstruct the myth that jazz is an advanced genre requiring a perfect ear and perfect chops, clue you into the secret of making music sound spooky (it’s not nearly as complicated as you think!), and guide you around that gaping, unseen hole in the ground known as the ear training trap.
But first, let’s see what we’ve added to our already-towering stack of musical resources…
October’s Offerings
It’s been a busy month here at Musical U. Besides our regularly-scheduled programming of ear training tips, podcasts, and musicality advice from the pros, October has seen the addition of three resources for you to sink your teeth into!
First off, we’re releasing a new module to make mastering scales easier than ever. Our new Scale Degree Recognition module will enable you to identify notes of the major scale simply by singing them in solfa (a.k.a. solfege).
Our Instrument Packs have been updated with a lesson in rhythmic precision, teaching you how to hone your inner metronome. Our pros for singing, guitar, bass, and piano all offered up some amazing advice (both general and instrument-specific) on how you can better feel the beat.
And last but absolutely not least, the imminent return of Halloween calls for some scary studies in spookifying your sound! This time around, our resident piano pro Sara Campbell shares the secret of turning upbeat, happy songs into something nicely suited for… a horror movie soundtrack.
Head over to What’s New in Musical U: October 2017 for more details on these new offerings!
Jazz is for Everyone
This week, we interviewed Learn Jazz Standards founder Brent Vaartstra about how the foundations of jazz can be of value to any musician, whether or not they’re interested in jazz itself.
Ear training is an invaluable skill for jazz musicians; this is the foundation of improvisation, playing and singing around the beat while still staying in time, and expressing yourself musically! These lessons benefit musicians of all backgrounds – nobody wants to play robotically.
Brent’s website is a goldmine of resources for any kind of musician, with lessons on chord progressions, intervals, playing by ear, and more. Most importantly, he bridges the gap between learning music theory and actually applying it to your instrument.
Tune into our podcast episode An Ear for Jazz, with Brent Vaartstra to learn about Brent’s musical background, what led him to start Learn Jazz Standards, his teaching philosophy for ear training, and a wonderful freebie he has kindly provided to our listeners to get started with developing their ear!
Brent has such a fascinating story about how he came to be the musician he is today. One interesting aspect was that he was forced, with the mysterious disappearance of his teacher, to begin playing by ear at a very early age. While this is not the path that many of us take, it begs the question, when is the right time to begin playing by ear? Key-notes explores this question.
While most piano players begin with learning by sheet music, guitar players tend to pick up sheet music later. But, what if piano players started the same way that guitar players do? Piano Picnic explains how pianists could benefit from starting without sheet music.
Jazz players often think of music in terms of the chord changes that the chart is built around. This requires an additional step in the ear training process to be able to recognize the chords and anticipate where the music is heading. Jazz Advice has a great guide on anticipating chord transitions!
Jazz is one of the most aurally intensive forms of popular music, in regards to the amount of listening that musicians in this genre tend to do. Today’s jazz musician still looks to the many classics like Miles Davis, The Dave Brubeck Quartet, and Charlie Parker.
But does that mean that good jazz hasn’t been made since back in the day? Absolutely not! Brent Vaartstra compiled this list of 92 modern jazz albums on his blog for you to expand your repertoire.
Spookify Your Songs!
What gives horror movie soundtracks their visceral, hair-raising effect? Why are some melodies so unsettling to the ear? How do different chords and chord progressions lend completely different character to songs?
The answers to these questions are complex, but can be be boiled down to one thing: transposition.
Musical U’s resident piano pro Sara Campbell works her magic on nursery rhymes and other simple, innocent happy notes, and shows how changing just a fewl notes can transforms the song from upbeat and cheery to creepy and foreboding.
Throw your own malicious mix into Sara’s cauldron as you learn to Transpose and Terrify!
Transposition is certainly a valuable skill that any musician will benefit from mastering. For our guitar players, Guitar Trance details how to easily transpose in only four steps.
Transposing into a minor key is just one way that you can make music sound scarier and fit in with your Halloween adventures. Beyond minor, there are many other elements in music that help to create scary music. 12tone shows you the key components of scary music and how you can create your own!
Aside from these types of special effects, there is an interval that is traditionally labeled as the “Devil’s Interval”: the dreaded tri-tone. The tri-tone is a perfect fourth interval, raised by a half step. This essentially splits the diatonic scale in half, creating a sound that you will never forget! Learn more about this staple in horror music from the Sync Project.
During the course of this mini-lesson, three distinctly different minor scales were discussed, which can all be used to make your music more Halloween-y. Rich from Trumpet Planet explores the different types of minor scales, and the key characteristics of each one.
Escaping the Trap
The ear training journey is not without some speed bumps and roadblocks along the way.
It’s easy to do the exercises, but some musicians find themselves in a rut when it comes time to play. Let’s say a guitarist can recognize intervals by ear with no problems, but has a hard time strumming out a perfect fifth when they pick up their instrument.
What’s going on?
Check out About the Ear Training Trap to learn how Musical U can help you avoid this pitfall, and how to best combine ear training and instrumental practice to get the results you want.
Taking all that you are learning in your musical studies -whether it be aural training, music theory, or other bits of instruction – and applying it to your music makingis the missing element to achieving the musical freedom that you are seeking. For another look at this, Todd from Liquidrum describes the importance of learning your instrument and not just your pieces.
There was a fascinating moment in the interview where Brent discussed that the greatest musicians are not just “playing an instrument”, but that the instrument is a vessel for their musical expression. This is particularly enlightening (and inspiring!), and a big reason that we stress singing so much within Musical U. Jay Friedman, principal trombonist for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, has a very similar philosophy.
Singing is a such an important part of ear training, even though most of us are not singers! Don’t be frightened!ou don’t have to be a vocalist to be able to sing through your intervals. If you are uncomfortable with letting your voice free, it will be helpful to start out with some exercises that have reference pitches for you to build on. Let Verba Voice Technique help you on your way:
Apart from applying ear training exercises directly to your instrument, you could take another approach and incorporate the music you are trying to learn. By taking one song, and using sight singing, you willmake great progress in applying your newfound ear training success to real music. The process is really quite simple, as laid out by the School of Popular Music.
Still scared of the dark?
Even with a lantern in hand, the dark places won’t light up until we step inside.
So now that we’ve shone the light on jazz music, transposition, and ear training, step inside without fear – you’ll find treasures you didn’t even know existed.
The post October’s Offerings, Jazz is for Everyone, Spookify Your Songs, and Escaping the Trap appeared first on Musical U.
A good improv can yield hours of good spooky material! We…
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/improvisation-how-to-score-halloween-horror/
A good improv can yield hours of good spooky material! We’re going to use a particular short film clip as an example of how to improvise and then develop your score for a horror movie. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/improvisation-how-to-score-halloween-horror/
“Is ear training even possible for me?” I certainly know …
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/ear-training-possible-impossible/
“Is ear training even possible for me?” I certainly know that feeling. When I was learning music at school I would ask myself this kind of question often. The self-doubt returned later on when I began doing ear training. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/ear-training-possible-impossible/
Finding the Notes Yourself, with Sara Campbell. The Musicality Podcast
New musicality video:
See the piano in a whole new way and learn the value of improvisation with our special guest Sara Campbell from Sara’s Music Studio! https://www.musical-u.com/learn/finding-the-notes-yourself-with-sara-campbell/
Today’s show features Sara Campbell, an accomplished piano and singing teacher based in Pennsylvania.
We met Sara when we were gearing up to launch our Instrument Packs at Musical U. We were searching for someone who excelled in bringing joy and creativity to the process of learning piano and really understood how to develop musicality, not just instrument technique.
She accepted the position and has been doing a terrific job inside Musical U for several months now. But as you’ll discover in this episode, that’s just one example of a variety of cool and interesting projects she’s involved with.
In this episode, we dive deep into how to get started with playing by ear and improvisation. Sara shares insights and specific tips that can be applied on any instrument, not just piano.
She recommends one particular activity you can try today to get started improvising – and the essential warning you’ll need to hear if you want it to go well!
And she reveals a powerful way to flip your understanding of the piano keyboard and see it in a whole new way – something that’ll be useful for anyone who occasionally dabbles on keyboard, not just the devoted piano players among you.
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/finding-the-notes-yourself-with-sara-campbell/
Links
SarasMusicStudio.com: http://sarasmusicstudio.com/
Upbeat Piano Teachers: http://upbeatpianoteachers.com/
Recommended: Tim Topham: https://www.timtopham.com/
Recommended: Andrea Dow: https://www.teachpianotoday.com/
Recommended: Supersonics Piano: https://supersonicspiano.com/
Free download: Celtic music improv: https://sarasmusicstudio.com/2017/10/10/free-celtic-improv-for-piano/
Free download: Pentascale piano charts: https://sarasmusicstudio.com/2016/03/11/circle-of-5ths-pentascale-chart/
Instrument Packs at Musical U: https://www.musical-u.com/instrument-packs/
Axis of Awesome: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOlDewpCfZQ
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Finding the Notes Yourself, with Sara Campbell. The Musicality Podcast
Anyone who loves music senses that magic lies within the …
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/lydian-scale-seeking-ultimate-mysteries-music/
Anyone who loves music senses that magic lies within the relationship from one note to the next. What discoveries can you uncover in this article about the Lydian Scale?
https://www.musical-u.com/learn/lydian-scale-seeking-ultimate-mysteries-music/