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  2. Ear training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ear_training

    For example, free and open source software under the GPL, such as GNU Solfege, often provides many features comparable with those of popular proprietary products. [ citation needed ] Most ear-training software is MIDI -based, permitting the user to customise the instruments used and even to receive input from MIDI-compatible devices such as ...

  3. Improvisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Improvisation

    Techniques of improvisation are widely used in training for performing arts or entertainment; for example, music, theatre and dance. To "extempore" or "ad lib" is basically the same as improvising. Colloquial terms such as "playing by ear", "take it as it comes", and "making it up as [one] goes along" are all used to describe improvisation.

  4. Relative pitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_pitch

    An example, is the different concert pitches used by orchestras playing music from different styles (a baroque orchestra using period instruments might decide to use a higher-tuned pitch). Compound intervals (intervals greater than an octave) can be more difficult to detect than simple intervals (intervals less than an octave).

  5. Interval recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_recognition

    Some music teachers teach their students relative pitch by having them associate each possible interval with the first interval of a popular song. [1] Such songs are known as "reference songs". [ 2 ] However, others have shown that such familiar-melody associations are quite limited in scope, applicable only to the specific scale-degrees found ...

  6. Suzuki method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_method

    The use of sound recordings is another technique common to all the musical instruments taught in the Suzuki method. Pre-recorded music is used to help students learn notes, phrasing, dynamics, rhythm, and tone quality by ear. Suzuki believed that the advent of recording technology made it possible for large numbers of "ordinary" people whose ...

  7. Phonetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonetics

    How sounds make their way from the source to the brain. Audition, the process of hearing sounds, is the first stage of perceiving speech. Articulators cause systematic changes in air pressure which travel as sound waves to the listener's ear. The sound waves then hit the listener's ear drum causing it to vibrate.

  8. 10 Musical Geniuses Who Couldn't Read a Note of Music - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/10-musical-geniuses-could...

    3. Prince. Like many people on this list, Prince made up for not being able to read sheet music by having an unusually good ear for melody and an intuitive sense of what chord should go where. He ...

  9. Musical technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_technique

    So for example, the more I get involved musically the more technically I am accurate." [2] Pamela Frank is quoted as saying: "Practicing technique separate from music, I really don't believe in--the way you play is the way you have practiced. If you have practiced mechanically, you will play mechanically.