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Practical guides on relative pitch, intervals, chords, scales, and learning music by ear.
A practical ear training routine you can actually follow: notes, intervals, chords, and scales, ordered by skill so beginners know exactly what to do daily.
Guitar ear training that connects fretboard shapes to sound, so you can find songs by ear, hear chord changes, and stop relying on tabs. A practical routine.
Chord progression ear training that works: think in scale degrees, follow the bass, learn the I-V-vi-IV pop chords, and hear where the harmony wants to go.
Perfect pitch is rarer than you think, around 1 in 10,000. Here is what the number really means, whether it is genetic, and if adults can learn it.
How to play piano by ear, step by step: find the key, pick out the melody, hear the bass move, and name chords by sound. The honest, trainable method.
Two methods strong ears use together: reference songs and the feel of each interval, plus a short daily routine to recognize intervals by ear for good.
Singing in tune is a hearing skill first. Learn why you sing off-key, how to match pitch, and the simple pitch-matching drills that actually fix it.
A complete interval song chart for all 12 intervals, ascending and descending, with famous tunes you already know. Plus how to actually use it to train your ear.
Major vs minor chords, keys, and scales all hinge on one note: the third. Here's the by-ear tell, why happy-vs-sad only half-works, and a drill to lock it in.
What solfege is, the do-re-mi solfege syllables, movable do vs fixed do, and how "do = home" trains your ear to hear every note by its place in a key.
A tritone is the augmented fourth nicknamed the "devil's interval." Here is what it sounds like in real songs and how to train your ear to hear it.
What an interval is, how intervals are named, and how all 12 sound, from the minor second to the octave. A plain-English primer for training your ear.
Ear training is the skill of recognizing music by ear — notes, intervals, chords, and scales. Here's what it is, why it matters, and how to actually practice it.
Perfect pitch gets the hype, but relative pitch is the skill that working musicians actually use — and unlike perfect pitch, you can train it as an adult.
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