Ear and singing training
I have read plenty of different questions related to ear training, even way more answers, but I'm still struggling to obtain a clear-cut answer (provided that it exists). I have taken up on singing lessons a few years ago and although my technique is considered to be very decent during the exercises (it has been confirmed by a few teachers) I kinda fall to transpose these right feelings to singing songs. I have started playing piano a year ago and have a long guitar experience of about 8 years.
At some point I thought it might my hearing that stops me from making a progress I expect to see, so eversince I have been trying to pay more attention to that. Here's what I tried:
Singing notes, intervals (repeating! vocally) – I play a note (or intervals) on the piano and then try to sing (repeat) it. I think it works quite well.
Comparing intervals – this is what made me think that maybe my hearing is not as good as it should be! Even though I can compare two notes right off the bat and so it is with simple intervals like m2 and M2 I somehow struggle when it comes to, for instance, m3 and M3; my score on an Android app PerfectEar2 is 70/210 what means I am right (whether it is m3 or M3) in ~67% of cases. I have tried using songs as references but I'm not sure this is the way I want to go, as this method doesn't really involve the "context" of an interval, colour and many things that are intrinsic for (for?) a complex approach. I wonder if it makes any sense to keep on guessing and keep my fingers crossed that after one million of attempts I will have made a progress?
Functional Ear Training – teaches you to recognize a scale degree in context to the tonic of a chord progression. I haven't really spent much time on it, but what do you think? Is it a promising method?
Transcripting music – mainly melodic lines so as to learn how to sing a song properly. Nowadays I rarely practice it that way, maybe it is worth to dredge it up.
To all who have come through this – a big shoutout. Now here comes my question – could you please give me any piece of advice on how to practice? What should I do? I'd be really grateful.
1 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
You are on the right pathway. Functional training and transcribing or even composing your own music is the best way for ear training.
Additional to this good method you can choose two-part pieces like inventions, fugues, canons playing one voice and singing the other one.
Finally my most successful practice and secret tip was the training with the movable doremi (solfege) combined with functional training:
E.g resolving V7-I, especially the dim 7th chords, the augmented 5th triad and all kind of German-, French-, Italian sixth chords.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © freshhoot.com2025 All Rights reserved.