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Hoots : How to identify the duration of notes that I hear (In my head or on records) This is something that bothers me for too long, not that I practiced it, much but every time I try to practice it seems like climbing a mountain. - freshhoot.com

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How to identify the duration of notes that I hear (In my head or on records)
This is something that bothers me for too long, not that I practiced it, much but every time I try to practice it seems like climbing a mountain.

How do you identify the note duration of a note that you hear on a piece of music (whole/half/quarter/eight... e.t.c). I try to count the music but I always get lost, if it's something easy and straight forward, of course I can find out what's being played, but if it's something fast or contains triplets and dotted notes I get lost.

Are there any tips to make the processes easier?


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One thing that has helped me in the past is doing “conductor” style counting with my hand. That’s probably nowhere near an official term haha.

Anyway, it’s a good VISUAL representation of the beats I think.

So for example you start with you hand out in the air and on beat one you move your hand down.

Beat two is across your chest, beat three is to the opposite side of beat two, then beat four is up. Then you start over. That’s really hard to explain through text but hopefully that makes sense.

There are different hand patterns to count different time signatures too. Like 3/4 is down, across, up I believe?

Anyway, I always felt like actually SEEING the beats helped a great deal with figuring out note lengths. And you have the ability to really slow it down too since you’re the one controlling it.

Also, if it was a more complicated rhythm, I always made my movements more “robotic” and returned to a center position after each beat to count the 8th notes in between the down beats.


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I found that the best thing to do for me was to "memorize" certain rhythmic patterns. From a young age, we used Kodaly rhythmic solfege, so the simpler rhythms were very natural for me.

It makes sense to start with combinations of quarters and quarter rests. Then move to combinations of quarters with eighths, etc.


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You could try this rhythm training app: play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.civogames.rythmmaster it's quite similar to a lot of what I had to do in music school. Otherwise, there's progressive rhythm reading methods. I'm sure practicing reading rhythms will help with identifying them.


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