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never mind
Last edited by Kojo27; 09-26-2011 at 12:36 AM.
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09-26-2011 12:32 AM
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Originally Posted by fep
If our definitions of "hearing" had been the same, I would have been using your logic.
Looks like *this* is our point of disagreement. With all the respect in the world to you, fep, I believe that if a person is really "hearing" a set of notes, he can sing, hum, whistle, grunt - reproduce, in sound, somehow - those notes he has in his aural imagination. If you don't believe this, Google a bit. 'Tis true. If you can't sing it (or whatever), you aren't hearing it - that's the problem. Singing problems are hearing problems... or really "imagining" problems. Hal Galper talks of this, as does George Kochevitsky in the book Galper got it from. But lots of voice and ear-training teachers have known this for many years.
Thus my statement that a person might *listen* to some music all day, but still be unable to "hear" it -- to vocalize it.
Here is our point of difference in the original problem. "Playing what you hear" - to me - means being able to play what you can reproduce with your mouth or your vocal cords. Because if you "own" a set of notes, you can sing or hum them. However, it seems that, with your definition of "hearing," it means playing anything someone throws at you.
I'd say there probably aren't but a very few, if any, who could do this. Anything? Would take perfect pitch and a highly trained ear just to have a hope, I think.
I said it should be "easy to sing". But, I'll admit singing is not easy for some, so that statement was sloppy. But it doesn't take away from my argument, we aren't talking about singing we're talking about hearing. ....if you can sing it you certainly can hear it, though the opposite is not necessarily true (for those that have difficulties singing)....
Where did I say, "He might "listen" to them all day but still be unable to hear them."
We are talking about very accomplished musicians aren't we? We're talking about musicians that can play anything they hear, right?
You said: "Yet you imply in other parts of your post that if a person can play what he hears, he should be able to play whatever he listens to! A contradiction?"
I don't understand how that's a contradiction.
I understand your position now, and I hope you see mine. "Listen" and "hear" are not, to me, the same thing at all, when we're talking about being able to play what you can hear. I could possibly listen to atonal piano music all day and not be able to reproduce it - see? I don't have the "ears" for it. And I would never create ("hear" and play) an original phrase made up of tones I can't hear.
kj
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
I'm not necessarily trying to thrill the listener with risk-taking. I would rather the listener be thrilled with the overall musicality of the performance. I'm very much a "play for the song" kind of guy, even when soloing.
To that end, extemporaneous melody composition poses very little risk for me. I'm never really in a position that I'm "fishing for clams". There are no "awkward surprises" because what I play in that way is what I intend to play. I am playing melodically, with malice aforethought.
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Originally Posted by EightString
kj
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Originally Posted by EightString
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Originally Posted by Kojo27
To answer the obvious question, for a b5, #5, or a 5, we'd just sing 5 for all of them but think the # or b in our had if that was the note we were after.
I think this method is more suited for jazz, as using scale degrees is part of the vernacular, (e.g. VI ii V I).
KJ wrote: "I'd say there probably aren't but a very few, if any, who could do this. Anything? Would take perfect pitch and a highly trained ear just to have a hope, I think."
I have met two people that can do this. One of them would notate everything she'd listen too in her head. She said she has a really hard time turning it off, she does it without thinking about it. It makes it hard for her to just relax and listen to music. She's a young piano teacher I took lessons from. My favorite is her tune Fronk:
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Originally Posted by Kojo27
Ah, no, I don't use solfege at all. I use a relative approach that used to be more conscious, but it has been absorbed into my subconscious from decades worth of playing.
So, I'm usually not thinking of the note values at all, but of their intervalic relationships to the preceding notes and to the chords and changes. I also think ahead with melodies as well, so I might "pre compose" a little melody right before I play it.
This is how I also approach chord work, always with relative movement and "hearing" the changes before they come.
But again, it's more subconscious. In a way, it has to be, because I'm a singer, and I can't be consciously thinking too much about chord changes and fills while I'm trying to deliver a good vocal performance.
On a related note, I would bet that the fact that I play guitar WHILE I sing has a good deal to do with forcing me to deal with this stuff in my subconscious.
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Originally Posted by fep
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To me, the fundamental goal is to be able to sing everything, and instantly find/transfer those notes on the board. Also, how are you going to respond to what someone else has just played or is playing if you can't hear and identify those notes on the fly? I.e., to take and develop a line, you have to know the line. It's all very simple, but, at the same time, very difficult to properly execute, because it requires a lot of ear training, particularly for me, because I did not grow up singing. I'm trying to spend some time away from the guitar, at the piano, match pitches, etc. Musicians in other fields don't have to worry about this as much, but , to me, its a "sin qua non" element, JAZZ 101.
Also, another function of scatting or singing your lines, even if you don't the notes exactly, at least you have the RHYTHMIC contours of your line. To me, a melodious/lyrical line played with a a great groove is the most important thing.
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