![]() I think simply playing songs you know(or can sing), could be a path. If you can play from notation already, infusing a tune into your brain seems much harder. Doesn't matter which scale as the intervals are the important part in the beginning. Then i found a major scale on my fingerboard. is constructing a model of a major scale. In my limited experience of Auralia that has been great too a lot more indepth and wide ranging than functional ear trainer as far as i can see but not free.Īll you need is a model of the intervals in your memory. ![]() I'm not a big fan of technology for the sake of it or being seen as a shortcut, but to me something like the functional ear trainer is what computers are great for - it's hard to get practice of recognising random tones because when you create them then you're obviously aware what note your playing, and there's only so much time that someone else will devote to playing notes / chords on a keyboard just so you can guess them. ![]() I think there's no real substitution for playing music, but the functional ear trainer suggests you use it for 10 minutes 3 times a week, so unless you hardly have any practice time at all, it's not going to eat in to your playing time much, and if it even slightly increases your tonal perception in the hours when you are just at your instrument with the computer off then it's been worth it. So playing your mandolin is my suggestion, forget the software. ![]() I have used ear training software while on airplanes and such. I don't know for sure, but I think playing is better ear training than messing with your computer. ![]()
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