![]() Most days its about 20-30 minutes a day but for several weeks i was ear training for anywhere up to 5 hours in a day. I've been working on ear training pretty much daily for the last 11 months since i restarted playing guitar after a 20 year break. (at least that's what i've been told is possible.) Ok so the goal is to be able to hear a melody or chord progression and be able to name/play the relative scale degrees or chord numbers without having to fish around for them on an instrument and find them by trial and error. The meat and potatoes kind of ear training. I'm looking to have daily 10 to 20 minute sessions, with or without the bass (without is even better), and I would like some "functional" ear training centered on melodies and harmonies and chord progressions. So I want to start ear training, and I need your advice. I throughly impressed by people capable to play things on the fly, identify tonality and chords in a matter of seconds. I have trouble transcribing melodies, and even more so when there are several instruments layering. I often have trouble identifying the tonality and especially the chords (I can for example identify a chord as minor instead of major, or take the fifth for the root). Well, I've been doing music rather seriously for 4 years now, and I hear and reproduce rhythm rather easily, I know basic music theory (chords, chord tones, scales, chromatisms) and can apply them when playing or composing. Hello, everyone, my name is Belzebass, and I have a problem with hearing notes and chords.
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