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tag:Ear Sharpener is an intense but simple game that provides the musical training you need to help you hear what'...
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Ear Sharpener is an intense but simple game that provides the musical training you need to help you hear what's happening both melodically and harmonically in music - whether you're listening to something that's playing on the stereo, at the club, or in your head.
How To Play:
You'll hear a cadence in C (a IV-V-I), and then a random note. You indicate what note you think you heard. Once you get it right, you'll be presented with another cadence and random note, repeating until you pass the level.
To pass a level, you need a streak of 20 correct answers, and each answer must be given within one second of hearing the note/chord.
For Beginners: Rather than diving right into all 12 notes, the first few levels are incredibly easy - in the first level, for example, you have to distinguish between just the notes C and G.
If you already have a pretty good ear: Start with the last exercise under "Beginner / Notes I". The note recognition will be easy for you, and you'll have a chance to get used to how the game works.
Eventually, you'll progress in baby steps to all the diatonic notes, and then all twelve tones, and then through a gradually widening note range (whereas at first, the notes are restricted to the Middle-C octave). At that point, you're in a pretty good place, ear-wise, but you can further increase your skills with multiple-simultaneous-note exercises.
There is a similar baby-steps path for triads, where you are identifying the root, starting out with root position C and G chords, and ending with triads in various inversions in various voicings built on all twelve tones.
Ear Sharpener comes with 140 preset levels, but also gives you the ability to design your own custom levels, where you can change the cadence keys, or have the app randomly change the cadence keys, or opt to not hear the cadences at all.
Here are some notable things that this app *does not* work on:
Chord qualities: The app will play you major, minor, augmented, and diminished triads, but it only cares whether you can identify the root.
Intervals: Ear Sharpener doesn't deal with the vocabulary ("major third", "perfect 5th") used in interval training. Interval training helps you to identify the "distance" between two notes (pretty useful), whereas Ear Sharpener will train you to hear notes in the context of some specific tonal center (much more useful).
Playing with friends: There is no replacement for the lessons you will learn by getting together with your friends and improvising music on a regular basis.
4
out of
13 reviews
Size
14.1 MB
Last update
Aug. 25, 2015