JAZZ Ear Training They DON'T Teach You In Music School

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 187

  • @ElizabethStJohnRamirez
    @ElizabethStJohnRamirez Před 3 lety +18

    Studied with Bob Magnusson, the bass player for Sarah Vaughn. He said that Sarah's ear was incredible. If something wasn't to her 'Standard', she'd stop the band and sing the chord she wanted. She knew the sound she wanted precisely, note for note. So this is great, right on.... Thanks for sharing it.

  • @Garrett_Rowland
    @Garrett_Rowland Před 3 lety +12

    First minute and 20 seconds: Hey this is pretty cool, I bet I can get this down with a bit of practice.
    Next 40 seconds: Maybe more than just a bit... lol

  • @JariSatta
    @JariSatta Před 6 lety +50

    Superb! Supercharging relative pitch.
    Unofficially:
    Passive Relative Pitch = listening and naming notes with an aid of a reference pitch.
    Active Relative Pitch = producing lines and chords in your mind and then playing them.
    There are two types of perfect pitch: active and passive. A person with active perfect pitch is able to sing or hum any given pitch; that is, if they are asked to sing a Bb without hearing the said note or any reference note, they can sing it without any problem.
    If a person with passive perfect pitch is asked to sing the same Bb note, they cannot. However, if a random note is played for them, a person with passive perfect pitch will be able to name it without any problem.
    A person with Bilateral Perfect Pitch can do both*
    ( I don't know the exact English translation for 'Bilateral' here, the original study is in Finnish. We could use 'two-sided' in place of bilateral. (Finn: Kaksisuuntainen = bidirectional)

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 6 lety +7

      That's interesting - I've never really read up on any studies about it. I do remember years ago I heard a very interesting guest on WNYC music radio show, who was saying they had studied more than 2000 people with perfect pitch, and found that as those people get older, their 'pitch' goes up. In other word, a person would hear a C as a C# later in life. Someone called in to the program and claimed to have had exactly that experience. I certainly did not know any of the terms you presented here.

    • @eliser2467
      @eliser2467 Před 5 lety +1

      That's what's happening to me, it's really confusing! If I could stop hearing the notes I could use my relative pitch just like anyone else but this voice in my head keeps singing those notes, and now they are wrong! :'(

    • @ghost_evermore
      @ghost_evermore Před 5 lety

      Bilateral perfect pitch is what I have. For some reason I can't name intervals without counting the distance between the notes though. Idk why lol

    • @Mishtiman
      @Mishtiman Před 5 lety

      @@TimCollinsVibes Ur terrific!! Natural talent.

    • @Philrc
      @Philrc Před 4 lety +2

      There's no such thing as active and passive perfect pitch. I don't know where you got those ideas. It's nonsense

  • @taura101
    @taura101 Před 2 lety +3

    Don't know how many ear training videos I have seen but this is one of the best 8 minutes I have seen. Props.

  • @PalEllingsen
    @PalEllingsen Před 3 lety +4

    I’m sitting here at the piano singing bmaj7 over cmaj7 and my kids thinks i’m crazy. Thanks! Brilliant excercises.

  • @heliodoroherrera7827
    @heliodoroherrera7827 Před 5 lety +7

    Great ideas Tim, thank you!!
    One practice I do is to take a 4 voice Bach chorale and sing
    one part while playing the other 3 on the piano, and then doing all
    parts in the same way.

  • @photoallergic
    @photoallergic Před 5 lety +4

    Nr. 4, the "Surprise Play-Along" ... wow, that's such a powerful exercise because it forces playing and improvising outside of the comfort zone. I noticed that once my concentration goes down, I subconsciously go back to movements and licks that I practiced the most.
    For Ableton Live users like me, shuffle-playing chords is easily done:
    - In a single MIDI track, record one bar (1 chord) per clip
    - With, say, 12 subsequent clips in the track, set "follow action" to "random" so it would randomly repeat the same clip or continue playing one of the 11 other clips
    - Add a drum track with a minimalistic 12-bar drum loop
    - Set tempo and hit "play"

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +3

      Thanks for the tip! I know absolutely nothing about Ableton Live. You could probably go crazy with that idea and record random 2-5-1s or even crazier stuff as well.

    • @photoallergic
      @photoallergic Před 5 lety

      @@TimCollinsVibes Exactly. I can't recommend Ableton Live for mixing and mastering, but for fooling around with clips, it's just perfect. Thanks again for the video!

  • @andrewtrieu7585
    @andrewtrieu7585 Před 6 lety +29

    Tim Collins is my music teacher in real life

  • @sliverhandsonbasses
    @sliverhandsonbasses Před 2 lety +3

    As a bass player I’ve found a creative drill in singing a triad/inversion and than moving the bass (played on the instrument) around, just paying attention not only to the overall sound, but also on how the same triad seems to “change color” reacting to the different bass. It can be a fun take on working on your ear in a way more similar to what a pianist does.

  • @undergroundfitclub1
    @undergroundfitclub1 Před 5 lety +9

    LOTS OF GREAT EAR TRAINING PRACTICE TIPS THAT are UNIQUE...
    THANKS TIM!

  • @subramaniantr2091
    @subramaniantr2091 Před 4 lety +2

    This is good direction. I have seen people giving random chords. We want "why" and not "what" to learn. This makes more sense from a very brut force perspective. You need to know just notes in order to clear this step. It's quite difficult. But I've hope. Thank you.

  • @yashasvibhardwaj6454
    @yashasvibhardwaj6454 Před 16 dny

    Thankyou for inspiring me to practice this way❤❤❤❤loads of love for you❤

  • @pierre-andredaignault3482
    @pierre-andredaignault3482 Před 4 lety +12

    This is were I realize that not practicing solfeggio when you were young comes back to bite you in the as...

  •  Před 4 lety +2

    Man!! Glad to watch this not only about the content but the commitment about your ear training! Beautiful to watch it practicing by yourself because alongside your casual mistakes, it demonstrates the time and effort you put in those exercises. Loved it!!

  • @IRACEMABABU
    @IRACEMABABU Před 6 lety +2

    What helped me a lot about ear was to had learned to sing well in tune, to become a singer (not a good one but a decent one). That means to learn how to sing notes with a good amount of precsion, without to damage the voice (respiration, air colomn, use of facial bones as resonators, belly breathing, use of diaphragm, etc....). It forced me to really pay attention to the notes, to imagine them before to sing, and to be able to apply all the needed technique to sing them. Each note becomes very specific, internalized. Very good training for anticipation in music. When i was young i had the oportunity as guitarist to play with dancing bands, very great way to develop your ears too, since you have to comp for various musicians, all with their own repertoire, often without sheet music, then all by ear...
    And thanks for this excellent lesson !

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah - there are so many great ways to work on it. With my school classes we do lots of Solfege singing (Do Re Mi)

    • @jeanlucchapelon
      @jeanlucchapelon Před 5 lety

      Yes !
      I think it’s a good thing to play with bands for dancers it will developpe the ears !!

  • @Kundebeats
    @Kundebeats Před 3 lety +1

    WOW!! This excercise is by far one of the most efficient ones I've ever tried! Thanks a lot for sharing

  • @strictlybythenumbers
    @strictlybythenumbers Před 5 lety

    This is the Zlotnick pivot system. Very few people know this method of ear training. I learned it in music school back in Chicago around 1970's. Good work.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +1

      I’ve never heard of that- I’ll have to check it out!

  • @Wildepicureism
    @Wildepicureism Před 5 lety +10

    Hey Tim , thanks a lot for the video it gives great input on how to develop a good ear. Could you do a course out of it???. Like a methodical way to develop those principles for unmethodical people like me. I'm sure a lot of people like me would pay for such a thing. Please think about it. Thanks

  • @Bipedlocomotion
    @Bipedlocomotion Před 5 lety +3

    Genius. Revolutionary. Beautiful. Bravo.

  • @alexbayer9294
    @alexbayer9294 Před 5 lety +1

    Hey Tim, thanks for the great video. I did this: back in college, I made 12 game cards and every card had a different note on it . So came up with a lot of ways to play ear-training games, with the help of the chards I created e.g. random 12-tone-rows, random intervals/tri-chords or root movements and then I tried singing them. Sometimes I just used 7 seven and created diatonic exercises...

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +1

      Man that's a cool idea. I was thinking about something similar to that but with little phrases on them. Could be cool too.

    • @alexbayer9294
      @alexbayer9294 Před 5 lety +1

      @@TimCollinsVibes That's also a cool idea too, but man I'm a bassist... a single pitch is enough for us ... haha just joking

  • @maxpower7916
    @maxpower7916 Před 3 lety +3

    love your videos Tim - you have super teaching skills!

  • @ditschnluis1
    @ditschnluis1 Před 6 lety +2

    What i often tried is to take a simple folk tune or childrens song or something like that, where you just know how the melody sounds but you don't how it looks on sheet music, and you try to play trough just by ear with playing as many right notes as you can. you can then always adjust the difficulty level if you're gettin trained with this method, i still do it, not often enough i have to admit ;)

  • @Iluminacion32
    @Iluminacion32 Před 6 lety +5

    You are extraordinary my friend, if I can call you that! Wonderful! Nice ear trining skills! Congratulations!

  • @br4648
    @br4648 Před 6 lety +47

    I sing telephone numbers to practise ear training AND help me remember the numbers. I decide in advance which scale/mode/chord I'm going to be using, zeros get a rest. I might make a tune up based on all my friends' telephone numbers and call it 'Friendship Song'. Before someone else says it, I guess with habits such as this, my song probably won't be very long... 😢 Well, anyway, MY telephone number makes a great tune! 😄👍

    • @darrenshearer1730
      @darrenshearer1730 Před 4 lety

      In a day and age where we don't tend to memorize phone numbers, that's a pretty great technique. I think I'm going to try this out.

    • @br4648
      @br4648 Před 4 lety

      @@darrenshearer1730 You'll never look back. When I have to remember my home telephone number, I just hear my song. It's in the mixolydian mode, just so you know.

    • @darrenshearer1730
      @darrenshearer1730 Před 4 lety

      @@br4648 I assume some tunes sound better in different modes? I think it might be a challenge if you have no 3's and a lot of 4's, but could be interesting. Do you ever add words to the songs?

    • @br4648
      @br4648 Před 4 lety +1

      @@darrenshearer1730 Yah, I choose a mode depending on the numbers available, so as you have surmised, my tel number has some 3s, 5s and 7s. I do actually make up lyrics to melodies I'm trying to memorise. The last one I did was for Billie's Bounce. I will basically do anything to try and add another dimension to music to help me to learn it on a deep level.

  • @tehenga38nz
    @tehenga38nz Před 4 lety +2

    I have tried the bass note singing thing in the past. Must go back to it.
    Also like to sing 2nd parts of duet while playing the other part. Easy parts from William Leavitt Berklee guitar method. Also harmonising with voice while playing scales with certain intervals e.g. consecutive thirds. Playing straight up and down at first then random order.

    • @cyomara89
      @cyomara89 Před 3 lety

      Hey there, can I ask you a question about this? Firstly, can you tell me anything more about the bass exercise, or ANY bass exercise, that you've found helpful?
      And When you're doing the scale thing, you're just choosing an interval, and going through the scale consecutively? So you'd play 'c', and sing 'e', then play 'd' and sing 'f'?? And then you'd pick a random note, and try to sing that third instantly?
      And did you branch out to other intervals? (Sorry if this, or any of these, are naive questions!).
      Many, many thanks for your time. Jeff

  • @jokmenen_
    @jokmenen_ Před 4 lety +3

    This is insane! Thanks for the exercises

  • @vecernicek2
    @vecernicek2 Před 5 lety +2

    I play incomplete chords and sing other chord tones or tensions. Eg., play 1-3-7 and sing flat 13

  • @bigdog38au
    @bigdog38au Před 4 lety +3

    Love this! Killer exercises...thanks Tim!!

  • @bradking658
    @bradking658 Před rokem +1

    ,😮 this is very advanced.And Kool too, thank you for sharing this Tim 🤘😎

  • @pamq25k58
    @pamq25k58 Před 6 lety +113

    the first 2 minutes made me depressed

    • @perfectbeat
      @perfectbeat Před 6 lety +3

      You are not alone. :-) :-(

    • @futurfry
      @futurfry Před 5 lety +1

      That exercise is really really good do it

    • @verandi3882
      @verandi3882 Před 5 lety +3

      same , i was all like , how is he doing that ? this is amazing

  • @mark_sax_alex
    @mark_sax_alex Před 6 lety +5

    Tim, thank you so much! It's a great lesson ! Very interesting and useful!!

  • @JulietRobin
    @JulietRobin Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much Tim. I immediately subscribed. I'm excited about this video. Ive always gotten total marks in aural part of my music exams. This is great. I'm so glad I found your awesome channel.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks! Glad to hear you find the videos useful. I promise there are more coming soon.

  • @ChristofferKeizer
    @ChristofferKeizer Před 2 lety +1

    Radical. That would make music much easier. Haha.

  • @markwolfersberger3573
    @markwolfersberger3573 Před 6 lety +2

    Amazingly creative eat training! Wow. That gives me a lot to think (sing) about. Thanks for sharing.

  • @guygrumach7105
    @guygrumach7105 Před 4 lety +2

    thanks so much looks like an amazing technique

  • @zachbrock8159
    @zachbrock8159 Před 3 lety +1

    Late to the party, but this is KILLIN’!!!

  • @Debsquall
    @Debsquall Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome work man! Great exercises!

  • @PalEllingsen
    @PalEllingsen Před 3 lety

    For fun I use to sing exploded chords, like C-G-E, C-B-E or just C-E with a 10th between the C and E. I can sing along to songs singing the chords, or just sing the exploded songs to myself and have the melody in my head. I guess that if I practised it enough I would be able to improvise over it while doing it, but I’m not that good yet.

  • @yes_its_THE_Dave_Alleckna

    Very cool! Gotta check that out! Thanks for the great ideas! Cheers from Hamburg!

  • @olafschneider77
    @olafschneider77 Před 6 lety

    A good technique I learned from Walter Norris many years ago:
    Play a scale with your left hand. Play another scale with your right hand. Sing a third scale simultaneously.
    Good to start with: LH C major, RH G major, Sing E major.
    Hard stuff: LH C major, RH D major, Sing Db major.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah that sounds like a good way to scramble one's brain ;) I suppose it's not all that different from trying to sing one song while another song is playing on the radio somewhere.

  • @kebabroyal5682
    @kebabroyal5682 Před 5 lety +1

    Now that's useful to practice. Thanks.

  • @jeffreyoliver4822
    @jeffreyoliver4822 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Tim, great ideas

  • @josephwright8752
    @josephwright8752 Před 4 lety

    I was hoping this would teach me how to hear entire chords in my head. I think this method of ear training is very valuable nonetheless and a great resource for people that took the standard college ear training route.

  • @broggsey
    @broggsey Před 3 lety

    Brilliant stuff

  • @RemyTrahant
    @RemyTrahant Před 3 lety

    What a great exercise, thanks, Tim!

  • @orritomasson6781
    @orritomasson6781 Před 5 lety

    Great exercises and ideas!
    Thanks for sharing and the effort of making the video.
    I had to simplify a lot to get started. I just did 3rds and 5ths on major chords to begin with and will then need to add more notes and chords. Will probably take some weeks or months.

  • @gedinchristian603
    @gedinchristian603 Před 2 lety +1

    Very impressive . Fo me it's impossible to do that!!! "It's a kind of magic"!! Do you have a formation beginning by A... B...C?

  • @etkagban
    @etkagban Před 6 lety +6

    fantastic...thanks for sharing.

  • @tanhongzhi2637
    @tanhongzhi2637 Před 6 lety

    that is some really good methods from you ! thank you!

  • @simplehonestmusic2261
    @simplehonestmusic2261 Před 4 lety

    This is AMAZING!!!! Thank you for this!!

  • @luisfeliperey
    @luisfeliperey Před 5 lety

    Great exercises Tim, thank you

  • @goncalocorreia3203
    @goncalocorreia3203 Před 3 lety

    This is incredible. Thank you.

  • @cam-biofundacion2429
    @cam-biofundacion2429 Před 5 lety

    the sound of the doing around stuff while you are in a tune! the sound of each thing around you in your tune"

  • @TheUpvalley
    @TheUpvalley Před 6 lety

    I remember some of this exercises, this material Is very helpful, thanks a Lot! It makes me remember the exercisrs in Paul Hindemith's Book. Tim... You are great. Best

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 6 lety +3

      I remember doing some of this with you guys in Argentina - still one of my favorite musical trip memories! Hope all is well with you.

  • @SpeedyBangBong
    @SpeedyBangBong Před 4 lety

    I think I would need something more begginer friendly, like decomposition of those methods, but I will try anyway. This is a wonderful work Tim, thank you :)

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 4 lety +2

      Start by singing scales and triads :)

    • @SpeedyBangBong
      @SpeedyBangBong Před 4 lety

      @@TimCollinsVibes Thank you, sure I will! Even though your lesson is above my level at this point, it sure made me want to achieve singing those shiny Maj7#11 chords! :)

  • @koka7366
    @koka7366 Před 3 lety

    Wow what awesome concepts mindblowing

  • @Chilajuana
    @Chilajuana Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome Tutorial!!!!!!!!!!

  • @rob.elo.music.
    @rob.elo.music. Před 6 lety +1

    This is great! Thank you!

  • @michaelbetts9645
    @michaelbetts9645 Před 3 lety +1

    Hold my bottle of scotch... I've got this

  • @insidejazzguitar8112
    @insidejazzguitar8112 Před rokem +1

    Whoa!

  • @gregorgiebel1377
    @gregorgiebel1377 Před 4 lety

    Not very creative but useful is the following exercise: after being able to arpeggiate the chords of a tune: start singing the notes of each given chord in another order. Then add rhythm. Once you are comfortable with this, add diatonic or chromatic passing notes, while checking after a few bars, whether you are still in tune. A metronome can help with the rhythm.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 4 lety +1

      That is a great exercise! You said it’s not creative but I disagree

  • @peptonibrotons5480
    @peptonibrotons5480 Před 4 lety

    Great job! Thanks!

  • @gejugfeguug5623
    @gejugfeguug5623 Před 5 lety

    This is amazing! Thank u!

  • @jimgresham5529
    @jimgresham5529 Před rokem +1

    Show-off 😁

  • @Solomon.Y_Music
    @Solomon.Y_Music Před 2 lety

    Beautiful explaining 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🙌

  • @daniellecaballero3152
    @daniellecaballero3152 Před 2 měsíci

    Your awesomeness 😮😊

  • @bradford_shaun_murray
    @bradford_shaun_murray Před 6 lety +1

    4:29 that's the ball crusher right there...

  • @simonsprague4178
    @simonsprague4178 Před 3 lety +1

    Do you still do these exercises? And how useful have you found them to be over time? Thanks!

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah - I need to do this every so often just to maintain it. I definitely have days when I feel like I'm getting worse at it!

  • @philipbrown2225
    @philipbrown2225 Před 3 lety

    very cool

  • @metalmilitia137
    @metalmilitia137 Před 3 lety +1

    Question on the 4th method - should the root for all the chords be the same, so like C7, Cmaj7, Csus, etc? Or is trying to figure out the changing roots as well as qualities part of the challenge? That sounds super tough if so. Also, kinda specific, but did you add a metronome somehow to keep time or is it more rubato? Thanks!

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 3 lety +2

      Good question - really you could do it any way you wanted. When I did it, I made all of the chord qualities the same (like say, Minor/Major 7th) and each track was just a different root.. so I had to figure out the root movement. But I suppose you could put every possible type of chord into the system, with all 12 root possibilities, and just have random chords coming out that you have to find your way around improvising. Sounds like a good time! hehe

    • @metalmilitia137
      @metalmilitia137 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TimCollinsVibes Cool, thanks!

  • @MinorSwing-qu3ku
    @MinorSwing-qu3ku Před 4 lety

    oh my you are so good

  • @calcal5135
    @calcal5135 Před 5 lety +2

    Hi Tim
    In what part of the world do you live? My emphasis is playing totally by ear and I would like to further improve my ear. I would love to take some in-person lessons. I am in the San Francisco Bay Area.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks for the comment.. well, I live in Munich, Germany. So if you decide to come to Oktoberfest we can make that happen!

  • @dajoelfoss2856
    @dajoelfoss2856 Před 6 lety +13

    This video is definitely not for everyone

  • @sansundertalefrommegalovania

    I love jazz and this was very interesting! Congratulations! Also, you're pretty convinced you don't want perfect pitch... I mean, you're right, you can guess intervals and that stuff without knowing the pitch, but it's wonderful to feel different things when listening to different keys/chords. Like, if I play a song in F minor and next day I play it again in E minor, people won't realize, but I will give me completely different feelings, which is beautiful! I can experiment with keys. That's the only thing that people without perfect pitch should want!

  • @futurfry
    @futurfry Před 5 lety

    Hey this is really good. Keep it up plz

  • @DutchGuyMaasland
    @DutchGuyMaasland Před 4 lety +1

    awesome!

  • @kevdean9967
    @kevdean9967 Před 4 lety

    I'd like to hear you do the theme to The Great White North the Bob and Doug Mackenzie show from SCTV!!!

  • @jeanlucchapelon
    @jeanlucchapelon Před 5 lety

    Thanks

  • @crapadopalese
    @crapadopalese Před měsícem +1

    1:18 singing Eb instead of D there... How effective is this technique? 😂

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před měsícem

      Ah. I made a mistake. I guess the whole video is useless now?

  • @noeldl6973
    @noeldl6973 Před 2 lety

    Sooooo this is how you practice to perfect pitch

  • @610231718
    @610231718 Před 4 lety

    Please sing rainbow connection

  • @deangrande7002
    @deangrande7002 Před 6 lety +1

    Awesome

  • @bobwrotenstien315
    @bobwrotenstien315 Před 4 lety

    As an example, when you are making your tone the maj7 of some chord, what is your brain process to find the chord, do you find the root by going up a half step and then think of a major triad, or are you "working down from my note a M3, then down a m3 then down a M3" or some other method ?

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 4 lety +1

      Hmm.. I think i find the root by going up a half step, but then down the chord from there (P4, m3, M3)

  • @anthonysilva5312
    @anthonysilva5312 Před 5 lety

    Impressive

  • @qweqwe-sb9gj
    @qweqwe-sb9gj Před 5 lety +1

    What is actually G7alt chord? is it with #4 , #2, ..??? Thank you.

    • @qweqwe-sb9gj
      @qweqwe-sb9gj Před 5 lety

      @Some Phaggot Thank you. God bless you.

  • @HaukeRenken
    @HaukeRenken Před 6 lety +1

    great lesson Tim! Cool that you're putting out so much content lately, really like it. Also, your ears are incredible!! one five seveeeen. one three five seveeennn.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah - I left the mistakes in there on purpose too ;) Glad you appreciate it! I'm trying to stick with one video per week.

  • @tetrachr0macy
    @tetrachr0macy Před 6 lety

    AWESOME!!!!!!

  • @christyherron_
    @christyherron_ Před 5 lety

    Great ideas, very helpful, thanks

  • @Jazzmarcel
    @Jazzmarcel Před 5 lety

    Dam!..........this cat has big fucking ears! Please make more videos!

  • @lucaridolfo6668
    @lucaridolfo6668 Před 5 lety

    Hi Tim, just a question: you, as a comper, how do you train your ear in order to understand what the soloist is playing at that exact moment? I'm really trying to figure it out to understand at the "light-speed" which target notes the soloist is landing to or simply the scale he/she is using. I think a good training would be to listen to a lot of soloists, transcribe them and get the sound into your ear. thanks!

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +2

      It depends on how well you know the soloist, and how much of the language they are using that you have practiced yourself. I sometimes recognize things other people play because I've spent time trying to play the same things before. Certain 'tricks' that people use are easy to hear once you've practiced it yourself. Also - I think one of the best things people can do is talk about it with the soloists after the gig/rehearsal/session whatever.. "Hey, what was that cool riff you did in this spot'... when you freeze frame these little moments, you can have a chance to make a musical response without the pressure of 'real time reaction'. Over time I think those things slowly seep in and you can react more quickly. Also - your last point about transcribing is absolutely correct :) Get the sound in your ear!

    • @lucaridolfo6668
      @lucaridolfo6668 Před 5 lety +1

      @@TimCollinsVibes Thanks for your fast reply! Your reply makes totally sense, and I'll tune into it. I was lucky enough to follow a masterclass with Brad Mehldau and it was incredible how he was catching all the phrases that the saxophonist was playing, but also incorporating those choices into his voicings, expecially with his top note of the chord!

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety +2

      Yeah he is one of the best at that...

  • @Philrc
    @Philrc Před 3 lety

    why are my comments being deleted?

  • @davidzamora9973
    @davidzamora9973 Před rokem

    So I'm going to put this into guitar speak. I feel like my ears were at Black Sabbath Iron Man ability level and then I see this Yngwie Malmsteen of ears here sing an E#/Cb 9.5 b17 chord and now I'm just like shit... This dude could probably fart out jazz chords better than I can sing a major triad . And he's not even a Japanese twelve year old! You know, that kind of phenom you know is out there. But this is just cruel. Why is life so unfair?!

  • @inusadawuda.official
    @inusadawuda.official Před 5 lety

    Good but I do ear training by singing and using Solfege it makes life easier) Thanks for the vid though.

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 5 lety

      I also use solfege a lot and I believe in it 100% for diatonic melodies. But for singing things like Altered Dominant chords it isn’t really the way I think of them.. plus I learned it in school so it doesn’t fit with the title :)

  • @AboveMediocrity2010
    @AboveMediocrity2010 Před 5 lety

    Its trying to get lost in the weeds and then looking up to confirm you're 2 steps from the apple tree.

  • @unclejohn8520
    @unclejohn8520 Před 6 lety +1

    it too crazy

  • @rodolfocoutinho7cordas

    3:35 you played "C F G B".

  • @jazzjazzman7265
    @jazzjazzman7265 Před 3 lety

    Aaaaaaaaaaaaand I'm subscribed.

  • @RorxorProductions
    @RorxorProductions Před 6 lety

    Fucking awesome holy shit!

  • @RanBlakePiano
    @RanBlakePiano Před 4 lety +2

    Check. Primacy my book

    • @TimCollinsVibes
      @TimCollinsVibes  Před 4 lety +1

      Mr. Blake! It's an honor to see you here. Thank you for the comment - We've never met, but I know who you are and the contributions you have made as both a performer and a teacher. Thank you!

    • @Kapiwolf123
      @Kapiwolf123 Před 3 lety

      @@TimCollinsVibes he hasn't said shit beside promote himself. what honor ? he's a sleaze bag

  • @elsaporana4652
    @elsaporana4652 Před 4 lety

    ni modo no hablo ingles