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6.9: Additional Practice

  • Page ID
    270112
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    Online Activities

    Consistent practice is the only way to build aural skills. Ear training is not the kind of class where you can leave practicing and preparation to the night before an exam. Use these activities to guide your practice time each day.

    ADAPT

    Use Activity 6.1 (opens in a new window) to practice identifying if an interval is larger or smaller than a perfect fifth.

    QR code for the activity link above

    Musictheory.net

    This interval practice exercise (opens in a new window) on the web version of musictheory.net will help you to practice a variety of ascending melodic intervals. This will allow you to practice quite a few intervals with immediate feedback and will not go on to the next question until you have answered correctly.

    Musictheory.net also offers some apps for Apple devices for a small fee. The one with similar exercises to their web version is Tenuto.

    Apps

    Earpeggio

    This free app has three interval exercises for you to explore.

    1. The first exercise is learning to compare and determine which interval of two intervals is the larger. You can choose ascending, descending, or harmonic intervals.
    2. The second exercise is interval identification. Again, you can choose to focus on ascending, descending, or harmonic intervals. You can also choose to focus your practice on specific intervals.
    3. The third exercise is hearing intervals in context. This exercise will give you the first note on the staff, you are to determine the missing note by interval, and then a third note is played. This is helpful for practicing melodic dictation on a smaller scale.

    Interval ET

    In this free app, you are given a piano keyboard and are to play the given note and then the note that is the correct interval. This is helpful if you are a visual learner or already familiar with the piano keyboard.

    Perfect Ear

    This free app has both exercises practicing hearing intervals and singing intervals. Hearing intervals, the interval is shown on the staff and the piano keyboard. You can also repeat the audio before going on to the next question. Singing intervals, the app uses your microphone and you sing the requested interval. It will also tell you what note you actually sang so you can learn to adjust accordingly.

    Additional Practicing Ideas

    • Find another music student and practice together. Create your own activities to test one another based on your individual needs. You may also use sight singing examples from the Lab Activities sections and sing together.
    • Listen to your favorite music and make your own table or list of key intervals you are hearing in the melody (or a distinctive bass line!).

    This page titled 6.9: Additional Practice is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.

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