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14.6: Additional Dictation Tips

  • Page ID
    258569
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    Recognizing Form

    When completing an ear training exercise like melodic dictation or listening to a piece of music and trying to write it down for your own performance, there is no rule that you have to start at the beginning and work through each note and interval. Practically speaking, that will take a very long time. It will be tedious and frustrating and there is a likelihood that you will want to give up. This does not need to be the case.

    As you practice melodic dictation, think about the overall form and consider the following:

    • Did you hear anything that repeats?
    • How long were the phrases?
    • What cadence was implied at the end of the first phrase?
    • What cadence was implied at the end of the second phrase?
    • Where did you hear do?

    Start with what you are confident you heard. Make an outline or a framework for yourself. Then, as you hear it a second time, you can go back and fill in the missing information.

    Helpful Hint

    What scale degrees make up the dominant chord?

    • Sol
    • Ti
    • Re

    Does the first phrase sound unfinished? Does it sound inconclusive? If it is leaving you feeling unresolved, it is likely that the melody is ending on one of these pitches and implying a half cadence.


    This page titled 14.6: Additional Dictation Tips 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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