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How to Develop Your Ear to Instrument Connection - Learn Jazz... https://www.learnjazzstandards.com/blog/learning-jazz/ear-traini...

How to Develop Your Ear to Instrument Connection


By B
Brreenntt V
Vaaaarrttssttrraa - September 8, 2017

I get a lot of emails asking me questions like, “how do I learn songs by ear?”, “how do I learn
solos by ear?”, “how do I play the music I’m hearing in my head?” All of these questions can be
summed up in one simple question: h o w d o I p l ay w h a t I h e a r ?

Through consulting colleagues and looking back into my own musical history, I’ve become
convinced that the fundamentals of ear training are crucial for playing what you hear. They are

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the foundational infrastructure we need to truly develop our ears.

The fundamentals of ear training are:

1. Hearing intervals.
2. Hearing chords.
3. Hearing chord progressions.

These are all things you can train your ears to hear away from your instrument. But there is a
final step in the process of playing what you hear, and that’s c o n n e c t i n g yo u r e a r t o yo u r
instrument.

Once those fundamentals are in place you need to start developing the relationship between
what you are hearing to your instrument. Think of your ears and your instrument as two
separate entities.

There are skills you need to have developed on your instrument. You need to know how to
navigate it and you need to know your fundamentals like scales and arpeggios. For your ear to
connect properly with your instrument you need to have broken down any crippling technical
limitations that you may have.

Your ear needs to be developed as well. That’s where the fundamentals of ear training come in.
Having that strong foundation will key your ears into what you are hearing so that you can both
reproduce it for yourself and understand it.

Most jazz musicians have a connection with their ear and instrument, but it’s a weak one.

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How to Develop Your Ear to Instrument Connection - Learn Jazz... https://www.learnjazzstandards.com/blog/learning-jazz/ear-traini...

Some may have a stronger connection than others, but ultimately it’s not to the level we want
to be at. When I go see some of my favorite jazz musicians play live or even on a record, there is
always one thing they have in common: t h e i r i n s t r u m e n t i s a n ex t e n s i o n o f t h e i r e a r.

In the case of these high-level musicians, the instrument and the ear are not separate entities.
They are one. They are able to seamlessly connect the two.

This is obviously the level we all want to get to. So how do we do it?

Well, it still comes down to ear training, but a more musical kind of ear training. There are many
ways to go about it, so I’ll list the ones that I believe are the most important:

1. Learn licks and solos by ear.

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How to Develop Your Ear to Instrument Connection - Learn Jazz... https://www.learnjazzstandards.com/blog/learning-jazz/ear-traini...

This practice has two wins involved. The first win is you are learning great jazz language from
jazz musicians you admire. That’s a big part of becoming a better jazz improviser. The second
win is you are training your ears to respond to what you are hearing and translate it to your
instrument.

This is a practice I always preach, and if you have followed our blog or podcast
already know that. But I usually hone in on the learning language side of it and not so much on
the ear training side of it.

When you listen to a record and try to learn individual lines or even entire solos, you are first
and foremost training your ear to listen critically. It takes extra energy to listen to what is being
played and try to emulate it. This is especially true when learning jazz language. Jazz musicians
use a lot of chromaticism in their lines and other techniques. You really have to listen in to get
everything that is going on.

When you translate this musical information to your instrument you are building that ear to
instrument connection. The more you practice this the faster you will get. Your ear starts to
pick up on patterns and your muscle memory starts to kick in, even if you have never heard a
particular phrase before.

2. Learn songs by ear.


This is another one I have always evangelized on Learn Jazz Standards. But usually, when I talk
about doing this, I am stressing the fact that it will help you memorize and internalize the song
better than learning from sheet music.

In the same way that learning solos by ear forces you to listen critically, learning songs by ear
does the same, if not more.

First, you are learning the melody, which is a melodic line unto itself, and then you are learning
the chord changes. If you have ever tried to learn chord changes by ear, you know that it’s not
easy. The more you do it the easier it gets, but especially when you start doing it for the first
time it can be tough. However, it’s this kind of practice that will build up your ears if you put in
the work.

By translating songs you’ve learned by ear onto your instrument you are strengthening that

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connection even further.

3. Practice melodic dictation


The last point I want to talk about is melodic dictation.

What’s melodic dictation?

Melodic dictation is the practice of hearing short melodies, patterns, or phrases and translating
to your instrument as quickly as possible. It’s kind of like the hearing version

It’s kind of like the hearing version of sight reading. When you sight read you read through the
piece of music once maybe twice and then move on. The idea is not to memorize the piece
because then it becomes more about memorizing, not reading. When you learn licks and solos
the goal is usually to memorize, but that’s not the goal of melodic dictation.

Melodic dictation trains you hear to respond quickly with your instrument. You hear a short
melody once or twice, and you try to replicate it right away. Then you move on to the next one.

The easiest way to practice this is to get together with a friend and have him or her play for you
short melodies. But you can also listen to a solo and pick it apart phrase by phrase; not learning
it, but simply trying to replicate each phrase as quickly as possible.

Let’s put melodic dictation to practice. I’m going to provide for you 5 short melodies. I want you
to listen to them no more than 1-3 times, and play them.

Melody 1

Melodic Dictation 1          

Melody 2

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Melodic Dictation 2          

Melody 3

Melodic Dictation 3          

Melody 4

Melodic Dictation 4          

Melody 5

Melodic Dictation 5          

How did you do? The idea would to play many more of these in a row to keep the training. Start
putting some of these into practice and build that ear to instrument connection.

A
Abboouutt tthhee A
Auutthhoorr

B r e n t Va a r t s t ra
http://www.brentvaartstra.com

Brent Vaartstra is a professional jazz guitarist and educator living in New York City. He is the head blogger and
podcast host for learnjazzstandards.com which he owns and operates. He actively performs around the New
York metropolitan area and is the author of the Hal Leonard publications "500 Jazz Licks" and "Visual
Improvisation for Jazz Guitar." To learn more, visit www.brentvaartstra.com.

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