Music & Life

In the last Music & Life article we looked at the role of songs in children’s musical development, and the many ways songs can be integrated into a child’s life. We’ve also looked at how lullabies help your child’s musical appreciation. Today we’re releasing two free songs which can help develop your child’s aural skills!

Music & Life author Sabrina Peña Young has composed these songs to help children learn about different intervals and rhythms.
Ear Training for children

Froggy Interval Hop

Here’s a fun little song which runs through major scale intervals from a second up to a fifth. With younger children you don’t need to worry about the interval names, but just singing the song will help them get used to different melodic leaps. Older children can use the song to help them learn the sound of each interval!
Click to read the rest…

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Series Information
This is part 8 of 17 in the Music & Life series.

UPDATED: 18th January to include further information from Dr. Daniel Müllensiefen.

Researchers from the “Music, Mind and Brain research group” at Goldsmiths, University of London are embarking on a project to discover how musical people are – including those who don’t consider themselves musical at all!

In collaboration with the BBC Lab UK, they have developed a simple 25-minute test which you can take online to discover how strong a sense of musicality you have.

The research hypothesis is that people without any level of musical training will be able to do very well – and in some cases just as well as formally trained musicians who take the test. They think it’s possible that people develop a strong sense of music just through everyday exposure to and appreciation of music; even if they’ve never considered themselves a musician.

Click the image below to take the test:
Take this Musicality Test to find out how musical you are
(You’ll need to register with the BBC website if you haven’t before – it’s quick and easy!)

What is “Musicality”?

The test is in seven short parts. Three ask you various questions about music, what it means to you, how much training you’ve had, and so on. Four are interactive musical tests, which ask you to do things like tap along with a song, or arrange short clips into groups that go together musically.

But before you start worrying that you’ll have to whip out your instrument, or brush up on your singing – there’s no need, as the test focuses on aural skills. Dr. Daniel Müllensiefen, one of the lead researchers on the project, explains “Musical performance is one aspect of musicality but by far not the only one – and maybe not even the most important one.”

At the end of the test you’re shown your scores for each of several dimensions of musicality, including “enthusiasm for music”, “musical perception” and “emotional connection”. Click to read the rest…

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Learn to hear how the Dorian Mode can add brightness to a minor song

Learn to hear how the Dorian Mode can add brightness to a minor song

This week we’ll be taking a look at the Dorian Mode, one of the most popular scales beyond the basic major and minor you probably already know. It’s important to train your ears to recognise scales, as this considerably builds your understanding of the music you hear, and gives you more power and flexibility when writing and playing music.

So let’s add the Dorian Mode to your aural tool-box!

Reminder: A mode is derived by taking the notes of a scale and changing which note in the scale is used as the root note. You don’t need to know much theory to learn from this article, but if you want to check the theory background, there’s a great lesson available from Gary Ewer’s Easy Music Theory (which specifically introduces the Dorian):

To summarize: the Dorian is a mode of the major scale that is formed by using the same notes as the major scale, but using the second note as the root. This creates a group of notes nearly identical to the natural minor scale, except that the minor sixth note is sharpened to the major sixth. This creates a brighter spot in Dorian when that note is played.

The examples below consist of the minor scale and the Dorian mode for comparison:

The Natural Minor Scale (click to enlarge)

The Natural Minor Scale (click to enlarge)

The Dorian Mode (click to enlarge)

The Dorian Mode (click to enlarge)

Click to read the rest…

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