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#1
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Ear training is the key to improving intonation. Audiation, or internalizing pitch is the key to putting your finger in the right place. Think about a dartboard- the bullseye is the correct pitch. If you are not on the bullseye, how close are you? If you are playing an instrument without having a good intonation target it is like playing darts with your eyes closed. Someone will get hurt!!
![]() Professional players make intonation mistakes, but very minute ones. Students miss by a mile. What is the key? Ear training. You must sing! My other necessary intonation work is developing the right concept of intonation. Students don't listen for intonation the same way that people that have good intonation. Most times, if you ask a student to play a scale and they miss a note, they progressively get worse as they go up and down the scale. If they play an open string they may correct, but the whole of the scale is wrong. People with good intonation listen to the intervallic relationship between tonic (the first degree of the scale) and the note they are playing. It doesn't matter if you miss one note, because the next can be in tune based on the relationship of that note to tonic. To practice this, I always have students use a drone when they play scales. It immediately snaps their pitch into place. I can hear that drone in my head and when I practice sometimes I will drone a pitch and sing the scale, or drone the pitch with my voice and play the scale. Give it a try and let me know how it works for you. Best, Brian |
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#2
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Brian, you can be assured that I'll be trying this. Thanks for the thoughts.
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#3
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Richard, if you can, find a community Orchestra that you can join. Trust me when I say this.. You will learn things that you would never imagined to try on the bass on your own. It will raise your DB playing awareness to a height you didn't know was there. The Orchestra Rep. is the way to learn more about your bass. That's assuming you haven't gone that route already.
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#4
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#5
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I am doing Mendelssohn's 4th (Italian) now. I just U-tubed it and holy xxxx. Triplets at 160 a beat. All over the Bass. Now that will put some hair on your bow. Actually, it's the left hand that goes to the Barber on that one. Playing the Orchestra Rep. trains my hands to be so fast, I can't even see my own fingers move. It's just a blur sometimes but the notes keep flying out somehow. I don't know what you got out of the Orchestra thing but for me, it's the ultimate workout. I will get only 3 rehearsals with the Orchestra and I have about a month to get it ready along with two other Pieces. Haydn's Farewell with a Bass solo at the end.. |
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#6
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I hear you, my friend. I started my musical life as a violinist. I played in orchestras and graduated with an honours degree (all that seems another life time ago now). I've since played the bass in orchestras, though not big serious ones. I had my first bass lesson in 1976 and later took a few lessons with Harry Botham (ex LSO). I never had that many lessons on the bass - 'I'm formally self taught' to quote Jaco. I am eternally grateful for my classical training and would advise any youngster to get formal training, but I'm not interested in playing classical any more. I played an hour gig (to about eight people) last night. Just me and my bass - I called on a lot of skills and played pretty well (I think - I'm pretty honest with myself; after all I confess to having played some shockers in the past!).
Lately I've played with two excellent classical violinists - one plays in the NZSO and another was once concertmaster of the Tasmanian Symphony (I hope I've got that right). Both have beautiful tones and can read fly sh1t on a bathroom wall. The ex-TSO player runs a gypsy jazz band and has all her solos written out. I hadn't played with her for a long while, but was able to whistle along with her solos! The other guy played some jazz standards, in his repertoire, that consisted of him playing the tune about three times - no solos from anyone! In my humble opinion, both of these players were out of their depth when it came to playing a jazz style gig. All I'm saying is that there are two sides to the coin, both requiring a set of skills. The classical playing will only help the improvising player to a point - I don't remember Coltrane or Miles playing in many orchestras. I'd better go, but I hope all is well in Perkasie my friend. |
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#7
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In that case, if all the skills are in line, playing out as much as possible is all I can suggest. Also, playing along with records (now it's CDs ) always helped me. I enjoyed most with improv stuff using the old Bill Evans records. You can't get more loose and free than with Bill. Things like that if you are not out playing and just wanna practice would be good to do. Also, less lonely than just playing by yourself. |
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#8
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I'll second that. My current teacher tells me to stop playing and punish myself every time I realise that I've stopped singing.
I'll go on for a bit about what my last six lessons (YES, it's that important): Fix your hand shape. I always used to be able to play chromatic 5ths up and down the bass fairly well in tune, but now with this teacher I've noticed that it's just not that simple, because I didn't apply it to the rest of my playing. The ear is easily corrupted... and if your first position is to small between the 1st and 4th finger - which I was shocked to realise was my case - even if you make a perfect semitone shift up from say B to C, you're out of tune, because you were out of tune in the first place. Myself, I found out that even though I always considered my intonation to be 'good enough', on the G string I was consequently low on B and consequently I was still low after shifting to C. This I had gotten so used to that I considered them to be in tune. As a result, my 3rd pos shape was too big in order to reach D, which was usually rather well in tune thanks to the easy check with an open D. E with 4th finger was too high as my shape was still too big, and E with 1st finger was usually was too low - especially when coming down - for the very same reason. All this was integrated in my playing and in my ears. A key, as Brian said, is to learn EXACTLY how an interval should sound. Playing with a droning note is nice because you learn where to 'place' your note, but what's probably even more important - as it is what's required of us - is to have a REALLY good idea of what a tempered scale or a perfectly pitched single interval should sound like, and here you may not have any help by that drone, as it might lead you into playing relatively in tune. Which we also have to be able to do. But there is a limit to the practical use of this kind of intonation. A very good exercise is to play between two open strings, say D E F# G F# E D. Then you can use the open strings as reference points. If you listen properly to that open G, does it sound a bit too high? Then your hand shape is probably too small. Or if the D is sounding low, then the E was already high - and a high first finger in first position is something an awful lot of people do, A on the G string being a frequent problem note, especially when coming down. If you play this exercise, you shouldn't rely on checking the E against the A or E string to see if it's in tune; it can be done, yes, but the point is that you should acquire a perfect sense of where you have a perfect E in relation to the D. This exercise can and should also be played in thumb pos, and you should also play D E F and D Eb F. Another common fault is that the hand shape doesn't get small enough when you reach 3rd 4th and 5th pos. It's starting out surprisingly big down in ½ and 1st pos but then decreases surprisingly quickly. But, if you can fix the hand shapes, you'll be sure to improve every element of intonation including shifts. This is the most important advice I can give you. It has really worked wonders with me during the past month. |
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#9
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Today (after playing for about an hour between shows), I realized that I REALLY need a new set of strings. Mine are no longer playing true notes...
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#10
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Dave, my friend, you can get them from music shops.
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#11
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E. Joel, my friend, thanks for sharing your very good advice. When Dave gets some new strings he can try your exercises.
Last edited by Richard Prowse; 10-14-2009 at 09:42 PM. Reason: water |
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#12
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Actually, I'm trying them now (and have been doing a variant of them for some months). Based on today's practice, it IS excellent advice, and I hope to do more with it. I'll be ordering the new strings tomorrow, and ideally, I'll be able to hear what I'm trying to do more successfully.
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#13
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#14
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I am agreeing with you, but I think a little is lost in typing rather than talking. BG |
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#15
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#16
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i downloaded all the chromatic shrutis here: http://www.karnatik.com/shrutibox.shtml
and use them sometimes for practicing. edit: practicing as described above by richard + playing scales, improvising edit2: improvising with that shruti always makes me feel like charlie haden playing the song "malkauns" on the fantastic (one of my favorites) record "brown rice" by don cherry )edit3: please everybody buy that record listen here: http://www.amazon.de/Brown-Rice-Don-.../dp/B0000253J0 Last edited by Anselm Hauke; 10-15-2009 at 03:02 PM. |
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#17
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I find this approach very helpful. If you have any more questions let me know. Brian |
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#18
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Call me Ron the silly badger if you like but, couldn't one just check one's scales by playing open notes and harmonics? For example:
C D (open D) E F G (open G) A B C D (harmonic D) etc... bearing in mind that harmonics up the series won't be in tempered tuning. You could even use open strings to check a Db scale - using weirder intervals. Any thoughts? |
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#19
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I've also been known to check say a Db major scale against some strange intervals - Db against A, F against D, Gb against D, Ab against E and so on. But these are all insecure and most relative intervals - a G# against an E should be a whole lot lower than the Ab against its base Db. Or you could try to establish the sound of an Ab against open D. But you still have to be able to play the scale in tune, without stopping, which you simply won't do if you haven't worked out your hand shape properly, and taken into account that you have to "fight gravity" on the way down. In many cases, it's not the shiftings themselves that seem to be the big issue, but the components therein. Or again, if you have a too big or too small hand, even a perfect shift will make you end up in the wrong place. Hope that helps. |
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#20
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