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Geraud B
Nov 23, 16:14 in ToneGym Cafe
How can I lower my level in a given workout type?
Congrats @Ben Krohn-Hansen for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Jesse Lyons
Nov 21
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Colin Aiken
Nov 22
Awesome!
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Kathy Anderson
Nov 23, 15:23
Congratulations!!!
Congrats @Thiago Silva for winning the Silver Ears Award!
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Colin Aiken
Nov 22
Superb!
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Jesse Lyons
Nov 22
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Kathy Anderson
Nov 23, 15:23
Good for you!!
Congrats @Charlow Gely for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Colin Aiken
Nov 23, 03:01
Fantastic!
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Terri Winters
Nov 23, 13:12
You did it! Congratulations!
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Kathy Anderson
Nov 23, 15:23
Congratulations!!
Sorry if this has been asked before, but is there a way to connect MIDI to games like Notationist? I've allowed MIDI input in Chrome but am still not getting an input in the game
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Spencer Moore
Nov 20
1962 so I think I should be good! :D
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Cuantas Vacas
Nov 21
I'd love to see it in action!! 😆
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Jason Blank
Nov 21
Maybe first find a test website to see if that can accept your MIDI. I doubt the problem is with Tonegym, I've used MIDI in the past.
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k sh
Nov 18 in ToneGym Cafe
Hello guys. Hope all is well.
I asked a question in past about ROUTE VI like what's the tip.

Then some people advised me to listen the bass move but I don't think it works.

For example, ii-V-I or IV-V-I.
Both ii and IV share two notes A&F ,key in C for example, and they might play inversion.
Correct?

So here's my actual question.

Ideally, Do you have to be able to tell each chord's function simultaneously? otherwise you can't tell if it's D minor or F Major I think.

I'm asking because be able to tell multiple chords function immediately is pretty hard. Way way harder than chordelius type of training.
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'Ideally, Do you have to be able to tell each chord's function simultaneously? otherwise you can't tell if it's D minor or F Major I think.'

Not sure I understand your question, since the key is given to you before the chords are played.

regarding a 'ii-V-I or IV-V-I':
a ii and a IV sound completely different regardless if they are inverted or not. one is major and the other is minor. that's about as fundamentally different as you can get with chords

if you can't immediately tell the difference between a major and minor chord you should work on that before working on identifying specific progressions. a chord has the same overall 'quality' regardless of its inversion
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John Huang
Nov 20
You seem to know which notes are the same, so try to focus on what's different. When you make a mistake, you can press the c key on a computer or the button with the scales on the bottom right corner, that allows you to compare the answers.

As for your question, you technically do need to know all the chords before selecting an answer, but you can replay the chord progression by pressing the button with the volume icon.

Since this game is testing your knowledge on chord progressions in a key, it is easier to think of this game as asking you:

What are the chords relative to the key given?

Sure, lowercase letters do mean minor chords, but if you don't understand the relationship between each chord and the tonic chord (key), any other memorisation methods defeat the purpose of the game.

So yes, you do need to know the chords simultaneously... but think of it more as identifying a group of chords rather than three unrelated chords.
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Dima G
Nov 20
I think that exercise should always play the proper bass line, at least at lower levels, not just have a limited amount of items you can do that. You need it to memorize what roots correspond to other notes in all diatonic chords, that's the most important step. Tackling inversions is secondary.

Overall, I think it best to try to sing those chord tones of a chord and try to figure out what they are in a major scale. That way you'll be able to visualize (or pre-hear) chords might better. It's not an easy skill to acquire and one that will take months if not years, but in the end it will result in a much faster intuitive identification of chords. When the route IV plays a 4 chord progression, try to sing a melody of four note over it. Then transcribe this melody and see what major scale chord degree it uses. Then see what chords those might be in. Over time you’ll be able to do that faster and also have an immediate understanding like: “oh, it sounds like I sang a third of a chord, and it’s a sol (5th scale degree), and it also sounds minor so it gotta be a iii chord” etc.

Some people do it purely by the feel of the chord, but I strongly believe that being able to dissect the individual notes is something that will spike up that intuition for the feel of the chord too. It's like a super precise interface through which fast decisions can be made, similar to how we process regular languages.
I'm the king of Melody Ace.
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Benjamin Jack
Nov 20
35 is crazy!!!
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Yuheng Zou
Nov 20
@Benjamin Jack Your 50 for progression identification is also crazy!
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Dima G
Nov 20
one day I’ll get to that one…
When playing Notationist, I would like to use the letter keys in my computer keyboard, instead of the on-screen buttons, but it doesn't seem to work. Is it my setup or is it just not there?

And, ideally, I'd like to use the keys on my Yamaha keyboard with Notationist. Is it possible?

Thanks!
Ahhhhh!!!!!
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Cuantas Vacas
Nov 20
LOL
Congrats @Fabrício Rinaldi for completing the 'Music Theory Basics' program!
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Jesse Lyons
Nov 19
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Good for you!
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Colin Aiken
Nov 20
Good work!
Congrats @Chuck W for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Amy Ng
Nov 19
Wow
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Congratulations