Understanding a cadence

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AcousticBruce
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Understanding a cadence

Post by AcousticBruce » Dec 28, 2008 7:09 pm

I have now gotten to level 23 and am pretty good.. Almost 100% all the time.

I just do not understand the point of a tonal cadence. What is the purpose of this?

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Quentin
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Post by Quentin » Jan 06, 2009 1:27 am

Do you mean the purpose of a cadence in general (i.e. What can it be used for?) or in relation with a particular exercise in EarMaster?
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AcousticBruce
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Post by AcousticBruce » Jan 06, 2009 7:04 pm

For intervals it will play
Do and the octave Do.

then play like Sol Fa

and I have to pick that it is M2.


What is the octave at the beginning for.. in real time I wouldn't know that it is Sol fa... i would think of it as Do Re.... i wish I was that good to do that.


But is that what its for... to call it Sol Fa instead of Do Re
then... the lessons got way!! harder!!

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Quentin
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Post by Quentin » Jan 07, 2009 2:05 am

The octave at the start is played as a reference, to train relative pitch. If there weren't any reference, you would either be guessing or using perfect pitch (I'm not talking of "training" perfect pitch as it is a long discussion with very little scientific background to base arguments upon...)
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AcousticBruce
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Post by AcousticBruce » Jan 10, 2009 11:03 am

so i should be using solfege?
because I am not that trained on this.

How do I learn this? Recommend any products?

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Quentin
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Post by Quentin » Jan 13, 2009 2:12 am

No not necessarily, as EarMaster can show you the first tone. You then only have to identify the interval (which can be interpreted as a "tonal distance") by finding out what the second tone was played. Solfege and theory are very important but a great deal of EarMaster's exercises only require that you use your aural skills, not your knowledge in theory.
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