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Rick Beato: Greatest Guitarists of All Time, History & Future of Music | Lex Fridman Podcast #492

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- The following is a conversation with Rick Beato, legendary

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music educator, interviewer, producer, songwriter, and a true

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multi-instrument musician, playing guitar, bass, cello, and piano. Rick, with his

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incredible YouTube channel, celebrates great musicians and

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musical ideas, and helps millions of people, including

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me, fall in love with great music all over

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again. This is the Lex Fridman Podcast. To support

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it, please check out our sponsors in the description, where you can

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also find links to contact me, ask questions, give

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feedback, and so on. And now, dear friends, here's Rick Beato. You had, I

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think, an incredibly fun and diverse beginning to your music

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journey. I heard somewhere that one of the things that made you fall in love

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with music was listening to guitar solos, some epic guitar solos.

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What's an early guitar solo that you remember you connected to spiritually,

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musically, where you're like, "Wow, there's magic in this"?

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- Well, the first solo that I learned was "Hey Joe." It was actually a good

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beginner song, you know, when I first started playing the

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guitar, because it has pretty simple chords, right? So it's like E, C, G, D, A.

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And I learned the solo, and I figured out this, like, I'll say it's this

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pentatonic scale, E minor pentatonic scale though. I didn't know that's what it was called, but

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learned this thing, and it's like, "Whoa, he's just in this one shape

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here." Now, there was no... You couldn't go look anything up. You

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just, if you could figure out the notes, you noticed that there was a little pattern

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to it. And then I got so obsessed with it, and I showed

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my younger brother John, who started playing guitar right at the same time I did.

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So I was 14, he was 11. And I

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would play rhythm for him for five minutes while he would solo over

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Hey Joe. And then as soon as I'd start soloing, he'd throw the guitar down, then we'd get in a

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fight. And so my mom eventually was like, "What is going on here?" And I was

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like, "John won't play rhythm."

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"John won't play rhythm for me." She's like, "Okay, I'll play rhythm for you.

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What, what are the chords?" And—

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- That's awesome.

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- ... I was like, "Okay, it's like E, C, G, D, A."

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And so my mom would literally play rhythm for 20 minutes while I'd play.

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- Hashtag parenting.

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- That's amazing. When I look back on it now, my mom's been gone for 10

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years now. When I look back on it, it's like, "My God, my parents were so cool."

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- We should mention that "Hey Joe," and Hendrix in general, is kind of known

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for the rhythm not being simple rhythm, just the chords that you mentioned.

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It's what you do with those chords. It's almost improvisation, the rhythm side.

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- He did all those really cool chord fragments, riffs, and things like that,

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that's just part of his... That's the Hendrix style.

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- What do you think? I mean, many people put Hendrix as the greatest guitarist of all time.

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What do you think is part of that?

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- You know, I make lists.

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- You do. If you somehow don't know who Rick Beato is,

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go on YouTube right now and watch your excellent

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interviews with musicians, watch your breakdown analysis of different songs,

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and watch your top 20 lists, where you're

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very opinionated, sometimes very openly critical about certain

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kinds of songs. It's fun. Opinions are fun.

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- But they do change, Lex, from day to day.

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- Yeah, exactly.

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- You know, like I... But when, anytime I do a list, if I do 20, I like to do

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20 because that gives me some leeway to throw in. I have to throw in

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something that is so weird that people, you

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know... So, something that a lot of people won't know,

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just to have it on there, so I can at least introduce a per- you know,

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I'll put somebody like a- Allan Holdsworth, who's a famous fusion guitar

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player. I'll throw in one of his solos or something. Just some, some

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oddball solo in there, just so that people, as they're listening down the list, will get

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exposed to something they would not necessarily get exposed to.

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- Yeah, a lot of variety. But Hendrix... Did you show up here today, Rick,

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try to tell me that Hendrix is not up there? I just am getting that vibe right now.

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- No, I'm not. I, but I don't want to say greatest, you

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know... You, you can say, well, there, there are people that inspired Jimi Hendrix.

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Charlie Christian, older guitar players. Charlie Christian, Django Reinhardt

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were the first two really big, and probably, and Andrés

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Segovia were, were three of the giants of the

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20th century, as far as guitar influences for most of the

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players that were to follow.

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- So here, going to Perplexity, Django Reinhardt was, of course, a jazz guitarist

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and composer, active mainly in France, and is widely regarded as one of the

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greatest guitarists in jazz history.

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- So, Django was... Well, there's a huge movement

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right now, Gypsy Jazz Movement, as they call it-

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... that is kind of built around this style of

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music that he played back in the early 20th century. One of the things

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about Django is that he was in a fire,

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and he had two of his third and fourth finger, so

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his ring finger and pinky were essentially melted together. He had

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no use of them. Although he could use them while he was chording, but a lot of

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these incredibly fast lines, he's just playing with two fingers. And it's amazing.

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- That... What is that? So that's Gypsy Jazz.

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- That's Gypsy Jazz, yeah.

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Him, Stéphane Grappelli was a violinist that played with him a lot.

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- How much of this is improvisation?

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- Everything he's doing there is improvised.

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- It feels so free. And fun like swing, and then at least you said

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pre-bebop. So bebop was a kind of jazz that was also influential

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on you in your own life journey. And it's this

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complicated, legendary kind of jazz that was very influential on the music that

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followed. So what was bebop?

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- Well, after the big bands were happening in

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the, you know, from the '20s through the '40s,

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Small, people would go out and play in small groups that they

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would tour with. And Charlie Parker, who's really kind of the, one of the

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main figures of early bebop, really developed the language of

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it. Usually, the music that they're playing over are standard chord progressions-

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... that they would use as vehicles to improvise

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over. A lot of them were AA, BA form. And Charlie Parker

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created this language of improvisation that

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was far more sophisticated than the swing players

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of the big band era. You know, think of people like Benny

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Goodman of that era. They would have really fast tempo

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songs, angular lines, chromaticism, things like that, chromatic notes.

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- Chromatic notes are just notes next to each other on-

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- Next to each other, yeah

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- ... on the keyboard.

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- I like to think of it as connecting notes.

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- Connecting. You're putting in more notes than are supposed to be there and so

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doing, creating some interesting texture.

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- Yeah, so that is one of the most difficult

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styles to master, because all these things are a language.

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Blues playing, they're all just languages, right? It's like, just like you'd learn

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any type of language. My dad loved

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bebop. Now, when I was a little kid and he's listening to these bebop

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records, whether it's Charlie Parker or Dizzy Gillespie

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or Oscar Peterson, Joe Pass, great jazz guitar

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player, I'm just hearing this stuff. I don't know any different. My dad was not a musician, but for

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some reason, he liked incredibly sophisticated-

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... music that was very technical. And,

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I just heard it and just was like, "Oh, yeah, okay, cool." And not realizing that

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it was developing my ear, because I really, bebop is one of the hardest

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to improvise in that style, in that language of bebop. It's

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very difficult to do. And hearing it as a kid is one of the things

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that I think enables you, just like languages, enables you to learn it

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as opposed to somebody that's never been exposed to it and tries to learn it as a teenager.

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So I think it's very similar to learning languages, which kinda

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is like my theory on perfect pitch, that every child is born with

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perfect pitch. And they start to lose the ability around nine months-

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... when people become culturally bound listeners,

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when babies do. They start out as citizens of the

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world, you know? They can, they have the the neural

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pathways to hear the sounds, the phonemes of all 6,500 languages spoken on Earth.

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But then around nine months, they begin to lose that ability and

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they, when they become these culturally bound listeners, there's a

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great YouTube video with this woman, Patricia Kuhl. She's a language researcher.

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And I watched this, The linguistic genius of babies.

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I saw this in 2010, this lecture that she did, like a TED

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Talk, and she talks about this, that kids, they did a, an

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experiment. They exposed kids to Mandarin three times a week for

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25-minute sessions, just a

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person speaking Mandarin to these babies. And they were able

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to recognize the sounds, the phonemes of that language even later on.

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And when I realized that my son Dylan had perfect

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pitch, I thought, "Why does Dylan have perfect pitch but no one

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in my family had ever had perfect pitch?" And I thought, "Well, it must be

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because of the things I exposed to him

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prenatally and then in the first nine months of his life."

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'Cause that's the only way I could explain it.

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- We're gonna return to Joe Pass. We gotta go to Dylan. You mentioned Dylan. I guess

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that's in part one of the origin stories of

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you putting out videos into the world, is the early videos you

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did with Dylan, a set of videos on his perfect pitch. And for people who don't

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know, maybe you can speak to what perfect pitch means.

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- It's the ability to identify any note without a reference tone. So you can play,

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it doesn't matter how quickly they are, that a person with perfect pitch

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can hear a note and immediately identify it. Or a collection of notes.

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- And taking a tangent upon a tangent, you also have a course on ear training.

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- Yes, but my course is for relative pitch-

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- Relative pitch

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- ... not to be confused with perfect pitch.

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- Is it fair to say that relative pitch, as far as the thing you would learn, is more

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useful-

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- Yes

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- ... for musicians?

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- Yes.

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- Can you explain the difference between the two?

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- Relative pitch is basically learning how to identify pitches relative to

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a stated tonic or something that you've heard, or just relative

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to each other. If you hear a note and then you hear another note after

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it, you can recognize, let's say, it's a minor third interval. So if you're on

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the note A, the next note would be C. So once you're given a reference note,

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you can use relative pitch to identify the

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relative nature from one pitch to another.

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- And of course, intervals make up scales, and intervals make up chords-

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- Chords, yup.

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- ... and so that if you develop it to any degree

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relative pitch, you can understand, you can hear the music better.

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- Yes.

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- Um, what does it take since we're taking a tangent on a tangent, what's

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what does it take to train your ear? What's a TL;DR

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on the course before people go out and sign up?

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- It's just practice basically. You start with intervals.

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Typically, with small intervals like minor second, major second. So minor second would

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be a half-step, major second would be a whole-step.

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- Are you listening to the tone one after the other or two of them together?

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- Both. So played separately it's called melodic intervals, right, like a melody?

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And harmonic intervals are played like a harmony, together. So you have to be able to

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identify them both, both ways.

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- What's an early journey? Like, we'll give people a preview of what they should...

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Like, what does that look like? What does practice look like?

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- Well, my course, it will play you an interval, and then you

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identify it by clicking on whether it's, you know, a major third, or minor

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third, or major sixth, or minor sixth, or perfect fifth, or tritone, whatever it is.

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And it will teach you gradually, over time, how to recognize all the intervals.

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- So you listen to a melodic interval or a harmonic interval. How quickly

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does the ear in the various age groups that we humans are

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