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You'll Hear It: Full Album Deep Dives with Jazz Musicians

Usin' those EARS.

You'll Hear It: Full Album Deep Dives with Jazz Musicians

Peter Martin

Best New Jazz, Reaction, Album Analysis, Live Music, Album, 194861, Music, Jazz Lessons, Fresh Spin Fridays, Album Breakdown, Music Analysis, Kid A Harmony Analysis, Jazz Education, Musical Life, Video Podcast, Isolated Stems, Track-by-track, Song Breakdown, Music Advice, Jazz Tutorials, Music Education, Album Deep Dive, Jazz Musicians React, Music Commentary, Jazz, Vocal Stems, Adam Maness, Tutorials, Jazz Courses, Musicians React, Peter Martin, Song Stems, Chords, Music Theory

4.9770 Ratings

🗓️ 11 March 2022

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Run it BACK. This episode features a compilation of clips that all discuss using your ears and how it can be helpful when playing.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

What's up? This is You'll Hear It with another episode of the Run It Back series.

0:07.0

All right, so the clips today are all centered around the central theme, and that is

0:22.1

using your ears.

0:24.7

As we know in jazz and all music, that your ears are pretty essential.

0:30.2

So we've got a number of topics that talk about the different ways that we need to learn

0:35.1

to practice using our ears and how exactly we can most

0:38.9

effectively use them in a musical context. This first episode is about how to listen to music

0:46.0

in a real way. I'm talking deep listening. And much in the same way that any artist can

0:54.0

admire someone's art.

0:55.0

As a musician, it's kind of your practice responsibility to break down music as you hear it

1:03.0

and find out exactly what you like about that and what you might want to use from each track.

1:08.0

Peter and Adam really take this topic to a really cool place,

1:12.2

so I'm going to play that for you right here. What do you mean when you say, listen deeply?

1:16.9

I have an idea of what that is, but how do you actually listen? What do you listen for? Do you try

1:22.3

to hear changes, chords, solo lines? Which do you listen for first? Sorry, that was all the first question. Thanks, David. David. David, yeah, thank you. David Kissinger, grandson to our secretary, former secretary of state, Henry Kissinger. No, we don't know that for sure. Yeah, it's possible. Unbelievable fact number nine here. We don't know that he's not. We don't know that he's not. This is a great question. We talk about listening a lot. Yes. And so we can definitely go into some some ways to listen. Yeah.

1:48.5

And I mean deep listening, I think we've made that distinction before or maybe he heard

1:53.1

David heard it from somebody else. But I think we do, you know, want to acknowledge and

1:59.2

really emphasize the difference between deep listening and just listening.

2:03.2

And the way that I can find, you know, to sort of explain that easiest maybe is that deep listening is the way that a musician, a practitioner of the craft of playing jazz music, would listen to something as opposed to a fan.

2:19.3

Now, I think that gets a little confusing because we are fans also.

2:23.0

Sure.

2:23.2

Maybe even first and foremost.

...

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