Try to keep it practical (like something that would be fairly doable, you just havent gotten around to it…yet)

There are apps that you can input text into and they can replace the characters in each word incrementally to help learn them. Wanna get into that

  • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    If you’re involved in any kind of protest, the phone number of a lawyer. Hell, generalize this. Make sure you memorize numbers of at least the first few of your emergency contacts. You never know when you will be separated from your phone.

  • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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    2 months ago

    Fa Do Sol Ré La Mi Si
    (F…C…G…D…A…E…B)

    this is the order in which sharps go. Gives you the tonality of a given song. Let’s say the song takes 4 sharps- take the last one (Ré/D), add a half-tone to it (Mi/E), there it is, your song is in E major

    It works with flats as well, in the reverse order (Si Mi La Ré Sol Do Fa). Take the next-to-last flat, that is your tonality.

    • Camille_Jamal@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      That’s cool!

      I don’t understand any of it. (ELI5 please? Thanks for sharing this anyway!)

      Have a great day, be kind, and thanks for sharing! :D

      • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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        2 months ago

        It’s helpful if given a partition (with sharps or flats duly noted in the key signature), of which you want to quickly know the key -thus the tonic chord, usually the one any given song begins and ends with… broadly speaking. With this mnemonic you can immediately tell what the key is and start playing. Of course most people who play an instrument have developed their ear so that they can find the key of most songs they hear intuitively/empirically, the trick is useful with a partition only.