LMMS and Ear Training

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Hi everyone,

I am new to LMMS and music composition, so I thought I would run an idea I had past you all. I’d like to do ear training, so I thought I’d create some tracks with isolated intervals, chords, or what have you, so that I can listen to them on shuffle later and try to correctly identify them by ear.

I am aware that it would be fairly simple to do something like this in LMMS, so what I’m really wondering is, does this seem like a good way to do ear training? If not, is there some other way LMMS could play a role in ear training?

Thanks for reading!

Aeolia
Aeolia wrote:
Thu Sep 02, 2021 5:06 pm
Hi everyone,
Hi, Welcome to the Forum Aeolia!
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I am new to LMMS and music composition, so I thought I would run an idea I had past you all. I’d like to do ear training, so I thought I’d create some tracks with isolated intervals, chords, or what have you, so that I can listen to them on shuffle later and try to correctly identify them by ear.

I am aware that it would be fairly simple to do something like this in LMMS, so what I’m really wondering is, does this seem like a good way to do ear training? If not, is there some other way LMMS could play a role in ear training?
I am not familiar with the concept of ear-training, but if you need a tool for making rhythm completely free constraints, then LMMS has max quantisation of 1/192. You just select that in the Q-dropdown, and then i would recommend you to use ~400% magnification. With that setup, you should be able to make any rhythmic variation you want.
Ear training? Could you give us a bit more info on this?
Hello!

You may want to try GNU Solfege, it is open source too.