Ukulele Workshops

Schedule | 2024 

POP UP UKE Sessons via Zoom
NOTE NEW DAY AND TIME
Tuesdays 5-6 pm Pacific Time

Major Scale & Solfege Zoom Lesson
Saturday, March 16 3-4 pm PT

UkeWest Festival Zoom Workshop 
April 13, 2024

UkeWest Festival Concert via Zoom
May 25, 2024

Kamloops Summer Festival
Sorrento Retreat, British Columbia
June 19-23, 2024

Placer Ukulele Festival
Roseville, California
September 28, 2024

Reno Ukulele Festival
Sparks, Nevada
October 9-12, 2024

NOW OFFERING PRIVATE LESSONS IN THE SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA AREA AND ON ZOOM!

BECOME A POP UP UKE PATRON FOR ONLY $12 PER MONTH!

Become a Patron!

 

 

Active Listening: Listening Outside Of Your Mind

Posted on: August 23rd, 2010 by dville

Active Listening will be an occasional feature extolling the virtues of ear training in everyday life. You may have noticed that sounds are all around us! Why not use those sounds to our advantage and really hear what’s going on in the world we live in?

The first step to active listening is to practice switching from listening to the voice of your conscious mind (that voice in your head that never seems to stop) to listening to the sounds that are outside of you.

In the book A Separate Reality by Carlos Castaneda, his mentor Don Juan answers Castaneda’s question of “How can I stop talking to myself?” by saying “First of all you must use your ears to take some of the burden from your eyes. We have been using our eyes to judge the world since the time we were born. We talk to others and to ourselves mainly about what we see. A warrior is aware of that and listens to the world: he listens to the sounds of the world.”

I am fortunate to live next to the Pacific Ocean and it provides ample listening opportunities. For those unfamiliar with living by the seashore, the ocean is quite noisy most of the time. “How do you stand it?” visitors often ask. Well, after a while you don’t hear it anymore.

In his book, The Outermost House, writer Henry Beston chronicles time spent living in an isolated cottage on Cape Cod in the mid-1920’s. He explains the act of selective ocean listening in this passage:

“Friends are forever asking me about the surf on the great beach and if I am not sometimes troubled or haunted by its sound. To this I reply that I have grown unconscious of the roar, and though it sounds all day long in my waking hours, and all night long in my sleeping ones, my ears seldom send on the long tumult to the mind. I hear the roar the instant I wake up in the morning and return to consciousness, I listen to it a while consciously, and then accept and forget it; I hear it during the day when I stop again to listen, or when some change in the nature of the sound breaks through my acceptance of it to my curiosity.”

In addition to selective ocean listening, I have another aquatic ear-training exercise I use. When sitting on a bluff right above the sea, I close my eyes. I start by listening close in, listening to the waves breaking and crashing right below me. Then, gradually, I start to listen further out to sea. I direct my ears as far out as possible, trying to hear whatever might be happening there.

If you are more apt to find yourself on public transportation instead of sitting by the seashore, you can still practice selective listening. If the bus or subway train is crowded, try focusing in on individual conversations instead of listening to the entire cacophonous mix of voices.

You don’t have to be sitting at home with your instrument to practice the most important aspect of playing music, listening.

photo credit

2 Responses

  1. Jon says:

    Great post. Just yesterday I was conned into giving a very short talk on the subject of prayer and meditiation. It turned out to be "My asthmatic, ADD, experience with conscious breathing and focus". It's an uphill struggle. I ended by saying that going back to playing the ukulele has been a great help because I've found that you can't learn music without learning to listen. I'm still an inept musician but I'm a much better listener.

  2. Jim D'Ville says:

    Thanks for taking the time to comment, Jon

Ukulele Tutorials

Playing By Ear


Play Ukulele By Ear 1
Vol. 1 DVD or Download
more info


Play Ukulele By Ear 1.5
Playing By The Numbers
Download Only
more info


Play Ukulele By Ear 2
Vol. 2 DVD or Download
more info


Play Ukulele By Ear 3 Download Only
more info

 


see all products
& descriptions

read reviews


© 2012-2024 Jim d'Ville play ukulele by ear  |  graphics and layout by lindesign  |  built and maintained by Gray's Web Design