Train your musical ear with focused exercises
Build your skill step by step and become a stronger musician by training your ear.
- Step-by-step growth
- Focused exercises
- Track your progress
- Clear goals
Practice as if a music teacher is giving dictation on demand
The goal is to simulate the best parts of guided ear training at home: many examples, direct feedback, and structured repetition whenever you want it.
Short, clear tasks
Each round asks one concrete listening question, so you always know what to focus on.
Direct comparison
After each answer you can replay, compare, and hear what made one option different.
Target weak spots
In focused mode, the site can bring back the intervals, chords, and scales you still miss most often so practice stays relevant.
Why a good musical ear matters
- Play together with other musicians more easily.
- Recognize and remember music faster.
- Transpose and improvise with more confidence.
The essentials of ear training
Start with these exercises
Start with intervals, then use that skill as a building block for scales and chords.

Intervals
Identify intervals by ear and build solid pitch awareness.
- Recognize intervals quickly
- Improve melodic accuracy
- Strengthen relative pitch

Scales
Explore scale patterns and tonal centers.
- Understand key signatures
- Hear scale colors
- Strengthen harmonic sense

Chords
Identify chord types and build harmonic intuition.
- Recognize chord qualities
- Improve harmonic hearing
- Hear tension and color
How practice looks here
Practice starts broad, gets more precise, and can later focus on the intervals, chords, and scales that still slow you down.
Ways you train
Start broad, then sharpen
Begin with easier listening tasks and build toward exact interval, chord, and scale recognition.
Hear the same concept in different ways
Use multiple choice, grouping, matching, and ordering tasks so one musical idea becomes familiar from more than one angle.
Focus on the weak points that matter
Focused mode can bring back what you still miss, including cases like direction or close confusions, so practice stays targeted.
