ABSTRACT

Aural Education: Reconceptualising Ear Training in Higher Music Learning explores the practice of musical ‘aural training’ from historical, pedagogical, psychological, musicological, and cultural perspectives, and uses these to draw implications for its pedagogy, particularly within the context of higher music education.

The multi-perspective approach adopted by the author affords a broader and deeper understanding of this branch of music education, and of how humans relate to music more generally. The book extracts and examines one by one different parameters that appear central to ‘aural training’, proceeding in a gradual and well-organised way, while at the same time constantly highlighting the multiple interconnections and organic unity of the many different operations that take place when we interact with music through any music-related activity. The resulting complex profile of the nature of our relationship with music, combined with an exploration of non-Western cultural perspectives, offer fresh insights on issues relating to musical ‘aural training’. Emerging implications are proposed in the form of broad pedagogical principles, applicable in a variety of different music educational settings.

Andrianopoulou propounds a holistic alternative to ‘aural training’, which acknowledges the richness of our relationship to music and is rooted in absorbed aural experience. The book is a key contribution to the existing literature on aural education, designed with researchers and educators in mind.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

How it all started

chapter 2|11 pages

Tracing the history of ‘aural skills’

Solfège and dictation as facilitators of musical learning

chapter 3|10 pages

Current views on ‘aural skills’ teaching

A lively, ongoing discourse

chapter 4|8 pages

Aural perception

The human brain, a fascinating sound-processing machine

chapter 5|12 pages

Musical memory

Much more than playing by heart

chapter 6|16 pages

Musical mental imagery

The brain’s inner musical life

chapter 7|14 pages

Music notation and literacy

Bridge or barrier?

chapter 8|17 pages

Implicit and explicit forms of musical knowing

You can only know what you already know

chapter 9|12 pages

Music theory

Music’s changing shadow

chapter 10|11 pages

Embodied musical knowledge 1

It’s music to my ears – but not only

chapter 11|11 pages

Musicality

Synonymous with giftedness – or is it?

chapter 12|34 pages

An interview study

Exploring non-Western classical views of ‘aural training’ parameters

chapter 13|20 pages

Moving from ‘aural training’ to aural education 1

A pedagogy according to the intricate character of the human musical experience

chapter 14|18 pages

Enriching aural education with non-Western classical perspectives

More immersion in musical sound, more creativity

chapter 15|10 pages

Reflections and conclusions

Thoughts on the way(s) forward