Read this Article First

Understanding Depth in Ear Training and Audiation

Many learners expect depth to feel intense, dramatic, or breakthrough driven. In music education, this expectation often comes from procedural training, where the work is intentional, focused, and measurable inside each drill. However, not all forms of musical development operate through that kind of immediacy. Some forms of learning are subtle, cumulative, and perceptual. They work beneath conscious awareness and reveal themselves gradually.

I want to share a little of my teaching philosophy, because it explains why my courses are structured the way they are and why the experience may feel different from what some learners anticipate.

Flawless and the Nature of Subtle Depth

Flawless Ear Training is not deep because of precision. It is deep because it gradually reorganizes auditory perception. This type of depth does not present as intensity within individual drills. It is subtle, and the effects appear in musicianship before they appear as subjective sensations. Learners often notice the results in their playing or listening long before they feel anything “happening” inside the exercises themselves.

Audiation as Conceptual Development

Audiation in The Composing Hour is conceptual rather than procedural. Ear training is procedural and intentional. Audiation is perceptual and cumulative. The depth does not occur within a single exercise. It develops over time as the listener begins to recognize more information within real musical contexts. This is why audiation work can feel light or surface level in the moment, even though the long‑term perceptual changes are significant.

Why Subtle Work Can Feel Superficial

If a learner expects intensity or breakthrough sensations, both courses may appear surface level. When the courses are used as designed, the deeper changes occur gradually and reliably. Subtle work does not always feel deep while it is occurring. It becomes clear only when the ear begins responding differently to music outside the exercises.

On Imperfections and Forward Motion

With the volume of material in these courses, there will be imperfections. These do not affect progress. The ear responds to majorities rather than isolated moments. This is why I encourage students to move forward day by day and not repeat lessons. Repetition of a single example creates a false reference point. Forward motion prevents that. As a result, imperfections do not accumulate and do not shape the ear.

This is also why I ask students to complete the entire lesson rather than isolating specific parts. You do not want to overemphasize the material you are struggling with. You want to encounter it again in a different way on another day, because that is how the ear builds flexible recognition.

Pedagogical Decisions vs. Mistakes

Not everything that appears to be a mistake is a mistake. Some are pedagogical decisions. They reflect choices about how the learning process unfolds. There are multiple valid approaches to course design, and not every learner resonates with the same method. My approach prioritizes real‑time experience over explanation.

Why I Do Not Explain Every Mechanism

I am often asked why I do not describe every mechanism inside the course itself. The reason is simple. If I explained every process as it occurred, the course would become bloated and difficult to use. It would shift the focus away from listening and toward justification. It would also create the impression that I am defending myself or explaining away every choice. That is not helpful for learning, and it would undermine the structure.

The course is designed to work through experience, not through commentary about the experience. Consider how a child learns to count. You do not begin by explaining why one plus one equals two. You show it. The explanation comes later, once the foundational skill is already in place. The same principle applies here.

A Philosophy Rooted in Real Musical Experience

My approach is to keep the learner moving, to take in what is available in real time, and to leave the rest. This mirrors real musical experience. In performance, one cannot pause when something is unclear. The musician adapts, remains present, and continues. That is the skill being trained.

Closing Thoughts

This approach may or may not align with every learner’s preferences, and that is acceptable. But subtle work is not superficial work. It is simply a different kind of depth, one that reveals itself gradually and reliably over time.