u/MeasurementSignal168

How to differentiate between the IV and V chords in a progression

I've been doing more ear training as I'm away from my instrument more regularly; I've been using tonedear. At first I wasbad at intervals, then I got good at it. Then I was bad at chord identification then I also became good at it, then I was bad at scale identification then I became good at it.
But no matter how hard I try, I can't seem to stop mixing up the IV and V in progressions. It should seem easy because they do have completely different feelings, or emotions, when used within a piece, but for some reason I always mix them up.

Do you guys have any trick or way of imagining it that helps? Or I just have to drill more?

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u/MeasurementSignal168 — 3 days ago
▲ 26 r/ControlTheory+2 crossposts

Control Engineering survey

Hey guys, I'm doing a survey to ascertain the dominance of different control engineering paradigms in the industry, to ascertain whether there has been a noticeable shift from classical controls to more modern algorithms, or whether modern algorithms, while looking good on paper, are stuck on research papers for the most part.
I would love everyone's inputs, from student to seasoned researcher.
Your still welcome to contribute if you don't work directly in controls, or if your work is controls-adjacent, like SWE or mechanical design.

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u/MeasurementSignal168 — 14 days ago