Tips and tricks for practicing with Djangolizer

Eartraining with arpeggios and scales

Because Djangolizer serves you different kinds of scales with one mouse click, you get the chance to compare and study them easily. Not only optically but also acoustically.
Put a Cm7 chord into the grid and choose the Dorian scale. Where are the notes? How does it sound?
After a few times playing up and down, you can switch to the Melodic Minor scale and compare, where the notes changed. Play Melodic Minor a few times up and down. How sounds the difference? And what about the Harmonic Minor scale...?
For doing the comparison more easily, program the Cm7 chord in three following measures in the grid and put in each one a different scale. Now you can change the scale view just by using the arrow keys.
Of course you should do this also with dominant and major scales. Especially the dominant scales (and chords) can vary in their sound from quite tensionless to very disharmonic.

Sing the tones of the arpeggios and scales! But, sing them first, and then check with your guitar, if you got them right, otherwise this exercise will not help. The day, you can sing all the arpeggios and scale up and down, you made it. You can call yourself musician. You will connect melodies with their scales and hear clearly, when a song changes his tonality.

Django could improvise immediately a solo to any song, even to those he never had heard before. He trained his ears very well.