Learning To Listen


I’m frequently astonished when I hear the description of a soundstage by someone who really knows what he’s talking about. The Stereophile crew, Steve Gutenberg, and countless others hear—or claim to hear— when one violinist’s chair is out of line from the others and when the percussion players were forced into the bathroom because the studio was full. Issues like where the mices were placed, who stood where, and where the coffee pot was located are child’s play for these guys. 


Is it “mices” or “mikes?”


This seems to be a skill, like juggling, which one could learn with a little knowledge and a little practice. Some of the super listeners have said as much. But search though I might, I can’t find the key to the kingdom, the door to the fortress, the . . . all right, I’ll stop beating that particular horse.


But if someone could point me to the Cat In The Hat, The Horton Hears Who, the McGillogoty’s Pond of the subject you would have my eternal gratitude.




paul6001
The OP asked for the key to the door of the fortress. Science and education is usually a good start.
Just to puff that Critical Listening for Studio Engineers course I posted, I too have listened intently to music for 40 years or so, but I  found the course invaluable. Not so much the theory - it was the listening tests. Each week we were sent sound files which explored the theory taught that week. (Eg here is a string quartet. Here they are again. What filter, set at what frequency, was applied in the second sample?). I thought it would be easy - maybe lots of us would. But it was really, really hard.   But with teaching and learning and then practice it became easier as the weeks went by. I would never have got those skills without that input.  It’s like playing tennis with your mates for hours and hours - you won’t get much better without a coach. 

If you always do what you’ve always done, you will always get what you’ve always got.
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I’m listening to and watching "Poirot", my French still sucks... I need a teacher ;-)

Spanish not bad, though..

My MIL was a Spanish interpreter, a TEACHER of the Spanish words..
Amego...

Regards
Things would be more easy to debate if we could be able understand the difference between sound and music, audio, acoustic, and music and their subordination to one another in speech and in musical experience....

Like the diffrence between mechanician, ordinary good driver, course pilot driver, test driver and stuntsman driver.... 😁😊
@bluemoondriver I tried the link but that course has expired. I registered however as it says they may roll it out in the future.