@PoppaJOL said:
wellsdeckers:
1. Ear Training - This may be the most important thing of all for you. In my opinion you should make this the number 1 priority in your development. Not everyone is lucky enough to hear music in their heads. Because you can, you must train yourself to understand what you are hearing.
2. Orchestration/Arranging - Many people would put Harmony before this and they are probably correct but, for me, Orchestration and Ear Training are the true keys for people who really hear the music already.
3. Harmony and Advanced Harmony - The better you understand the components of music the easier it will be for you to remember and to translate what you are hearing.
4. Composition - This is the skill and technique of taking what you hear and crafting into a piece that realizes all the potential in your ideas.
Poppa
That's truly excellent advice. I get so frustrated hearing music in my head and not being able to get it down that I always end up with my "best creations" staying in my head - the amount of work I've had to abandon after I've gone over the "ruining it" mark or times I've had to simplify things because I'm ending up with just "noise" in my head when I try and concentrate on it. But I never really thought about it in the way you've put it forward.
But yeah, I see what you mean. I suppose it's no different to when you have thoughts in your head and then you either 'notate' them by writing it down, or you speak them out loud, only as it's the language you're brought up on you don't need to think about or break down this process because it's become instinctive. Just like typing here at the keyboard. I think of what I want to say and I just type it without needing to sit down and work out each letter of each word I've just thought.
If you learn music properly as a language in the way you've suggested, I imagine it would be the same process. Your sentences become passages, words become bars, letters become notes. The grammar is the expression or the articulation.
I've started reading books on orchestration, and even though I'm not even half-way through the book, I'm already listening to sounds in my head and determining what instrument it either is or would work best being.
As for the ear training, is that literally just sitting at keyboard and hitting notes over and over again until eveytime you hear one you can recall it being an Fb etc?