I took a long break from podcasting, not intentionally, just focusing on other things. I guess it makes sense to call the 30 episodes I did last year the first season, and the latest episode the beginning of the second season. Happy listening!
Things I wrote in 2025
This year I did a lot of rewriting and refining things I had previously written: for my classes, for MusicRadar columns, and for this web site here. I started a podcast, too. Recording and editing it is a lot of work, but it is extremely satisfying creatively and I’m hoping it will find its audience. Here are some of the episodes that I think came out the best:
- Why are F-sharp and G-flat two different notes?
- Watermelon Man
- The name of this tune is the Funky Drummer
- It Don’t Mean A Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing
- You Are My Sunshine
I taught a new aural skills class at NYU, Advanced Popular Music Transcription. Here’s how it went. I also continued teaching other pop theory and aural skills classes. There was a lot of overlap between things we talked about in class and things I wrote about here and talked about on the podcast.

Mr Tambourine Man
I grew up with a cassette copy of Bringing It All Back Home. It was the first Bob Dylan album that I remember hearing, and I knew that my Boomer parents and classic-rock-loving peers revered it. That said, people definitely respected Bob more than they enjoyed him. I did enjoy a lot of Bringing It All Back Home, though I had no idea what any of the songs were supposed to be about. I liked the melodies, though, and Bob’s singing didn’t put me off. I thought “Mr Tambourine Man” was intriguing, seemingly weighted with some deep countercultural significance that I wasn’t privy to.
All of Me
My students and I tend to think of all pre-rock American popular songs as being “jazz”, because that’s the context in which we tend to encounter them. However, jazz was an artistic outgrowth of popular song, and it’s worth seeing how those tunes existed before jazz musicians began interpreting them. The jazz pianist, composer and educator Ethan Iverson has a great resource on the repertoire of core standards. Iverson recommends that you start your journey by looking at the original sheet music, and he includes a bunch of representative examples.
“All of Me” is from the third decade of Iverson’s collection. That meant that it was a “modern” tune at one time, compared to truly archaic standards like “My Melancholy Baby” or “Tea For Two.” The sheet music for “All of Me” is full of delightful surprises. First, there’s the helpful tuning chart for ukulele or “Banjulele Banjo”. Then there’s this verse: “You took my kisses and you took my love, you taught me how to care…” The part of the tune we all know, the “chorus”, finally starts at the bottom of the second page.
Dancing in the Street
Now that my semester is done, it’s time to start thinking about the next one. I like to spend the first day of class on a song that encompasses all the big themes and topics we’ll be covering. For this spring’s pop theory kids, I chose “Dancing in the Streets” by Martha Reeves and the Vandellas (1964).
I was reminded of this timeless banger by Andrew Hickey’s 500 Songs podcast episode on “Heatwave”, which gives much better background on the song and the people behind it than I could. The episode mentions that this song was unusual for its era because it sits on one chord for long stretches, well before James Brown or Parliament started using single-chord grooves. The song is musically interesting for many other reasons too. Here’s an annotated listening guide.
Continue reading “Dancing in the Street”
Is there a way to teach counterpoint that is less of a drag?
The other night, the family and I went to a Handel’s Messiah singalong at Lincoln Center. This is an enjoyable holiday tradition where professional singers, conductors and musicians perform the Messiah, and the audience sings along for all the choral parts. You have to bring your own score, and this attracts a very specific kind of person, which my wife is proud to be. The Hallelujah chorus is the famous part but “All We Like Sheep” is the real musical high point.
I’m not enough of a sight singer to be able to keep up with any of the complicated parts, but it’s definitely fun to be in a big crowd doing all that polyphony, and it’s not too difficult to find chord roots to add to the mix. Continue reading “Is there a way to teach counterpoint that is less of a drag?”
Advanced Pop Transcription wrap-up
I just concluded my first semester teaching Advanced Popular Music Transcription in NYU’s new pop theory and aural skills sequence. The students transcribe recorded music into notation, and also analyze production techniques and timbre. Learning by ear is an essential skill for pop musicians. Even when you are using charts, accurate ones are rarely available. There are some AI tools that promise automated transcription, but so far, they are hilariously terrible. So students need to learn to rely on their ears.

AI slop predates AI
One of my back burner writing projects is a book chapter about generative AI in music education and why I think it’s a Bad Thing. In preparation, I reread Ted Chiang’s New Yorker essay about why AI isn’t going to make art, which I completely agree with. To put ourselves in the right frame of mind for this discussion, let’s enjoy some beautiful patriotic AI output.
AI transcription on MusicRadar
This week I wrote my first software review for MusicRadar, assessing a web app that promises to create sheet music from audio recordings. TL;DR it doesn’t do a great job.
Portrait of Portrait of Tracy
While I was writing about fretless bass, I briefly mentioned Jaco Pastorius’ “Portrait of Tracy.” Now it’s time to dig into this tune properly.



