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Music Theory For Dummies®, 2nd Edition

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Table of Contents

Introduction
About This Book
Conventions Used in This Book
What You’re Not to Read
Foolish Assumptions
How This Book Is Organized
Part I: Getting Started with Music Theory
Part II: Putting Notes Together
Part III: Musical Expression through Form, Tempo, Dynamics, and More
Part IV: The Part of Tens
Part V: Appendixes
Icons Used in This Book
Where to Go from Here
Part I: Getting Started with Music Theory
Chapter 1: What Is Music Theory, Anyway?
Unearthing the Birth of Music and Theory
Putting the Spotlight on Music Theory Fundamentals
Understanding the foundation: Notes, rests, and beats
Manipulating and combining notes
Studying musical form and compositions
Seeing How Theory Can Help Your Music
Chapter 2: Determining What Notes Are Worth
Meeting the Beat
Recognizing Notes and Note Values
Examining the notes and their components
Looking at note values
Whole (Semibreve) Notes
Half (Minim) Notes
Quarter (Crotchet) Notes
Eighth (Quaver) Notes and Beyond
Extending Notes with Dots and Ties
Using dots to increase a note’s value
Adding notes together with ties
Mixing All the Note Values Together
Chapter 3: Giving It a Rest
Getting to Know the Rests
Whole (semibreve) rests
Half (minim) rests
Quarter (crotchet) rests
Eighth (quaver) rests and beyond
Extending the Break with Dotted Rests
Practicing Beats with Notes and Rests
Chapter 4: Introducing Time Signatures
Decoding the Time Signature and Measures
Keeping It Simple with Simple Time Signatures
Using measures to count in simple time
Practicing counting beats in simple time
Working with Compound Time Signatures
Using measures to count in compound time
Practicing counting beats in compound time
Feeling the Pulse of Asymmetrical Time Signatures
Chapter 5: Playing with Beat
Creating Stress Patterns and Syncopation
Studying the general rule of placing stress
Syncopation: Hitting the off-beat
Getting a Jump on Pick-Up Notes
Irregular Rhythms: Triplets and Duplets
Adding interest with triplets
Working with duplets
Part II: Putting Notes Together
Chapter 6: Music Notes (And Where to Find Them)
Meeting the Staff, Clefs, and Notes
The treble clef
The bass clef
The grand staff and middle C
C clefs: Alto and tenor
Identifying Half Steps, Whole Steps, and Accidentals on the Staff
Working with half steps
Taking whole steps
Changing pitch with accidentals
Finding the Notes on the Piano and Guitar
Looking for notes on the piano
Picking out notes on the guitar
Using Mnemonics to Help Remember Notes
Chapter 7: Mastering the Major and Minor Scales
Following Major Scale Patterns
Working with major scales on piano and guitar
Listening to the major scales
Discovering All Minor Scale Patterns Have to Offer
Playing natural minor scales on piano and guitar
Having fun with harmonic minor scales on piano and guitar
Making great music with melodic minor scales on piano and guitar
Listening to the minor scales
Chapter 8: Key Signatures and the Circle of Fifths
Understanding the Circle of Fifths
Sharps: Father Charles Goes Down and Ends Battle
Flats: Battle Ends And Down Goes Charles’s Father
Recognizing Major Key Signatures
Finding Minor Key Signatures and Relative Minors
Reviewing the Key Signatures
C major and A natural minor
G major and E natural minor
D major and B natural minor
A major and F sharp natural minor
E major and C sharp natural minor
B/C flat major and G sharp/A flat natural minor
F sharp/G flat major and D sharp/E flat natural minor
C sharp major/D flat and A sharp/B flat natural minor
A flat major and F natural minor
E flat major and C natural minor
B flat major and G natural minor
F major and D natural minor
Chapter 9: Intervals: The Distance between Pitches
Breaking Down Harmonic and Melodic Intervals
Quantity: Counting lines and spaces
Quality: Considering half steps
Naming intervals
Looking at Unisons, Octaves, Fourths, and Fifths
Perfect unisons
Augmented unisons
Octaves
Fourths
Fifths
Recognizing Seconds, Thirds, Sixths, and Sevenths
Seconds
Thirds
Sixths and sevenths
Building Intervals
Determining quantity
Determining quality
Showing Major and Perfect Intervals in the C Major Scale
Chapter 10: Chord Building
Creating Triads with Three Pitches
Roots, thirds, and fifths
Major triads
Minor triads
Augmented triads
Diminished triads
Expanding to Seventh Chords
Major sevenths
Minor sevenths
Dominant sevenths
Minor 7 flat 5 chords
Diminished sevenths
Minor-major sevenths
Looking at All the Triads and Sevenths
A
A flat
B
B flat
C
C flat
C sharp
D
D flat
E
E flat
F
F sharp
G
G flat
Manipulating Triads through Voicing and Inversion
Taking a look at open and close voicing
Identifying inverted chords
Chapter 11: Chord Progressions
Reviewing Diatonic Chords, Chromatic Chords, and Minor Scale Modes
Identifying and Naming Chord Progressions
Assigning chord names and numbers
Looking at chord progressions in major keys
Checking out chord progressions in minor keys
Adding a Seventh Chord to a Triad
Seeing (And Hearing) Chord Progressions in Action
Applying Chord Knowledge to Fake Books and Tabs
Modulating to a New Key
Reaching a Musical Cadence through Chord Progressions
Authentic cadences
Plagal cadences
Deceptive cadences
Half-cadence
Part III: Musical Expression through Form, Tempo, Dynamics, and More
Chapter 12: The Building Blocks of Music: Rhythm, Melody, Harmony, and Song Form
Establishing Rhythm
Shaping the Melody
Complementing the Melody with Harmony
Working with Musical Phrases and Periods
Linking Musical Parts to Create Forms
One-part form (A)
Binary form (AB)
Three-part form (ABA)
Arch form (ABCBA)
Chapter 13: Relying on Classical Forms
Counterpoint as a Classical Revelation
Sussing Out the Sonata
Starting with the exposition
Moving on to something new: Development
Taking a rest with recapitulation
Rounding Up the Rondo
Figuring Out the Fugue
Combining Forms into a Symphony
Observing Other Classical Forms
Concerto
Duet
Etude
Fantasia
Chapter 14: Tapping Into Popular Genres and Forms
Feeling the Blues
12-bar blues
8-bar blues
16-bar blues
24-bar blues
32-bar blues ballads and country
Having Fun with Rock and Pop
Improvising with Jazz
Chapter 15: Creating Varied Sound through Tempo and Dynamics
Taking the Tempo of Music
Establishing a universal tempo: The minim
Keeping steady time with a metronome
Translating tempo notation
Speeding up and slowing down: Changing the tempo
Dealing with Dynamics: Loud and Soft
Modifying phrases
Checking out other dynamic markings
Examining the piano pedal dynamics
Looking at the articulation markings for other instruments
Chapter 16: Instrument Tone Color and Acoustics
Delving Into Tone Color
Attack: Checking out the beginning sound of a note
Timbre: Hearing the body of a note
Decay: Listening for the final sound of a note
Building the Band: An Acoustics Lesson
Part IV: The Part of Tens
Chapter 17: Ten Frequently Asked Questions about Music Theory
Why Is Music Theory Important?
If I Can Already Play Some Music Without Knowing Music Theory, Why Bother Learning It?
Why Is So Much Music Theory Centered on the Piano Keyboard?
Is There a Quick and Easy Way to Learn to Read Music?
How Do I Identify a Key Based on the Key Signature?
Can I Transpose a Piece of Music into Another Key?
Will Learning Music Theory Hinder My Ability to Improvise?
Do I Need to Know Theory if I Just Play Drums?
Where Do the 12 Musical Notes Come From?
How Does Knowing Theory Help Me Memorize a Piece of Music?
Chapter 18: Ten Valuable Music Resources
Dolmetsch Online
Open Directory Project
ClassicalWorks.com
Smithsonian Folkways Series
The Rough Guide to Classical Music
The Virgin Directory of World Music
American Mavericks
Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society
The Art of Practicing: A Guide to Making Music from the Heart
The Guitar Chord Bible
Chapter 19: Ten Music Theorists You Should Know About
Pythagoras (582–507 BC)
Boethius (480–524 AD)
Gerbert d’Aurillac/Pope Sylvester II (950–1003)
Guido D’Arezzo (990–1040)
Nicola Vicentino (1511–1576)
Christiaan Huygens (1629–1695)
Arnold Schoenberg (1874–1951)
Harry Partch (1901–1974)
Karlheinz Stockhausen (1928–2007)
Robert Moog (1934–2005)
Part V: Appendixes
Appendix A: On the CD
Appendix B: Chord Chart
Appendix C: Glossary
Cheat Sheet
Download CD/DVD Content

Music Theory For Dummies®, 2nd Edition

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About the Authors

Michael Pilhofer teaches music theory and percussions at McNally Smith College of Music in St. Paul, Minnesota. He has worked as a professional musician for more that 20 years and has toured and recorded with Joe Lovano, Marian McPartland, Kenny Wheeler, Dave Holland, Bill Holman, Wycliffe Gordon, Peter Erskine, and Gene Bertoncini.

Holly Day is a writing instructor at the Open Book Writing Collective in Minneapolis. She has written about music for numerous publications, including Guitar One, Music Alive!, Computer Music Journal, The Oxford American, and Mixdown magazine. Her previous books include Music Composition For Dummies, Shakira, The Insider’s Guide to the Twin Cities, and Walking Twin Cities.

Dedication

To Wolfgang and Astrid, with much love.

Authors’ Acknowledgments

Special acknowledgement goes to all the musicians and composers who took the time out of their very busy schedules to share their thoughts on writing music with us: Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Irmin Schmidt, Barry Adamson, Jonathan Segel, John Hughes III, Nick Currie, Andrew Bird, Rachel Grimes, Christian Frederickson, Pan Sonic, Mark Mallman, and the late Dr. Robert Moog. A huge thanks to each one of you.

A big thank you also goes to the staff at Wiley: Corbin Collins, our project editor for the first edition, Elizabeth Rea, our project editor for the second edition, acquisitions editor Stacy Kennedy, copy editor Jessica Smith, and technical reviewers Karen Ladd and Kyle Adams. We thank our agent, Matt Wagner, as well.

Special thanks goes to Tom Day for mastering and producing the CD for the book and to rock poster artist Emek for continuing to inspire through his works.

Publisher’s Acknowledgments

We’re proud of this book; please send us your comments at http://dummies.custhelp.com. For other comments, please contact our Customer Care Department within the U.S. at 877-762-2974, outside the U.S. at 317-572-3993, or fax 317-572-4002.

Some of the people who helped bring this book to market include the following:

Acquisitions, Editorial, and Vertical Websites

Project Editor: Elizabeth Rea
(Previous Edition: Corbin Collins)

Acquisitions Editor: Stacy Kennedy

Copy Editor: Jessica Smith

Assistant Editor: David Lutton

Editorial Program Coordinator: Joe Niesen

Technical Editors: Kyle Adams, Ph.D., Karen Ladd, Ph.D.

Vertical Websites: Rich Graves, Doug Kuhn

Editorial Manager: Michelle Hacker

Editorial Assistant: Alexa Koschier

Cover Photos: © iStockphoto.com/Rubén Hidalgo

Cartoons: Rich Tennant (www.the5thwave.com)

Composition Services

Project Coordinator: Nikki Gee

Layout and Graphics: Carl Byers

Proofreader: Susan Hobbs

Indexer: Christine Karpeles

Publishing and Editorial for Consumer Dummies

Kathleen Nebenhaus, Vice President and Executive Publisher

Kristin Ferguson-Wagstaffe, Product Development Director

Ensley Eikenburg, Associate Publisher, Travel

Kelly Regan, Editorial Director, Travel

Publishing for Technology Dummies

Andy Cummings, Vice President and Publisher

Composition Services

Debbie Stailey, Director of Composition Services

Introduction

What do you think of when you hear the phrase music theory? Does the image of your elementary school music teacher eyeing you from behind the piano pop into your head? Or perhaps you have flashbacks to a later image of fellow college students in theory classes determinedly trying to notate theremin whistles? If either of these ideas is anything close to your own perception of what music theory is, hopefully this book will be a pleasant surprise.

For a lot of self-taught musicians, the idea of theory seems daunting and even a little self-defeating. After all, if you can already read guitar tabs and play some scales, why would you want to muddle what you already know with theory?

Even the most basic music theory training gives you the information you need to expand your range and abilities as a musician. A decent amount of note-reading ability enables you to play a particular type of music, whereas some basic knowledge about chord progressions can help you write your own music.

About This Book

Music Theory For Dummies, 2nd Edition, is designed to teach you everything you need to know to become fluent at knocking out a solid beat, reading musical scores, and learning to anticipate where a song should go, whether you’re reading someone else’s music or writing your own.

Each chapter is as self-contained as possible. In other words, you don’t have to read every single chapter to understand what the next one is talking about. Reading the chapters consecutively does help, though, because knowledge of music builds from simple concepts to complex ones.

We cover a lot of territory in this book, from discovering the basics of note values and time signatures to dissecting lead lines and adding harmony to a melody to studying the standard forms that much of popular and classical music follow. So if you’re new to the world of music theory, pace yourself while reading this book. Read it while you’re sitting at your piano or with your guitar or whatever instrument you’re working with next to you, and stop every couple of pages to practice the information you read. If you were taking a music class, this book would cover several years’ worth of information, so if you don’t learn everything in one or two months, you should refrain from self-flagellation.

Conventions Used in This Book

For organizational purposes, the following conventions have been used throughout this book:

check.png When we introduce you to a new musical term, we put it in italics.

check.png Keywords or key parts of lists appear in boldface.

check.png Websites are in monofont to help them stand out. Note that some web addresses may break across two lines of text. In such cases, no hyphens were inserted to indicate a break. So if you type exactly what you see — pretending that the line break doesn’t exist — you can get to your web destination.

What You’re Not to Read

The historical information and musician quotes contained in the sidebars or preceded by the Technical Stuff icon all make for interesting reading; however, if you never learn why the piano is the preferred tool of most composers or who invented the term minim, you can still understand everything else in this book. Unless you’re being tested on this information — and we promise we won’t show up at your door to administer a test — this information is included for entertainment purposes only.

Foolish Assumptions

We assume that if you’re reading this book, you love music, you want desperately to understand music and everything about it, and you’re a nut for the complicated dance of perfect timing and arrangement of tones. At the very least, we assume that you have a couple of books of sheet music lying around that have been frustrating you, or you have an old piano in the corner of your house that you’d like to mess around with.

This book is written for the following types of musicians (which, frankly, covers the gamut):

check.png The absolute beginner: We wrote this book with the intent that it would accompany the beginning musician from his very first steps into note reading and tapping out rhythms all the way into his first real attempts at composing music by using the principles of music theory. Beginning musicians should start with Part I at the beginning of the book and just keep reading until reaching the back cover. The book is organized to follow the lesson plan that college music theory classes offer.

check.png The music student who drifted away: This book can also be helpful for the musician who took instrument lessons as a child and still remembers how to read sheet music but who was never exposed to the principles of building scales, following basic improvisation, or jamming with other musicians. A lot of folks fall into this camp, and, luckily, if you do, this book is designed to gently ease you back into the joy of playing music. It shows you how to work outside the constraints of playing from a piece of music and truly begin to improvise and even write your own music.

check.png The experienced performer: This book is also intended for the seasoned musician who already knows how to play music but never got around to working out how to read sheet music beyond the basic fakebook or lead sheet. If this description sounds like you, start with Part I, because it specifically discusses the note values used in sheet music. If you’re already familiar with the concepts of eighth notes, quarter notes, and so on, Part II may be a good starting point. In that part of the book, we lay out the entire music staff and match it to both the piano keyboard and the guitar neck for easy reference.

How This Book Is Organized

Music Theory For Dummies, 2nd Edition, is organized into five parts. The first three are each based on a particular aspect of music, and the fourth, the Part of Tens, contains information about fun aspects of music theory that have little or nothing to do with actually playing or writing it. The fifth part provides three appendixes, including a guide on how to listen to the audio tracks, a rundown of chord charts, and a glossary. This organization makes it easy for you to find what you need to know quickly. This is, after all, a reference book, and nobody wants to spend all day thumbing through pages to find one simple technique. You can read about each part in the following sections.

Part I: Getting Started with Music Theory

Without rhythm, music would be one long, unbroken, unwavering note, and dancing to it would be awfully tricky. This part introduces you to music theory beginning with rhythm, the most basic component of any type of music. Being able to keep proper rhythm can make or break a performer or performance. In this part, we discuss the various values of notes and rests used in written music as well as more advanced concepts like time signatures and beat, including syncopation.

Part II: Putting Notes Together

In this part, we cover basic note reading and some silly mnemonics to help you remember the order of the notes on the grand staff. We go over major and minor scales, key signatures and the use of the all-important Circle of Fifths, interval basics, chord building, and basic chord progressions and musical cadences. We also include tons of audio examples, performed on both piano and guitar.

Part III: Musical Expression through Form, Tempo, Dynamics, and More

In this part, we show you how to put everything you know together in order to start writing your own music. We first show you the basics of musical form, and then we discuss and dissect the structure of various types of classical forms — including fugues and sonatas — and forms used in popular genres of music like the 12-bar blues, 32-bar blues ballads, and forms in rock and pop. We also cover tempo and dynamics as well as tone.

Part IV: The Part of Tens

In this part of the book, we jazz it up a bit and focus on theory outside of playing music. We answer some of the most common questions people have about music theory. We also help you further your musical exploits by listing additional music theory and history books as well as Internet resources. We round off the part by profiling some fascinating music theorists without whom this book, or any other book like it, wouldn’t be possible.

Part V: Appendixes

You can find a lot of useful information in the appendixes of this book. Appendix A tells you how to listen to each audio track in the book. Appendix B shows you how to play all the chords from Chapter 10 on both the piano and guitar. Appendix C is a glossary of some common musical terms.

Icons Used in This Book

Icons are handy little graphic images meant to point out particular types of information. You can find the following icons in this book; they’re conveniently located along the left-hand margins.

tip.eps This icon highlights time-saving advice and information that can help you understand key concepts.

warning_bomb.eps When we discuss something that may be problematic or confusing, we use this icon.

technicalstuff.eps This icon flags information that’s, well, technical; you can go ahead and skip it if you want to.

remember.eps When we make a point or offer some information that we feel you should keep with you forever, we toss in this icon.

playthis.eps This icon points out audio tracks that relate to the topic currently being discussed in the book.

Where to Go from Here

If you’re a beginning music student or want to start again fresh, plow through Part I. If you’re already familiar with the basics of rhythm and want to simply find out how to read notes, head to Part II. If you’re a trained musician who wants to know how to improvise and begin to write music, Part III covers the basics of chord progressions, scales, and cadences. You can also check out Part IV, which discusses a variety of musical forms you can start plugging your own musical ideas into.

Relax and have fun with your quest into music theory. Listening to, playing, and writing music are some of the most enjoyable experiences you’ll ever have. Music Theory For Dummies, 2nd Edition, may have been written by teachers, but we promise, no clock-watching tyrants will show up at your door to see how fast you’re making your way through this book! We hope you enjoy reading this book as much as we did writing it. Sit back, read, and then start your own musical adventure.

Part I

Getting Started with Music Theory

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In this part . . .

This part starts you down the road of understanding what music theory is and how it helps you comprehend music, whether you’re playing it, writing it, or just analyzing it. We start by explaining what different notes and rests are worth and then help you read time signatures. The part wraps up with coverage of beat patterns and of how different notes help create varied rhythms in music.