impresario Posted September 2, 2009 Posted September 2, 2009 Here you go! I think I got it right, it wasn't as hard as I thought it would be. D minor scales.mus
impresario Posted September 2, 2009 Posted September 2, 2009 Okay, I understand the exception to the rule, and sharping the C up and down. I don't understand A major to D major, what does that even mean?
Morivou Posted September 2, 2009 Author Posted September 2, 2009 lol. A Major is a CHORD. You know what a chord is, right? It's when you stack notes on top of one another to get a certain sound. Like, a C major chord is C E G. A C minor chord is C Eb G. It's when those notes are PLAYED together to make a coherent, identifiable sound. I can't believe you've never heard of that terminology. BUT, anyway... our next lesson will therefore be "Chords and their Uses". lol
impresario Posted September 3, 2009 Posted September 3, 2009 No, I understood what a chord meant, I just didn't understand going from chord to chord, but now I do. I thought we were talking one note, not chords, sorry. I can't wait for the next lesson, that's why I originally applied for lessons :D
Morivou Posted September 3, 2009 Author Posted September 3, 2009 Heheh. We are going to try a NEW method of teaching chords, btw. You are my guinea pig. So be ready. Cause we are tackling dissonance as MUCH as consonance.
impresario Posted September 3, 2009 Posted September 3, 2009 Alright! Let me see if I know those words: is dissonance chords with notes far from each other compared to the close notes that form chords in consonance? Also, can I be a wombat instead :D The panda has a wombat XP
repinshtrad Posted September 8, 2009 Posted September 8, 2009 Hey. I saw your offer and I could not pass it up. I started the violin player in 4th grade and I have been playing it for the last 9 years. The last two years of high school I was able to reach the highest orchestra in my school which is really good for a high school orchestra. I am in my first year of college. classroom wise, I never have had a theory class. But with my last two years in high school, I was able to pick up some theory but not a lot. i have finale software so I have been writing down some melodies that come in my head but since I do not have a lot of theory knowledge, I never got that far with them. I guess I am trying to get a stronger foundation in music theory out of this.
Morivou Posted September 8, 2009 Author Posted September 8, 2009 Sorry, but I am not currently taking any more students. If that is what you are asking. I have school, so I am really busy!
impresario Posted September 8, 2009 Posted September 8, 2009 Lol that's twice. Does anyone read the giant ***********READ THIS FIRST************* post?
Morivou Posted September 12, 2009 Author Posted September 12, 2009 CHORDS!!! YAY. There have been SOOO many resources on chords. SO many things used with them. I cannot do it all myself, SO, I want you to work through these over the next week, and come back with some basic knowledge of WHAT they are. I cannot teach you "chords". I can only teach you HOW to use them. Trust me, I have read ALL of these, and they are comprehensive of what you need to know. So, here: Music Theory/Chords - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks Music Theory - Chords & Symbols Introduction to Chords Music Theory: Chords Chord Naming Bonus reading (you MUST read this.. but you don't have to understand it all) Music Theory/Complete List of Chord Patterns - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks Beginner's Guide to Modal Harmony Bach's Changes Assignment: 1. Read EVERY link here. 2. Come back with a SMALL (two-sentence min. 4 sentence max.) summery of what each was about and what you learned. 3. Come back with ANY and ALL questions you have on the subject.
impresario Posted September 13, 2009 Posted September 13, 2009 Hey there! I'd be a fool to try an do this in one sitting, so I'm just going to keep editing this post whenever I read an article. I'll start reading tommorow, I have homework now. Music Theory/Chords (wikipedia) I understood the pictures more than the words here, but overall I understood which notes to use for different types of chords. I learned that the 1, 4 and 5 chords are major, the 2, 3 and 6 chords are minor and the seventh is diminished. When talking about notes, major is normal, minor is flat and augmented is sharp??? Then what is perfect and diminished??? I understand how to juxtapose different chords to make the same chord, and how inversions make different chords in the scale. In the diminished seventh chord, is that a bb7 or a b and then a b7? Figured Bass: I don't know how a piano player could memorize all that, it must be impossible! Do we do that now in music, write out the numbers instead of chords or is that just a 'how we got to now' thing? I understand the difference between I and ii now, the big is major, the little, minor! The next one with the video was pretty basic, a recap of lesson one, I got it all! I just have to remember what all the words mean. Like a minor third is this many steps, etc. The fourth lesson was also a recap, but much harder. I don't know how I'll remember names like 'major minor seventh' or 'augmented minor minor triad'. Do I need to, or can I just print off what steps it has?
impresario Posted September 24, 2009 Posted September 24, 2009 I am back after a long time! I finally got finale (pun thing intended) on my computer again, as well as time. Well, besides that math test I have to study for but that comes second... Article 5 - naming chords It looked very complicated, but if you read it, it wasn't really. Of course I couldn't memorize what 7 or +11 or -Am meant, but if I had it down I could easily come up with a scale name. Bonus ones: List of chords - I didn't understand some of the text, but the message was clear and I got the boxes, which are I'm assuming the important part. Why does the 5 sometimes have brackets around it? And why do some chords have lines or slashes in between them? The next one was fun to read, I thought it was weird that only certain notes were allowed by churches. The history behind it was all sort of strange really. I don't see the need to know it though... perhaps you could explain? And finally, the last one. Even looking at the meanings and finding out which chords they were I didn't understand why it was strange. Will I understand better after you teach me chord order/placement? Also, do you have unlimited staves on your finale?
impresario Posted October 4, 2009 Posted October 4, 2009 Morivou? I don't want to be naggy, but its been a week since I've seen you here. I'm assuming you're busy because of your school stuff you were talking about in the I'm a junior... thread?
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