TFTM2e - Instructors Manual - 2 PDF
TFTM2e - Instructors Manual - 2 PDF
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS MANUAL ..................................................................................................ii
COURSE OUTLINE .................................................................................................... v
PART ONE: IN LIEU OF FUNDAMENTALS ...........................................................01
1 ASSORTED PRELIMINARIES ...................................................................................02
2 INTERVALS ................................................................................................................08
PART TWO: DIATONIC HARMONY.........................................................................16
3 BASIC HARMONIC STRUCTURES ...........................................................................17
4 MUSICAL SHORTHAND: LEAD SHEETS AND FIGURED BASS ............................26
5 HARMONIES OF THE MAJOR AND MINOR SCALES .............................................34
6 CADENCES/HARMONIC RHYTHM..........................................................................45
PART THREE: MELODY .............................................................................................53
7 MELODIC PITCH AND RHYTHM ............................................................................54
8 EMBELLISHING TONES ...........................................................................................67
9 MELODIC FORM .......................................................................................................81
PART FOUR: VOICE LEADING .................................................................................95
10 MELODIC PRINCIPLES OF PART WRITING/THE OUTER VOICE
FRAMEWORK .............................................................................................................96
11 THE MELODIC FACTOR IN FOUR-VOICE PART WRITING/VOICING
AND CONNECTING CHORDS..................................................................................102
12 PART WRITING WITH ROOT-POSITION TRIADS/ THE CHORALE .....................113
13 PART WRITING WITH TRIADS IN INVERSION ......................................................123
14 PART WRITING SEVENTH CHORDS .......................................................................140
PART FIVE: BASIC CHROMATIC HARMONY .....................................................154
15 SECONDARY FUNCTION I .......................................................................................155
16 SECONDARY FUNCTION II .....................................................................................168
17 MODULATION I ........................................................................................................177
PART SIX: COUNTERPOINT .....................................................................................188
18 THE ART OF COUNTERMELODY ...........................................................................189
19 THE FUGUE ..............................................................................................................202
ii
21
22
23
24
iii
solutions are included in the manual for such assignments, although in some
cases, general commentary regarding the range of possibilities may be given.
ORGANIZATION
Important information concerning the organization of the text is furnished
in the two prefaces (To the Instructor and To the Student). Please read that
material carefully. The 33 chapters are organized in this way:
PART ONE: IN LIEU OF FUNDAMENTALS
Chapters 12
PART TWO: DIATONIC HARMONY
Chapters 36
PART THREE: MELODY
Chapters 79
PART FOUR: VOICE LEADING
Chapters 1014
PART FIVE: BASIC CHROMATIC HARMONY
Chapters 1517
PART SIX: COUNTERPOINT
Chapters 1819
PART SEVEN: ADVANCED CHROMATIC HARMONY
Chapters 2024
PART EIGHT: FORM
Chapters 25-27
PART NINE: MUSIC IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND BEYOND
Chapters 2833
APPENDIX A:
APPENDIX B:
APPENDIX C:
APPENDIX D:
PITCH
RHYTHM
BASIC LEAD-SHEET SYMBOLS
PART-WRITING GUIDELINES
iv
SYLLABUS
Course outlines for two-, three-, and four-semester plans are given below.
Youll no doubt need to fine tune these based on your students level of
preparation and your own preferences. Flexibility is inherent in the text. Weve
explained in the prefatory notes our rationale for placing the fundamentals in
appendices. You may wish to start there. If so, thats no problem. They are
formatted and presented just like chapters, complete with assignments. In addition
to the assignments, there are callouts in the margin to Back to Basics exercises,
which are remediation exercises that can be completed on the website
(www.routledge.com/cw/turek ). Exercises linked to the Routledge Music Theory
Trainer can be completed by students online and their results emailed or printed
out, should you wish to use them as homework assignments. Back to Basics
appear throughout the early chapters offering students the opportunity to review
key music fundamentals on their own time, in the hopes that by completing these
exercises it will prevent the need for additional lecture time on these topics.
Students with adequate high school preparation may be able to move quickly
through this material or bypass it altogether. If so, so much the better. Otherwise,
youll need to cut back in other areas to fit all topics into the syllabus.
The chapters of Parts Two and Three should be presented in order.
However, Part FourPart Writingcan be tailored to suit your needs. Chapters
10 and 11 contain all the information required in a more circumscribed study.
From there, you may wish to move to the sections of Chapters 12 and 13 that deal
with suspensions and then to Chapter 14 (Part Writing Seventh Chords). Doing
this will make more time available for the newer topics later in the text. Part
SixCounterpointcontains more-or-less self-contained chapters. Chapter 18
(The Art of Countermelody) can suffice for an abbreviated look at the topic.
Chapter 19 can be included in your syllabus or omitted from it, depending perhaps
on whether your degree program includes a later course on counterpoint.
Part Seven is a fairly hefty look at harmonic chromaticism and generally is a good
foundation for the jazz harmony chapters that follow later. Part Eight is a threechapter introduction to form. Part Nine contains much of the newer material that
we consider indispensable to todays musician and that makes this text different
from others. The two chapters relating to jazz and blues and the chapter on song
writing probably played a big role in your decision to adopt this book. Thus, you
are not likely to omit any of this material. Again, if your degree includes a course
on form, you may opt to omit Chapters 26 and 27. If you prefer to include an
introduction to the topic, Chapter 25 alone can do it. It looks at form in a way that
we believe students today can understand and appreciate.
v
4-SEMESTER COURSE OUTLINE (Tailor to Suit)
SEMESTER ONE
Appendix A and B
0-2 weeks
Part One: In Lieu of Fundamentals
Chapter One: Assorted Preliminaries
Chapter Two: Intervals
1 week
2 weeks
1 week
2 weeks
2 weeks
1 week
1 week
2 weeks
2 weeks
SEMESTER TWO
Part Four: Voice Leading
Chapter Ten: Melodic Principles of part Writing/The Outer Voice Framework
1 week
Chapter Eleven: The Melodic Factor in Four-Voice Part Writing/
Voicing and Connecting Chords
2 weeks
Chapter Twelve: Part Writing with Root-Position Triads/ The Chorale
2 weeks
Chapter Thirteen: Part Writing with Triads in Inversion
2 weeks
Chapter Fourteen: Part Writing Seventh Chords
2 weeks
Part Five: Basic Chromatic Harmony
Chapter Fifteen: Secondary Function I
Chapter Sixteen: Secondary Function II
Chapter Seventeen: Modulation I
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
SEMESTER THREE
Part Six: Counterpoint
Chapter Eighteen: The Art of Countermelody
Chapter Nineteen: The Fugue
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
vi
2 weeks
2 weeks
1 week
2 weeks
SEMESTER FOUR
Chapter Twenty-Six: Introduction to Sonata Form
Chapter Twenty-Seven: Introduction to the Rondo
2 weeks
1 week
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
vii
2 weeks
2 weeks
1 week
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
Option 2: Same basic plan as Option 1 but replacing sonata form and rondo
chapters with chapters on blues and song composition.
Part Six: Counterpoint
Chapter Eighteen: The Art of Countermelody
Chapter Nineteen: The Fugue
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
Option 3: Same basic plan as Option 2 but eliminating chapter on fugue in favor of
chapter on jazz harmony. Provides a limited dose of form with full dose of
vernacular music.
Part Six: Counterpoint
Chapter Eighteen: The Art of Countermelody
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
viii
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
1 week
2 weeks
2 weeks
2 weeks
ix
ASSIGNMENTS
There are more assignments than can possibly be given in a single course.
Pick and choose which youll use for in-class work and which youll assign. In
general, you will probably want to make many short assignments in the earlier
chapters and fewer but longer assignments as the course progresses.
QUIZZES
Quizzes are included in the manual for most of the chapters. These can be
photocopied and given at the completion of each chapter, they can be combined to
form larger tests that cover several chapters, or you may simply use parts of the
quizzes in devising your own exams. At any rate, most of the questions are of the
objective sort, requiring very specific and concise answers. This has the
advantage of being easy to grade. In later chapters, you may wish to supplement
these objective questions with musical excerpts for analysis. Anthologies are
available which will supply a wealth of material for this purpose.
SOME THOUGHTS ON TEACHING MUSIC THEORY
Learning music theory involves, in part, the acquisition of a set of skills.
Fluency in music reading, the ability to recognize at an intellectual level the
processes at work in a musical passage, and the ability to hear in ones mind a
musical passage by viewing the score page are skills which are cultivated only
with time and practice. Learning music theory does not equate with memorizing a
long list of technical terms, even though a technical vocabulary is essential to
meaningful discourse about a musical work. It is only when a vocabulary has been
assimilated to the point that it becomes a means, rather than an obstacle, to the
expression of ones views about music and the communication of ones
understanding of it that it has value.
Because proficiency in music theory is a skill, it cannot be acquired
overnight. The knowledge is cumulative, and it must therefore rest on a solid
foundation. Intensive in-class work, student-instructor interaction, and regular
homework assignments are essential. Students must understand this and must
realize that daily class attendance and diligent, careful preparation of homework
are every bit as important as ones performance on examinations. In fact, they
constitute the best method of preparing for exams.
Music theory is difficult to teach in a mass lecture format. The ideal class
size perhaps numbers from twelve to fifteen students. This size permits enough
one-to-one interaction between student and teacher while providing a large
enough class so that ideas can be cross-generated and so that classroom
performance of the music under discussion can be an occasional reality.
It is very important that the students listen to the music under study. Most
of the examples in the text are easily playable at the keyboard. Instructors with
limited pianistic skills can overcome this problem by requesting a piano major to
prepare examples for a given chapter or section (one class period should be
sufficient notice). Generally, students (especially the better ones) welcome the
opportunity for such participation. CD ROMs accompany both the text and
workbook. These contain hundreds of the musical examplesalmost all that are
over four measures in length. While students can access these on their computers,
it is always good to have a fresh aural impression in their minds when discussing
a passage. Then, too, taking the few minutes necessary to play the excerpts in
class will help to prevent students from developing the attitude that music theory
is only theory, and not relevant to actual practice.
The time has long passed when theory could focus only on the standard
classical repertoire. Students must be able work and communicate in the world of
vernacular music, and so our mix of examples is fairly ecumenical.
Sight singing and ear training (aural theory) are critically important
skills that must be cultivated. In some schools, they form a part of the theory
course and at others, they are taught under separate course numbers. Either way,
we believe that these skills are most effectively taught and learned in correlation
with written theory. To this end, we have included Suggestions for Aural Drill
in this manual. If you teach in an integrated program (which unites written and
aural theory in a single course structure), then we suggest that you spend time at
the beginning or end of each and every class on these and other aural drills. To do
so may mean covering a given topic in somewhat less depth than you might
otherwise prefer, but the benefits will probably be worth it. If you teach in a
program where the two disciplines are separated, coordination is a bit more
difficult but not impossible. Again, we believe that the effort is worthwhile.
RT and DM
PART ONE
IN LIEU OF FUNDAMENTALS
(CHAPTERS 12)
Students enter their freshman year of music study with diverse
backgrounds in theory, ranging from little or no knowledge of the fundamentals to
two or more years study in high school. Because of this, instructors will
inevitably cover the material of these first chapters in different ways.
This text presumes no prior knowledge. The fundamentals are presented in
full detail, with sufficient exercises to bring even students with the least
preparation up to speed. However, most of that material has been placed in two
appendices, to be accessed as necessary. We've opted to begin the text proper in a
different way, one that we hope will make a more ingratiating first impression,
provide a little perspective on both music and theory, and serve notice that music
theory is brimming with fascinating subtopicsthat its not just about scales, key
signatures, meter signatures, and the like. Bottom line here: Were hoping to
pique students interest at the outset.
Chapter OneAssorted Preliminariesprovides historical perspective
regarding the origin of the staff and clefs, the evolution of the major and minor
scales, the origins of meter, and the acoustic foundations of musical sound and
temperament. Chapter TwoIntervalsis a complete presentation of that topic.
Although those students fortunate enough to have had extensive high-school
theory may feel they already know all there is to know about intervals, we've
found very few freshman music majors who are entirely fluent in their spelling
and recognition. Thats why we've deemed it necessary to separate this topic from
the other fundamentals covered in Appendices A and B and give it an honored
spot in the front of the book.
CHAPTER ONE
Assorted Preliminaries
MATTERS OF PITCH (pages 58)
The history of our pitch notation system is a fascinating portal to the study
of music theory. Weve given a synopsis here. A convenient source of additional
information is The New Harvard Dictionary of Music (ed. Don Randel). Weve
adopted the practice of starting every (or nearly every) class with a singing of the
Ut Queant Laxisa bow to tradition and a musical beginning. Students seem to
appreciate knowing whence come the syllables with which we torment them for
two years.
MODES, SCALES, AND EVOLUTION (pages 8-10)
This discussion is meaningful only if students are familiar with major and
minor scales. Jazz students are typically taught the modes in a different manner,
and we encourage students to use whatever works for them. The modes are
encountered again in the discussion of cadences in Chapter 6 and in the discussion
of early twentieth-century tonal materials in Chapter 28.
METRIC MATTERS (pages 11-14)
This discussion presupposes understanding of the material presented in
Appendix B. The origin of the dot and the early meter signatures are topics that
students find fascinating. The inclusion of hypermeter here is the first of many
past-present comparisons in the text.
SOUND (pages 15-19)
Again, the discussion is just enough to whet students appetite for more.
The experiment on page 15 is a good introduction to overtones, because students
can actually hear their contribution to the overall piano sound. You can recall this
experiment later in the text to explain the frequent omission of the chord fifth
from a root-position triad or seventh chord.
Equal temperament is given a necessarily simplistic presentation. We like
to give students a pitch on the piano, divide them into groups, and ask them to
sing the most in-tune major triad they can produce. When they finally get close,
well play that triad on the piano and let them hear the difference.
We hope instructors will pardon our reference to Pythagoras as the old
boy. No irreverence is intended. Its just part of our attempt to inject a colloquial
tone into a subject (theory) that often comes across as dry and pedantic.
Its probably unnecessary to test on this first chapter, although some drill
on modes is worthwhile.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
A.
1 Phrygian
2 Lydian
3 Mixolydian
4 Dorian
5 Aeolian
B.
1
10
(white keys E to E)
(white keys F to F)
(white keys G to G)
(white keys D to D)
(white keys A to A)
6 Lydian
7 Mixolydian
8 Phrygian
9 Dorian
10 Aeolian
(white keys F to F)
(white keys G to G)
(white keys E to E)
(white keys D to D)
(white keys A to A)
C.
1
10
D.
1
Lydian
Dorian
Phrygian
Mixolydian
E.
Lydian
Mixolydian
Aeolian
Dorian
Phrygian
F.
1
G.
1
CHAPTER TWO
Intervals
At no other point in this text are students varying backgrounds in theory
likely to be more obvious than in this chapter. The time spent here is typically a
necessary period of equalization, in which a more-or-less level playing field is
established. It is difficult to overstate the importance of interval recognition and
spelling. Students must be able to work with intervals quickly and accurately to
be successful with the more advanced topics that follow. Therefore, the timed
quiz at the conclusion of this chapter is appropriate.
WHITE-KEY INTERVALS (pages 21-24)
We think it useful to provide alternative methods for spelling intervals and
let students choose the one that works best for them. The white-key approach
might also be called the letter-name approach because it is based first on
counting the number of letter names spanned by an interval. The second step is to
determine the number of black keys spanned. A M7 spans 5, a m7 spans 4; a M6
spans 4, a m6 spans 3; and so on.
This approach is independent of any other musical knowledge. All that
students need are eight fingers to count the number of letter names, noting black
keys on the way. Applying the guidelines on page 21 gives the quality of the
white-key interval. All that remains is to factor in the effect flats or sharps when
the white-key interval is altered. The ability to visualize the piano keyboard helps
a great deal.
INTERVALS OF THE MAJOR SCALE (pages 25-26)
For us, the most generally successful method for spelling intervals has
been the major scale approach. This approach gives intervals a tonal context and
thus seems more musical than the more abstract white-key approach. The
disadvantage is the extra step of injecting a scale into the mix. Trying to figure out
the interval Ab-C, for example, requires students to spell either the Ab major scale
or C major scale, either upward or downward.
RELATED MATTERS (pages 27-30)
Once inversion is introduced (page 27), it can be a useful tool for
recognizing the wider intervals (students can simply invert sixths and sevenths to
the more easily reckoned thirds and seconds). Enharmonic intervals take a couple
formseither intervals of identical numerical value and quality that are spelled
differently (Example 2-10) or intervals with different numerical values and
qualities that nevertheless contain the same number of half steps (Example 2-9).
Some instructors consider only the second type to be a true enharmonic interval,
regarding the first as an enharmonic spelling. This is perhaps a matter of
semantics.
At the end of the chapter, weve included one additional way to measure
intervalsthe additive or building-block method. Students will gravitate toward
the method that works best for them, which could end up being none of these or
some combination.
Suggested Aural Quiz
An aural quiz on scales, modes, and intervals is appropriate at this
point. A suggested format follows:
10 intervals (melodic)
10 intervals (harmonic)
5 scales
5 modes
NOTE: The intervals may include all diatonic intervals or,
more practically, a set of intervals, such as: all consonances;
all dissonances; thirds and sixths only; minor second through
the tritone; and so on.
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Identifying and Spelling Intervals
1A.
1 2; P4
2 4; M6
3 4: M6
4 4; m7
5 1; m3
6 2; P4
7 4; m7
8 4; M6
9 3; P5
10 0; m2
11 4; m7
12 3; +4
13 4; m7
14 5; P8
15 2; o5
1 P4, +4
2 P8, +8
3 +4, P4
4 P5, o5
5 P4, +4
6 P4, +4
7 o5, P5
8 P8, o8
9 P4, o4
10 P4, +4
1B.
10
1C.
1 m3, o3
2 M6, m6
3 m7, M7
4 m3, o3
5 M2, m2
6 M3, +3
7 m7, o7
8 M6, m6
9 m3, o3
10 m2, M2
1D.
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
1E.
P4
M3
m3
P5
P4
M3
m3
m3
M2
m3
m2
m3
P5
m7
m2
M3
P4
M6
P4
M2
M2
11
1F.
1
10
1G.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
A B C
B A G F
Eb D C Bb Ab
F G A Bb C D E
Ab Bb C Db Eb F
Bb A G F EbD C
E F G A B C
(M3)
(P4)
(P5)
(M7)
(M6)
(m7)
(M6)
12
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
B CD
Eb D C Bb Ab G-Gb
C D E F G A B
D E F G A B-Bb
Bb C D Eb
D C B A
F E D CB A
F E D C B A-A
(M3)
(M6)
(M7)
(m6)
(P4)
(P4)
(m6)
(M6)
2. Related Matters
2A.
1 and 7
2 and 4
3 and 11
5 and 8
6 and 10
9 and 12
2B.
Other enharmonic spellings besides the ones shown are possible.
1
10
13
2C.
1
2D.
1
10
2E.
1
10
14
2F.
1
10
2G.
Melodic intervals in Silver Threads among the Gold:
m2 m2 M6 M2 M6 |
M2 m6 | m3 M2 M2 o5 m6 m6 | m2
15
&
w
m3 above
&
M6 above
7
M2 above
m7 below
8
bw
#w
+6 above
bw
P5 above
m6 below
10
#w
w
w
bw
P4 below
M7 above
o7 below
2.
Identify the following intervals. Then indicate the type of interval formed
by the inversion.
1
Interval: ____
Inversion: ____
____
____
3.
&
____
____
____
____
____
____
____
____
10
____
____
____
____
&
____
____
Interval: ____
Inversion: ____
bw w
#w
bw
w
#w
#w
bw
bw
bw
w bw
bw bw
#w bw
10
bw #w
16
PART TWO
DIATONIC HARMONY
(CHAPTERS 36)
Students should thoroughly understand the principles of functional
harmony before attempting to part-write music based on those principles. Part
Two introduces the diatonic harmonic vocabulary and the analytical tools that are
used to describe it.
Chapter Three describes the structure of the basic triads and seventh
chords. The five diatonic seventh chord types are introduced. While this
introduction occurs earlier than is typical, it is necessary given one of the prime
intentions of this textto show the connections between popular-based styles and
art music. The seventh chord is rampant in popular music and jazz. Chapter Four
introduces lead-sheet and figured-bass notation. Consistent with the idea of
moving from more-familiar to less so, lead-sheet notation is presented first.
Chapter Five considers the manner in which the triads of a key relate to each
otheri.e., harmonic function. The replacement of lead-sheet symbols with the
more informative Roman numerals at this point is but a small step. Chapter Six
completes Part Two with the introduction of the standard harmonic cadences
(along with some popular-music variants) and a look at harmonic rhythm.
17
CHAPTER THREE
Basic Harmonic Structures
A major goal of this text is to make students aware that vernacular and
art music are part of a continuum. Example 3-1 makes the triadic connection.
TRIADS (pages 3539)
Example 3-3 is the basic reference point for this part of the chapter. It can
be helpful to students to point out the following similarities and differences
among the four basic triad types:
The shared major third at the bottom of the major and augmented
triads
The shared minor third at the bottom of the minor and diminished
triads
18
emphasize the fact that inversion is determined solely by the lowest pitch of the
chord. Aural reinforcement can be used in comparing the relative stability and
harmonic weight of the various triad positions. Immediate drill on the spelling
and recognition of inversions is advisable.
SEVENTH CHORDS (pages 4247)
All five diatonic seventh chords are introduced here. Almost every triadic
harmony found in jazz and popular music is reducible to one of the four basic
triads or one of the seventh chord types shown in Example 3-14. The subject is
given fuller treatment in Chapters Thirteen and Fourteen.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
19
10 seventh chords
Note: Identification of the type of chord is probably sufficient at this
point.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Triads
1A.
1
10
2 Dbm 3 Bo 4 A+
7 Db+
8 Fo
12 E o
13 F m
5 Gb+
9 EM
10 Am
b
b
14 A o 15 B +
1C. Following are the changes needed to created the requested triad:
1 A n 2 D 3 Bb
4 Cb
5 Ebb
6 E n 7 Db 8 E n 9 Bb 10 Bb
20
1D.
1
11
12
13
16
17
10
14
18
15
19
1E.
1
10
20
21
2. Chord Inversion
2A.
1 B-D-F (1) 2 Ab-C-Eb (2) 3 C-E-G (R) 4 F-A-C (1) 5 E-G-Bb (R)
6 D-F-A (1) 7 G-B-D (2)
8 C-E-G (1) 9 Eb-G-Bb (2) 10 C-E-G (2)
2B.
1 1 m 2 1 m 3 2 M 4 R m 5 2 M 6 1 + 7 R o 8 2 o 9 2 m 10 1 +
2C.
1
10
2D.
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
22
2E.
Bb
M
1
Bb
M
1
Eb
M
R
Eb Bb
M M
2 R
F
m
1
Eb Bb X
M M
2 R
F
m
1
Eb X
M
R
D
o
R
Bb
M
R
3. Seventh Chords
3A.
1 mm7 2 MM7 3 7 4 o7 5 o7 6 7 7 MM7 8 Mm7
9 mm7 10 7 11 o7 12 MM7 13 Mm7 14 Mm7 15 o7
3B.
1 o7 1
2 7 1
3 o7 3
4 MM7 2
5 mm7 2
6 MM7 1
7 mm7 1
8 7 1
9 Mm7 1
10 MM7 2
23
3C.
1
10
11
12
13
16
17
18
14
15
20
19
3D.
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
24
3E.
1
11
12
13
14
15
16
10
17
18
19
20
3F.
Root: D C D Bb C D E F G F D G C A D G
Type: oo oo oo MM Mm mm om MM mm MM mm mm Mm Mm Mm Mm
Inv: 1 2
2 R R R R R R 1 R R R 1 3 1
Root: C A D B E A
Type: Mm Mm mm Mm Mm M
Inv:
3 R R R R 1
3G.
25
Type
Inversion
2.
___
___
___
___
mm7
oo7
MM7
om7
MM7
Mm7
Mm7
oo7
mm7
om7
Identify both the type and inversion of the following seventh chords.
1
Type:
Inv:
Spell the indicated root-position seventh type below the given pitches.
1
4.
Spell the indicated seventh chord type above the given roots.
1
3.
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
26
CHAPTER FOUR
Musical Shorthand: Lead Sheets and Figured Bass
In keeping with the present-past focus of the text, lead-sheet chord
symbology and figured-bass notation occupy the same chapter. Lead-sheet
symbols serve the needs of todays musician in the same way the figured bass did
for the Baroque musician. Roman-numerals, introduced in Chapter Five, are a
synthesis of the two systems.
LEAD-SHEET NOTATION (pages 48-52)
Example 4-2 shows the more common symbols for basic triads and
seventh chords. Fake books and sheet music are flush with variants. This textbook
employs those variants in order to familiarize students with multiple ways of
expressing the chords. Around the 1970s, the slash symbol began to appear
regularly, reflecting the growing importance of the bass line to the harmonic
structure in many popular songs. The method is capsulized in Example 4-4. The
discussion builds on the topic of inversion from page 39. You may wish to refer
back.
MORE ON CHORD INVERSION: THE NUMBERS GAME (page 52-54)
Between the chord member names (root, third, fifth and seventh) and the
figured bass symbols for inversion, students often go into numbers overload,
and confusion is rampant. This section is intended to clarify what all these
numbers mean.
FIGURED-BASS NOTATION (pages 54-60)
The need to indicate a bass line in a lead-sheet symbol provides a natural
segue to the figured bass. You might begin by pointing out the parallel nature of
the two systems. In lead-sheet notation, symbols instruct the performer how to
realize the harmonies and bass line beneath a given melody. In figured-bass
notation, symbols instructed the performer how to realize the harmonic structure
and create a melody above a given bass line. Both systems served a music in
which the performer was accorded major responsibility for the creation of the
final product. The music separating these two stylesClassical, Romantic, and
twentieth-century art musicrequired ever-increasing fidelity to the written
score, which became increasingly encumbered with notational directions
regarding dynamics, expression, articulation, and tempo.
As with lead-sheet notation, variations abound in the figured-bass system.
This is especially true regarding the indication of accidentals (point 7 on page 56)
and the extent to which a bass line was actually figured. The ten rules of figured
27
bass (pages 55-57) can be intimidating. Dispense in small doses. You might bring
students to the chalkboard to symbolize simple triads in various inversions (points
16) before considering chromatic alteration (point 7) and seventh chords (point
8).
You can recycle some earlier examples here. Ask your students to
represent by a figured bass Examples 3-8 and 3-16.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
10
5 Em 6 Co
7 A+ 8 D
9 Ebm 10 Bb
1B.
1 Abm
2 C+ 3 B
4 F o
1C.
1
10
28
1D.
1 FMaj7
2 Bm7-5
3 Eo
6 AMaj7
7 Bdim7 8 G
9 Emin7
10 B+
1 E7
2 C7
4 GM7
6 F7
5 Cm7-5
7 BMaj7
4 C7
5 D-7
IE.
1F.
3 Bm7
8 Co7
9 Ab7
10 DbM7
10
1G.
1
F/G Em/G | Dm7/G C/G | Gb/Ab Fm/Bb | F/B DbM7 |
CM7/D D/E | EbM7/F Fm/G | GbM7/Ab ||
2
Gm7/C | Am7/C | DbM7/Bb Cm7/Bb | Cm7 |
29
1H.
F F/E | Dm Dm/C BbMaj7 | F/A Am7/D D | G7 Gm/F |
C7/E C7 A/C | Dm Dm/C Bm7-5 | Gm/C C7 | F ||
1I.
Eb/G Eb+/G Ab Fm7 Fo7 | Gm7 Cm Fm/Ab | Eb/G Eb+/G Ab Gm7 |
F7 Bb7 | Eb Eb7 Fm7/Eb Fo7/Eb | Eb G/D Cm A7 F7/Ab |
11
12
13
2B.
1 6+
2 3
3 b6
4
6
4n 3
6 3
7 6
n3
8 n 6
3
9 n3
10
14
15
6
3
10 6
3
30
2C.
1
31
2D.
1
2E.
(x = no figure needed under bass note)
1
2
x 6 | x 6 6 | x 6 x | x | x ||
n
x 6 x 6 | x x x | x 6 x | x 5
x ||
32
2F.
G| G D Em Bm | Em D G G | Em Bm D Em | C G D Em
|
x
D G D
x
G/B | C D Em D/F |
6
x x
G Em D Am | G/B D G
x
33
1 Cm 7-5
3 Eo /F
5 Db+/A
4 Em7/D
2.
___
3.
Spell the triads and seventh chords indicated by the figured-bass notes.
___
___
___
10
4.
___
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
___
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
___
34
CHAPTER FIVE
Harmonies of the Major and Minor Scales
THE DIATONIC CHORDS (pages 61-68)
The arrangement of Amazing Grace sacrifices simplicity on the altar of
musical interest. However, the triads and the couple seventh chords are clearly
shown on the extra staff. Again, its a way of beginning with a tune familiar to
most students. Example 5-2 is laid out to show the logic behind the functional
names given to triads (and scale degrees). For example, students sometimes ask
why the submediant is not under the mediant but in fact above it in the scale. The
illustration shows that the chord is named to reflect its position as a midpoint
(median) between the tonic and subdominant, just as the mediant is named to
reflect its midpoint position between the tonic and dominant.
Example 5-4 (page 66
Of the alternative minor-key triads, v and VII are the most common. Still,
students should understand that the most common of all minor-key triads are
those shown in the Example 5-4a, i.e. those of the harmonic minor scale but with
the major triad on the mediant (III).
Once the functional names and symbols have been introduced, immediate
drill can be undertaken. Calling upon students at random to spell the mediant in
Bb, or to spell the iv chord in E minor is efficient and effective.
Showing Inversion (page 66)
The figured-bass numbers are now plugged in to complete the Roman
numeral symbol. Complete symbols for the diatonic seventh chords and their
inversions are given at this point as well.
The Diatonic Seventh Chords
The diatonic seventh chords were introduced by type in Chapter 3
following triads (early by some standards but necessary in keeping with our goal
of presenting vernacular music throughout the text in renditions that are not
simplified to the point of sounding silly or even being unrecognizable. Here, the
Roman numeral designations, including inversion, are given, again following the
symbology for triads. Seventh chords return in a big way in Part Four (part
writing).
35
36
10
1B.
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
37
1C.
1 F: IV
d: VI
g: III
6 c: i
A: iii
E: vi
2 Db: vi
Gb: iii
Eb: X
7 e: iv
F: iii
G: ii
1D.
1
1E.
1
5 G: ii
C: vi
F: iii
9 Gb: V
Ab: IV
f: VI
10 c: X
Ab: viio
f: iio
8 E: IV
B: X
c: VI
4 f: iv
A: ii
D: vi
3 c: X
g: iio
Bb: viio
10
10
11
12
38
1F.
1
10
39
1G.
7
1 iii
2 V
3 vi
4 viio
5 ii
6 IV
7 ii
8 VI
9 V
10 iv
1H.
1 ii 4
2
4
6 iv 2
7 V5
1I.
1
3 vi 5
4 VI 3
8 iv7
9 IV3
ii
2. Functional Tonality
2A.
10 IV 5
vi
5 viio 5
1J.
7
iii
2 V2
IV
10
40
2B.
Key: G
Motion:
I | I V vi iii | vi V I I | vi iii V vi | IV I V
R R P
P P S
R P R P
P
2C.
1
Key: D
Motion:
I vi | ii V
P
P
6
| I ii | I 64 V
P
P
S
2
6
7
6
Key Bb: I IV iii vi | viio I V V | I viio6 iii vi | ii 6 V I ||
5
Motion:
R P P
P S P
R P P
P P
3
Key Ab:
Motion:
| IV | ii | V | V | I 6 | V | I ||
4
S P
S
P
P
(S
S)*
41
* If you prefer your students regard the cadential six-four chord as a dominant,
use this analysis of the harmonic motion .
2D.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
bb
d
G
F
Eb
b
E
f
PSPP
XPXR
SPRPPP
XPPRPP
XSPRPP
PXPPXP
XPPPXP
RPSPXP
2E.
Other possible answers are shown in parentheses.
1
1
2
3
4
5
b
D: ii V
A : ii V
F: V IV
g: VI iv
e: iv iio
(viio)
(viio)
(ii, vi, iii)
(ii, V, viio)
2
1
2
3
4
5
b
b
b
B : iii vi
g : V iv
G : viio V
b: V I
G: vi iii
2F.
1
V 3 | I IV | V
Pachelbel: Canon in D
I V | vi
| vi I 64 | IV I | ii ii 4 | V V 2 | I
2
I V
iii | IV
| IV
V |
I | V | vi | I 4 | IV | I | II
| V |
The patterns are similar. They resemble the patterns that support a
descending bass such as the one shown in Example 5-14 and elsewhere.
42
vi
ii
V
I
___
___
___
2.
Write the indicated triads on the staff below, adding flats or sharps as
necessary.
F: ii
3.
A: V
D: vi
Db: iii
Bb: viio
Provide a clear and concise definition for each of the following terms:
a.
Retrogression:
b.
Ground bass:
c.
Progression:
d.
Harmonic function:
43
4.
Ab:
___
___
___
___
___ ___
5.
Show both the lead-sheet symbol and Roman-numeral symbol that
describe each chord.
Lead-sheet:
RN:
6.
___ ___
___ ___
___ ___
___ ___
___
___
Eb: IV 5
6
Ab: viio 43
Bb: vi 2
4
g: III 2
f: VI 5
45
CHAPTER SIX
Cadences/Harmonic Rhythm
CADENCES (pages 80-91)
The traditional order of presentation (authentic followed by plagal, half,
deceptive, and Phrygian half) is a bit misleading, as the two most common
cadences by far are the authentic and half. Students should understand that
probably 90% of all cadences in the traditional common-practice repertoire fall
into one or the other of these two categories. Still, the plagal has enjoyed a
twentieth-century renaissance in gospel and blues-based music. Students should
also understand that the half cadence comes in many varieties and that any chord
leading to a pause on the dominant chord is a half cadence.
Standard Cadences (page 83)
Feel free to delay introducing the perfect/imperfect distinction at this time.
Practically speaking, the need to distinguish degrees of conclusiveness does not
arise until Chapter 9, where discussion of periods and phrase groups necessitates
it.
Youll probably want to reinforce the presentation of harmonic cadences
with aural drill. Root movement (or bass motion, which amounts to the same
thing except in the Phrygian cadence) and chord quality are good keys to
identification, since each of the standard cadences presents a unique combination
of these features. Using the Summary of Standard Cadences on page 90, you
might ask students to develop a chart showing the bass motion and chord type for
each. They can glean the necessary information from Example 6-13, as well.
Alternatively, you may wish to photocopy and hand out the chart on Cadence
Identification on page 47 of this manual. The three points on page 91 of the text
are worth stressing.
For the last forty or so years, self-trained popular musicians have
unknowingly assailed (or at least ignored) many long-held-sacred practices. One
such practice involves cadences. Popular and rock songs contain some that
conform to none of the traditional types, and todays musicians should be aware
of these departures. By whatever harmonic means, a pause in the musical flow
can usually be called a cadence. Examples 6-11 and 6-12, though by classically
trained composers, contain cadences that defy traditional classification. And thats
okay. Music evolves.
HARMONIC RHYTHM (pages 91-96)
Although harmonic rhythm is usually presented as if its governed by
meter, the more accurate approach might be to look at meter as a by-product of
46
harmonic rhythm. Certainly, when early music publishers first began to add
barlines for clarity, they did so based on a feeling for accentuation, which was in
large measure created by harmonic change.
For aural reinforcement, you might play excerpts and ask students to
notate the harmonic rhythm in the manner suggested in the experiment
involving Examples 6-18, 6-19, and 6-20. This is a good predecessor to harmonic
dictation since recognizing harmonic change is not as difficult as recognizing
harmonies per se. Some of the Bach chorale harmonizations in Chapters 12 and
13 can be used to hone students understanding of the importance of harmonic
rhythm to meter. Try playing Example 12-2 with no feeling of accent and ask
students to determine aurally the location of the strong beats. They might well
decide the passage begins with beat one. Next, show them the passage and play it
again. Chances are theyll hear it differently now. Discuss the reasons why,
starting with the cadence on beat three (not beat four). HOWEVER: Note how
Chopin turns the harmonic rhythm completely around in Example 6-21, which
actually sounds like it should begin with an anacrusis.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
47
M
A
CADENCE TYPE
BASS MOTION
TRIAD QUALITIES
Authentic
Perfect 5 down
Major to Major
Plagal
Perfect 4 down
Major to Major
Half
Major 2 up
Major to Major
Deceptive
Major 2 up
Major to Minor
Authentic
Perfect 5 down
Major to Minor
Plagal
Perfect 4 down
Minor to Minor
Half
Major 2 up
Minor to Major
Phrygian
Minor 2 down
Minor to Major
Deceptive
Minor 2 up
Major to Major
J
O
R
M
I
N
O
R
******************************************************************
48
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Cadences
6
1A.
1B.
1C.
1 AC
d: V i
2
PC
Db: IV I
6 PC 7 HC
A: IV I Bb: IV V
3 PH
b: iv6
8 DC
Ab: V vi
4 HC
G: IV V
9 PC
c: iv i
5 DC
a: V VI
10 PH
g: iv6
1D.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Deceptive
Half
Plagal
Authentic
Phrygian
1E.
1
Eb: I V vi V6
AC
|
I I6 V7 | I V6 I
AC
|
IV6
I IV I6
| V V7 I
||
49
PC
f: i i | i i | iv
iv |
PC
G: I
4
g: i
6
| I IV 4
| I
AC
i i | iv iv | i i | V7
HC
6
V6 | vi iii 4
AC
6
6
i i | V | V V
V | i
1F.
1
V7 | i i ||
| i
| v6 | VI
| I X | V ||
PHC
iv |V ||
10
2. Harmonic Rhythm
2A. Meter is
9
, the harmonies change once a measure until the last measure.
8
2B.
1
50
51
52
QUIZ ON CADENCES
1. Identify the cadences suggested by the following figured basses.
1
2
3
4
5
Cadence: _______
_______
_______
_______
_______
2.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
3.
Name the cadences possible (AC, PC, HC, DC, PHC) at each fermata.
_____
_____
_____
_____
Bb:
g:
______
______
______
_____
_____
Bb:
4.
Add the key signature, and notate the two chords that would produce the
cadences.
1
2
3
4
5
G: Plagal
D: Deceptive
E: Half
c: Phrygian
f#: Authentic
53
53
PART THREE
MELODY
(CHAPTERS 79)
Few students show up in the theory classroom packing an inspired
melodic gift. If the primary goal of this part of the book were to teach students to
write inspired melodies, that goal would be doomed to failure, because inspired
melody writing involves an elusive intuitive element that is difficult to teach. The
mission here, then, is to promote an understanding of the melodic dimension in
both its general and specific aspects and develop sufficient skill to write passable
melodies when the occasion requires it.
Melody writing cannot be easily learned by applying a succinct set of
guidelines such as those given later in the book for part writing. For one thing, the
factors governing effective melody writing do not lend themselves readily to a
recipe approach. For another, rhythminherent and indispensible in all
melodiesis an aspect difficult to quantify.
Tonal melodies are so bound up with functional harmonic principles that
students will need to draw upon their newly acquired harmonic understanding in
order to write effective tonal melodies.
54
CHAPTER SEVEN
Melodic Pitch and Rhythm
Freshman music students may hold rather narrow attitudes concerning the
nature of melody. Chances are that they think of melodies only in tonal and lyrical
contexts. You may wish to begin the chapter by playing a variety of melodies
from Mozart to Webernstressing that each is, in fact, a melody and that the
differences are matters of style.
RANGE, INTERVAL STRUCTURE, AND GESTURE (pages 99-105)
The melodic features discussed in this section should not be taken for
granted. You may wish to provide aural reinforcement by playing a number of
melodies and asking students to draw a general contour diagram, to make note of
the location of high and low points, to make general observations regarding the
interval structure, and to notate any recurring rhythmic patterns.
REPETITION (pages 105-111)
Melodies without repetition in some form are exceedingly rare. Example
7-5, however, is loaded. It contains repetition in all its formsexact (in m. 7),
varied (in mm. 12), sequential (mm. 56 vis a vis mm. 12), and (although not
mentioned in the chapter) imitation (in the left-hand part). You may wish to have
students identify the various forms of repetition in the melodies of Example 7-4.
Others that might be examined include Example 4-7 (page 58), Example 9-17
(page 159), Example 17-1c (page 280), and Example 17-12b (page 292).
Its up to you to decide how specifically your students are to describe
sequences. Weve chosen not to belabor the sometimes elusive distinctions
between real and tonal, partial and modified. These additional classifications
strike us as unnecessary analytical baggage. There are perhaps more important
things for students to consider.
MELODIC TONALITY (pages 112-119)
Were amazed by the number of students who apparently do not realize
the true value in practicing scales and arpeggiosthat its an indirect but highly
concentrated (and admittedly tedious) way of practicing their repertoire. This part
of the chapter pairs those familiar concepts (scales and arpeggios) with their
larger but less familiar counterpartsstep progressions and large-scale
arpeggiations. Its a logical pairing, but the latter require that students be able to
55
recognize the important pitches in a melody. Does a clearer example of the step
progression exist than Harold Arlens Over the Rainbow (Example 7-16)?
Harmonic implication in tonal melody is one of the less tangible concepts.
The term tonic-dominant axis has an off-putting, academic sound to it. Yet its
easy to demonstrate, and students seem to pick up on it quickly. Handels Alla
Hornpipe from Water Music (Example 7-17 illustrates this concept as effectively
as Over the Rainbow shows the step progression. Other good examples include
the Chopin Mazurka op. 7, no. 1 (page 151) and the Mozart Piano Sonata, K. 309
(page 159).
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
You can get higher mileage from the melodic vehicles in the Workbook by
interchanging the instructions preceding them. For example:
56
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Range, Interval Structure, and Gesture
1A. Student opinion may differ slightly, as may yours. Ask them to justify theirs.
1
Descending; arch
Prevailingly disjunct
C major
Ascending; descending
Evenly balanced
F major
Decending; ascending
Prevailingly disjunct
G major
Arch; ascending
Evenly balanced
G major
1B.
1C.
57
2. Repetition
2A. No. 1 is neither a precise real nor tonal sequence. However, it is more tonal
than real, remaining completely diatonic in the key.
1
You may wish to point out that the exact manner of variation in the repetition of
mm. 20-21. Augmentation is introduced later in the book (Chapter 18) in the
context of contrapuntal devices.
58
59
2B.
2C.
1
60
2D.
1
61
2E.
1
Measures 0-4 are repeated in a real sequence a P4 higher. Measures 8
(beat 3)-12 are repeated in a real sequence a P4 higher. Measures 9-16 are a
varied repetition of mm. 0-8.
2
Measures 11, 12, and 13 are a tonal sequence a step higher at each
repetition. Measures 15, 16, and 17 are a tonal sequence a step lower at each
repetition. Measure 17 is modified.
3. Melodic Tonality
3A.
1
62
3B.
1
63
3C.
For all their surface differences, the two melodies are remarkably similar
in certain ways. They both contain a step progression that descends in this
manner: 3 - 2 - 1 - 7 - 6 , the first concluding on 5 , the second on 1 . They both
reach a high point on the dominant on the first beat of their second measure. They
both have a strong tonic-dominant axis, with those pitches appearing in important
metric positions. Both feature gestures that are repeated in tonal sequence at a
lower pitch level, the first in mm. 47-50 and mm. 51-54, and the second in mm. 14. Neither melody contains a large-scale arpeggiation.
3D.
1
64
65
66
3
In the melodies that follow, bracket the step progressions or indicate by
arrows the large-scale arpeggiations that are present.
67
CHAPTER EIGHT
Embellishing Tones
Back when embellishing tones were in their formative stages, most
composers were involved with choirs. They handled dissonance with special care
partly out of concern for the ease with which it could be sung. Because of this, all
the standard embellishing tones are either preceded or followed by a step, and the
most conservative ones are conjunct on both sides.
We present embellishing tones in groups based on their approach and
resolutionstep-step combinations, step-leap combinations, and step-rep
combinations. The summary chart on page 139 is organized in this manner.
STEP-STEP COMBINATIONS (pages 122124)
Passing tones and neighbor tones compose this group. The former
involves a step between different pitches, the latter a step above or below a
repeated pitch. The group has its own dedicated set of assignments.
STEP-LEAP COMBINATIONS (pages 125127)
This is a three-member group. The appoggiatura and escape tone can be
characterized as opposites, in terms of both approach/resolution and accentuation.
The changing tone (now commonly called a double neighbor) adds an extra step
to the configuration; the steps must be in the opposition direction of the leap so
that the original pitch returns. A relative, which weve chosen to omit from
discussion, is the cambiataa step-leap-step combination in which the first step
and leap are in the same direction. It occurs often in Palestrinian counterpoint but
is less common in later styles.
STEP-REPETITION COMBINATIONS (pages 127130)
This is also a three-member club. Its helpful to characterize the
suspension and anticipation as opposites, both in terms of approach/resolution and
accentuation. In the anticipation, one tone arrives at the next chord before the
others, while in the suspension, one tone arrives at the next chord after the others.
Although this is a bit simplistic, it emphasizes an important and fundamental
difference. The retardation is simply an upward-resolving suspension.
Suspensions are usually the most difficult of the embellishing tones for students,
who can often see how they work readily enough but have trouble writing them.
Stress the idea of suspending the tone into the next harmony.
68
69
1. Step-Step Combinations
1A. Multiple answers exist for several of these. Weve indicated a few
possibilities.
1
70
1B.
1C.
In no. 5, a NT is not possible. A PT is only possible as a chromatic PT, and even
so, the resulting tone is not a dissonance.
1
1D.
Both possibilities are shown for Nos. 2, 3, and 4.
1
71
1E.
1
72
1F
1
73
Students are not asked to identify the two appoggiature present, as theyve
not been covered at this point in the chapter.
74
2. Step-Leap Combinations
2A.
2B.
10
10
75
2C.
1
76
g: i | IV viio i iv | V V | i viio
D: I | vi iii | IV ii iii | vi V | I ||
i iio | V ||
3. Step-Repetition Combinations
3A.
3B.
1
10
77
3C.
1
78
3D.
1
79
80
81
2.
3.
4.
Provide complete Roman-numeral analysis of the following passage.
Circle and label all embellishing tones. Then identify the cadence.
81
CHAPTER NINE
Melodic Form
THE PHRASE (pages 140-147)
Its interesting to begin by asking students to explain what a phrase is.
Some unusual answers are usually forthcoming. Despite the fact that most
students will have used the term many times, they may find it difficult to
formulate a succinct and accurate definition. We tell them to take heart in the
knowledge that there are many ways of defining a phrase (witness the four
definitions at the beginning of this chapter).
The last of these is perhaps the most useful, despite its imprecise
terminology. What constitutes a complete musical thought? Must a phrase end
with a rhythmic pause or can it be terminated solely by a harmonic cadence?
These questions highlight some of the problems that complicate phrase definition
and identification. Some students may wonder why Example 9-3a on page 142
cannot be regarded as two two-measure phrases. The answer is probably that the
four measures provide a more complete musical thought than either of the twomeasure units. And that might be because no harmonic movement takes place in
the two-measure units. Still, this exemplifies the problems associated with
defining phrases solely in terms of length. We advocate flexibility on this issue.
Point out to students that this is only one of many areas of musical analysis where
multiple viewpoints may be acceptable.
The Musical Sentence (page 146)
The prominence of sentence structure in classical melodies has recently
drawn interest. This type of phrase construction (1+1+2) occurs frequently
because of composers natural inclination to state an idea, repeat it, and grow it. It
occurs in melodies of all periods, can be seen in structures larger than the phrase,
as will be pointed out in the chapters on musical form, and is a natural way to go
about composing, as shown in Chapter 33.
Phrase Relationships (page 146)
The method of symbolizing phrase relationships used here is the standard
one, which of course provides no way of distinguishing between contrasting and
similar phrases (both are symbolized a b).
The matter of similarity versus contrast is another subjective area that can
provide fertile soil for debate. Rhythm is arguably the most important criterion in
such determinations. Where the distinction is not all that clear-cut, its probably
not all that important.
82
Example 7-6 on page 107: A two-phrase group and also an example of the
musical sentence
83
Example 12-11 on page 201: A phrase group or, if you prefer to introduce
the concept, a modulating period
Example 13-19 on page 221: A period (a b or a a1) or an eight-measure
phrase
Example 17-9a on page 287: Another modulating period, if youre so
inclined
Place a phrase mark at each melodic cadence and identify the cadence as
conclusive (C) or inconclusive (I).
Bracket any sequential passages and identify the repetition as real or tonal.
Repeated phrase:
Mozart Piano Sonata K. 332 (I): mm. 94109 (page 216)
Schumann Kinderscenen, op. 15, no. 8 (By the fireside): mm. 1-8 (pages
325-326
Parallel period:
84
Contrasting period:
Mahler: Nun will die Sonn so Hell aufgehn from Kindertotenlieder:
mm. 415 (page 400)
Modulating period:
Haydn Piano Sonata H. XVI: 37 (III): mm. 2028 (page 192)
Beethoven Piano Sonata op. 53 (I): mm. 18 (page 270)
Schumann Kinderscenen, op. 15, no. 2 (Curious Story): mm. 18 (page
323)
Faure Chansons dAmour, op. 27, no. 1: mm. 310 (page 395)
Three-phrase period:
Beethoven Symphony No. 7, op. 92 (II): mm. 5174 (pages 293294)
Double period:
Anonymous Menuet BWV 115: mm. 116 (page 81)
Schumann Ich will meine Seele tauchen from Dichterliebe, op. 48: mm.
116 (page 329)
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. The Phrase
1A.
1
Phrasing: Similar phrases a (mm.1-4) b (mm.5-8)
Sequences: mm.5-8 are a loose sequence of mm.1-4.
85
2
Phrasing: Contrasting phrases a (mm.9-12) b (mm.13-16)
The eight measures comprise a musical sentence.
3
Phrasing: Contrasting phrases a (mm.1-4) b (mm.5-8)
No sequences are present although the sub-phrase units are melodically similar.
The eight measures comprise a musical sentence.
4
NOTE: The first measure of the passage is m. 5.
Phrasing: Contrasting phrases a (mm.5-8) b (mm.9-15)
Mm. 11-12 are a tonal sequence of mm. 9-10.
1B.
1
86
1C.
1
2
3
4
5
2B.
1
87
2C.
1
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
88
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Motive: mm.1-2
Both eight-measure phrases end conclusively on the tonic on beat one.
a a1
The phrases form a phrase group.
No phrase extensions are present.
1.
2.
Motive: m.1
Whether viewed as two 8-m. phrases or four 4-m. phrases, only the final
phrase ends with the tonic on beat one.
As 4-m. phrases: a b c d
As 8-m. phrases: a b
As 8-m. phrases, the two form a period. Viewed as 4-m. phrases, they
form a double period.
Where seventh chords exist, the seventh has not been labeled a NCT.
3.
4.
5.
89
2D.
1
90
2E.
2F.
1
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
91
2
Haydn: Gennzinger Sonata (first movement)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
92
93
94
2.
95
PART FOUR
VOICE LEADING
(CHAPTERS 1014)
Four-voice part writing is a topic that may be scaled back in order to make
room for others equally vital for todays musicians. We realize that not everyone
will share this opinion, and this has prompted the organization of Part Four.
All the important voice-leading considerationsthe principles governing
the individual lines, chord voicing, and chord connectionare presented in
Chapter 11, so that students are equipped in this one chapter to go forth and part
write with some degree of success. From here, you can choose your route. Follow
the traditional path and proceed directly through the remaining three chapters of
Part Four; or skip next to Part Writing Suspensions on pages 202-204 of
Chapter 12, where the 4-3 and 9-8 are covered in the context of root-position
triads, followed by Suspensions and First Inversion on pages 213-215 of
Chapter 13, where the 7-6 and 2-3 are covered in the context of first inversion.
Whichever route you choose, you can allocate more or less time to second
inversion (pages 215-222). Students already know the most important principle in
this regard, which is to double the bass. Add to that the metric positioning of the
chord, stress stepwise motion into and out of it (the arpeggiated six-four chord
excepted) and voila! Seventh chords are so much a part of all music that we dont
recommend omitting any part of Chapter 14.
Our heavy reliance on the Bach chorales needs no apology. As for the
limitation to four-voice texture, mastery of this format enables students to deal
with three- or five-voice textures when the need arises. No additional voiceleading problems or considerations attend three-voice textures. While five-voice
textures do involve additional doubling and registral considerations, this texture is
not commonly encountered and, after all, theres only so much that can be
accomplished in a core theory course.
You should continually remind students of the melodic aspects of voice
leading. Its far too easy to lose sight of this when grappling with problems of
doubling, spacing, parallelisms, and all the rest. This is partly the reason for
Chapter 10, which focuses on melodic principles as they apply to the outer voices.
Frequent class singing of student work will help to reinforce the importance of the
melodic dimension and its guiding principles, and it will also help to relate theory
to performance. The aural benefits are an added bonus.
96
CHAPTER TEN
Melodic Principles of Part Writing/
The Outer Voice Framework
MELODIC PRINCIPLES (pages 167-169)
Chapter 10 serves a two-fold purpose. It serves to introduce part writing
by addressing the two most prominent, if not most important, musical linesthe
melody and the bass. It serves as an early introduction to counterpoint, a topic that
is taken up more fully in Chapters 18 and 19. Good counterpoint between the
outer voices goes a long way toward facilitating the part writing of the inner
voices. The melodic principles cited here apply with equal force to all melodic
and contrapuntal writing, whether for two voices or four, and students need to
learn them well.
CREATING AN OUTER VOICE FRAMEWORK (pages 169-177)
As a topic piece, weve chosen a song students are likely to have heard in
its popular renditions. This is in keeping with our goal of using the familiar to
teach the unfamiliar. We feel it makes the learning of 1:1 counterpoint a bit less
academic in the student mind than the typical Fuxian presentation in whole
notes.
Weve chosen to present the conversion of first species counterpoint to
second species in terms of the standard nonchord tones, providing students with
an opportunity to apply a recently learned concept.
Added Practice
Weve added ample exercises within the chapter to assure that students
have an opportunity to apply the concepts as they are presented.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Melodic Principles
1A. T.T. = tendency tone
1
Key: Ab
97
1B.
1
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
98
2
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1C.
1
10
1D.
1.
Soprano range: G4 to E5
Alto range: E4 to B4
Tenor range: A3 to F4
Bass range: A2 to D4
99
2.
3.
4.
1E.
Parallel: 1
Similar: 8
Oblique: 11
Contrary: 15
2. Creating An Outer-Voice Framework
2A. Possible solutions follow.
1
100
2B. Although students are asked to begin these exercises on different pitches, the
actual chorale melodies are added here for your reference. The complete Bach
harmonizations appear in the Bach-Reimenschneider 371 Harmonized Chorales,
Nos. 370 and 293.
1 J. S. Bach: Kommt her zu mir, spricht Gottes Sohn
101
102
CHAPTER ELEVEN
The Melodic Factor in Four-Voice Part Writing/
Voicing and Connecting Chords
REVIEW OF MELODIC PRINCIPLES (pages 179-180)
Four-part music is most effective when its component voices form
interesting melodic lines. Therefore, attention is paid first to the characteristics of
the individual lines. Following all of the procedures for doubling, spacing, and
chord connection will not compensate for poorly constructed melodies. Range,
contour, and interval structure are prime concerns, as is the treatment of sensitive
tones, which should almost always be resolved, even in the inner voices.
Examination of any number of Bachs chorale harmonizations will reveal that
conjunct motion predominates.
Example 11-1 (page 180)
In part music, no individual voice is likely to span its entire total range,
and in fact, the alto and tenor voices often exhibit quite restricted ranges, as they
do here. In Bachs chorale harmonizations, the bass is the voice most likely to
approach its total range.
VOICING CHORDS (pages 181-184)
Students seem to have a hard time appreciating the subtleties of spacing,
especially when chords are played on the piano, where sympathetic vibration of
strings tends to fill in most voicings. You might place a single harmony, spaced
half a dozen different ways, on the chalkboard and have the class sing each.
Discussion of the different effects can be revealing. It is worth stressing that
structure is determined by the distances between the three upper voices only.
Doubling (page 182)
Unless one is attempting a precise emulation of the voice leading in the
Bach chorale harmonizations, the Short Rule of Doubling (page 183) is all that
students need. We prefer not to overly restrict them with negatives (dont do this,
dont do that) so that part writing becomes more the creative activity it is than an
academic chore. The alternative doubling practices on page 184 provide options
for those students capable of dealing with them.
CONNECTING CHORDS (pages 184-191)
These principles apply to triads in all positions and thus pertain also to
Chapters 12 and 13. They are presented in what is generally conceded to be their
order of importance.
103
Part writing is a little like the card game Bridge, where you can play a
passable (though not inspired) game by simply following a set of rules without
fully understanding why. We want students to know why, and so weve provided
both a rationale for the procedures discussed in this section and some flexibility.
Consecutive Perfect Fifths and Octaves (page 185)
The term consecutive is perhaps preferable to parallel when
discussing perfect consonances of the same kind in succession. The reason is that
such a succession may actually involve contrary motion, as in Example 11-7b.
(Parallel fifths by contrary motion seems paradoxical on the surface and is a bit of
a mouthful.) In our experience, students have difficulty accepting (or at least
understanding) the historical and acoustic explanations for the prohibition on
consecutive fifths, octaves and unisons. How does one then justify the allowance
of consecutive perfect fourths? The ban became decidedly less a factor in the
nineteenth century, and students regard it as irrelevant to todays music.
Therefore, we present this purely as a stylistic trait, to be observed in the baroque
style. We find almost no point in hunting down direct fifths and octaves. Students
already have enough to master, and the problems do little to detract from
otherwise well-written passages. Voice crossing and overlap are even lesser evils,
and judiciously used, are not objectionable.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
104
7 V (X)
3 I
4 viio (X)
8 vi (X)
9 viio
5 i (X)
10 V
1B.
1
10
1C.
1
10
105
1D.
No. 7 cannot be completed according to the doubling preferences because
first inversion would place the leading tone in the bass, thereby doubling it.
1
10
1E.
Depending on their choice of soprano pitch, student solutions will vary. None are
given here.
1F.
6
Chord:
V | I I | IV I | V V I | IV V IV | I V V | I
Voice Doubled:
B B B B
B B S B
B B
B B B
R R R R
R R 5 R
R 3
R R R R
1 1
5 5
5 6
1 5 5
106
2. Connecting Chords
2A.
1 voice overlap
+2nd
2B.
1 voice crossing
6 spacing
// 5ths
2 // 8ves
7 doubling
+2nd
3 // 5ths
8 doubling
4 doubling
5 // 5ths
107
2C.
1
10
108
2D.
Part writing will vary depending on the voicing chosen. Possible solutions
are given here.
1
2E.
1
11
12
13
10
10
14
15
109
2F.
1 Plagal
4 Deceptive
2 Perfect Authentic
5 Phrygian Half
3 Half
6 Imperfect Authentic
110
2.
Identify the part-writing error in each of the following by placing the letter
corresponding to the error committed in the blank provided.
a. Spacing b. Voice overlap c. Voice crossing d. Consecutive octaves
e. Melodic augmented second f. Consecutive fifths g. Doubling
h. Voice not within range i. Unresolved tendency tone
1
_____
_____
_____
_____
_____
3.
Regarding the given pitch as the soprano, write the requested chords in the
inversion and structure indicated.
111
4.
Add alto and tenor to the given soprano-bass framework. Identify the
motion between the soprano and bass, and provide harmonic analysis.
n n
Motion: __ __ __ __ __ __ __
Key___:
__ __ __
___ ___ ___ ___
__
___
113
CHAPTER TWELVE
Part Writing with Root-Position Triads/
The Chorale
PART WRITING (page 193)
The comparison of part writing and golf seems apt. Mastery of either
activity practically precludes mastery of the other. Most musicians weve known
have neither the time nor the inclination for golf. Of the very few golfers we
know, none part write. We trust this comes as no surprise.
THE CHORALE (page 194)
You might ask your students if any have a favorite hymn, and if so, might
they make a copy (or bring in the hymnal)? For students who sing in church
(choir or congregation), this brings part writing into the orbit of their everyday
lives. The four-part arrangements found in hymnals are generally much less
complex than Bachs chorale harmonizations and thus make good points of
comparison. Have students compare the quality of the inner voices, the
sophistication of the harmonic structure, and the voice leading.
PART WRITING WITH ROOT-POSITION TRIADS (pages 194201)
In this section, voice-leading principles are applied to root-position triads
in all root relationships (fifth, second, and third). Students should actually be able
to part write each of these situations upon completing Chapter 11. The Short
Rule of Chord Connection given on page 200 is especially helpful to them:
retain the common tone(s) if present, in the same voice or voices; and move the
outer voices in contrary or oblique motion if possible. You can add this: Move
the three upper voices in contrary motion to the bass when no common tones are
present.
PART WRITING SUSPENSIONS (pages 202205)
Suspensions present a lot for students to grasp at once, and they require
ongoing reinforcement. This is one reason for spreading them over several
chapters, the other being to tie them to the chord positions under study. You may
wish to review their initial presentation as embellishing tones on pages 128131.
Only those that occur over root-position triadsthe 9-8 and 4-3are discussed
here.
Suspensions and harmonic motion (page 204)
As the illustration on this page shows, the 4-3 suspension can decorate a
plagal cadence (the 9-8 possible if the harmonic motion is reversed, i.e., I-IV),
114
and the 9-8 suspension can decorate an authentic cadence (the 4-3 possible if the
harmonic motion is reversed, i.e., I-V). Both suspensions can decorate a deceptive
cadence or (less commonly) the reverse harmonic motion (V-IV or vi-V).
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
ASSIGNMENT 1I on page 137: Students can also be required to add leadsheet symbols and/or Roman numerals.
10
115
1B.
The individual lines should be as shown below although the voice in
which they appear will vary depending on the voicing of the first chord in each.
1
1C.
1
10
10
116
1D.
1
1E.
1
117
1F.
1
1G.
Hope that your students do not turn in part writing that looks like this!
Errors to identify:
m.1, beat 2-3: // 5ths
m.1, beat 3: spacing
m.1, beat 4: leap in tenor
m.1, beat 4 to m.2, beat1: // 5ths and 8ves
m.2, beat 1-2: // 5ths
m.2, beat 4 to m.3, beat1: // 8ves
m.3, beat 1-2: // 8ves
m.3, beat 3: doubling
m.3, beat 3-4: // 5ths and 8ves
m.3, beat 4 to m.4: // 8ves
1H.
118
2B.
1
10
119
2C.
1
2D.
1
10
120
2E.
This harmonization is No. 116 from the Bach-Riemenschneider 371
Harmonized Chorales. Bachs harmonization contains a few more NCTs and a
couple other distinctions.
2F.
1
121
2G.
122
2.
Part write the following for four voices in the major or minor key
indicated by the chord symbols.
3.
4.
Chapter 13
123
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Part Writing with Triads in Inversion
FIRST INVERSION (pages 207-215)
Inversion and Bass Line (page 207)
The guidelines that we give students regarding first inversion grew out of
the contrapuntal practices of the Renaissance, when line and intervalnot chord
and inversionwere the governing forces. Its true that todays composers may
seek to melodize a bass through the use of inversion, but its worth pointing out
to your students that the bass originated as a melody, not a mere harmonic
support.
Doubling in First Inversion (page 208)
Doubling would be relatively straightforward were it not for first
inversion. This is where the melodic and harmonic forces collide head-on, and it
involves a degree of judgment not required in root-position and second-inversion
triads.
Why Not the Other Tone? (page 209)
On page 209, weve tried to shed light on what seems to students a rather
arbitrary and mystifying doubling preference (the outer voices). Weve tied this
preference to the need to keep the voices in their respective corridors. Doubling
an inner voice can lead to either spacing problems or voice crossing and overlap.
Of course, other forces are at work here, too. For example, when the soprano and
bass are one-and-the-same chord members, the outer voices are de facto doubled.
Chord Connection (page 210)
Students should try hard for conjunct motion in the bass. Of the chord
connection guidelines given here, No. 4 merits particular attention. Stepwise bass
motion to or from a first-inversion triad (unless a repeated chord) is the norm.
Guideline No. 5 is new at this point: Leave the doubled tone in contrary or
oblique motion where possible.
Inversion and Harmonic Weight (page 211)
Play the first two measures of Mary had a Little Lamb, first harmonized
6
this way: C G C G C C -C; then this way C - G 4 - C6 - G 64 - C - C - C.
Ask students to describe the effect of each and to state their preference. Its an
easy way to make the point about the harmonic weight of root position vis a vis
inversion. Move from this example to the more sophisticated ones in the book.
Chapter 13
124
Chapter 13
125
ASSIGNMENT 1I on page 150: You might play these bass lines with an
added soprano for two-voice aural dictation exercises.
ASSIGNMENT 1J on page 151: You might use this exercise as a review of
seventh chords. Ask students to identify the various types present.
Following Chapter 14, you can return to this song and ask students to
describe the voice leading in these same chords.
Chapter 13
126
- V4
- V
I4
- IV 4 - I
IV -
I4 -
I 4 - IV
******************************************************************
Chapter 13
127
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. First Inversion
1A.
1
1B.
The bass note is given here. Inner voices will vary with voicing and
doubling chosen.
Chapter 13
128
10
1C. Voicings may vary, and this may also result in different voice leading.
Remind students that doubling the bass is not an option where the V appears in
first inversion.
1
10
1D. Student solutions will vary depending on the soprano and initial voicing
chosen. A solution is given here. For greater uniformity of response, you may
wish to give students the initial soprano pitch.
Chapter 13
129
10
11
12
1E.
The tenor line could definitely be made more interesting than here. The virtue of
this part writing is that the line is easy to sing.
Chapter 13
130
1F.
1G.
1
10
Chapter 13
1H.
1
131
1I.
1
Chapter 13
132
1J.
The lead-sheet symbols given here reflect the chords as originally given
(i.e. prior to adding the suspensions, which of course add ninths to the chords they
adorn). Also, its worth mentioning to students that adding complete lead-sheet
symbols is a purely academic exercise intended to enhance their familiarity with
the system. Not all of these chord symbols would likely appear on the music since
they do not truly reflect the nature of the chords. For example, the chord of m. 7,
beat 3 is actually a V with a PT C, and the entire measure is more accurately
represented as a V7.
Chapter 13
133
Chapter 13
134
2. Second inversion
2A.
4
6
6
6
7
6
6
1 A: I I | V V 3 | vi V I ii | I 4 V I || (cadential)
6
2 D: vi | ii | I 4 V | I || (cadential)
6
3 a: i | V 4 | i
Chapter 13
135
2C.
Students answers may vary. Inner voices will probably be similar to
those shown here, although they may be exchanged where a different opening
structure is chosen.
1
Chapter 13
136
2D.
1
2
Cadential
Cadential. Metric placement incorrect. The cadential six-four should be
metrically stronger than its resolution to V.
3 Passing six-four
4 Passing six-four. Incorrect doubling in the six-four chord.
5 Pedal six-four. Bass and one other voice should remain stationary through
the six-four chord, and the non-doubling voices should both resemble
upper neighbors.
2E.
The bass line (given here) is determined by the Roman numerals. Inner voices
will vary and are not provided here.
Chapter 13
137
2G. The six-four chord in m.2 is a cadential six-four (cadential six-fours do not
necessarily appear only at cadences.) The six-four chord in m. 4 is a pedal sixfour.
1
2
This one takes a little effort to avoid the consecutive fifths that are almost
mandated by the iii-IV in m.1 along with the passing seventh between the two
chords. It is possibly why this particular progression is among the least common
in Bachs harmonizations.
Chapter 13
138
2.
Complete the following passages in four voices, approaching and
resolving the given six-four chord in an appropriate manner. Then, identify the
six-four chord type.
3.
1,__This six-four chord occurs over a bass line that contains repeated pitches.
2.__This six-four chord is always metrically stronger than its resolution.
3.__This six-four chord is the only one that is not a primary triad.
4.__This six-four chord occurs over a bass line that moves stepwise in a single
direction.
5.__This six-four chord occurs over a disjunct bass line.
Chapter 13
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
139
Chapter 14
140
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Part Writing Seventh Chords
Generally, seventh chords are easier to part write than triads. In four
voices, doubling is not required, and voice leadings prime directive given on
page 225neither double nor fail to resolve a tendency toneapplies to every
seventh.
SEVENTH CHORDS OF DOMINANT FUNCTION (pages 226232)
Similarities in function and resolution suggest that the chords under
discussion here be considered together. These seventh chords are different from
the rest. They contain the tonicizing tritone (scale degrees 4 and 7). This sensitive
tandem is best resolved the same way in all three chords.
Example 14-2 (page 226)
When the leading tone is in an inner voice, the composer often chooses to
resolve it or not depending on whether melodic or harmonic factors are more
important at that moment. This is an excellent opportunity to stress once again
that part writing, as with all composition, involves a balanced approach to linear
(melodic) and vertical (harmonic) forces.
Chord Member or Not? (page 227)
A guiding principle is given only because students feel more
comfortable with a guideline rather than with generalizations. We opt for a
flexible approach to the question of whether a harmony should be analyzed as a
seventh chord or as a triad with an embellishing tone. This normally is not an
issue that warrants extensive debate, since even the longest of chord sevenths in
the music of, say, Wagner can often be viewed as greatly elongated suspensions
or passing sevenths. You may wish to establish your own criterion here.
For a short tour of the dominant seventh chord in the hands of some major
composers, you might return at this point to the following and discuss the
treatment of the sensitive tones in each:
Example 3-16 on page 45 (Bach)
Example 4-7 on page 58 (Handel)
Example 6-2 on page 81 (Mozart)
Example 6-9 on page 87 (Beethoven)
Example 8-9 on page 127 (Chopin)
Chapter 14
Page 229
The unresolved leading tone, the ascending chord seventh, and the delayed
resolution of the chord seventh are exceptional practices that are noted here
without extensive elaboration. In most situations where the seventh moves
upward rather than downward, this tone is found in the melody (soprano), as in
Example 14-5. You might ask students how m. 1 of Example 14-10 differs.
Page 230:
You can use Example14-5 to demonstrate the functional and voice-leading
similarities between the dominant seventh and leading tone seventh chords and
also to help students hear the difference in sound among the three chords. Change
the tenor pitch in m. 2 (beat 2) to B and then to Bb.
The Leading-Tone Seventh Chord (page 230)
Abbreviated the coverage of these two chords is possible because voiceleading practices are the same as for the V7. The consecutive-fifth problem noted
in Example 14-7a is encountered again when a IV7 resolves to a V, and for the
same reason. We prefer not to burden students unduly with this relatively
infrequent issue. Here, as elsewhere, weve tried to pare coverage in order to save
time for new topics and matters we deem more important.
NONDOMINANT SEVENTH CHORDS (pages 232-240)
Despite the important common feature shared by all seventh chords, i.e.,
the stepwise downward resolution of the seventh, all seventh chords do not occur
with equal frequency, nor do they occur in the various inversions with equal
frequency. This aspect of seventh chords accounts in part for differences in
harmonic style from period to period.
Weve mixed examples from the Bach chorale harmonizations with
examples from the traditional, popular and jazz repertories to show the
applicability of these chords from style to style.
Three points are worth stressing at the outset:
141
Chapter 14
ASSIGNMENT 1E on page 161: Where neither the leading tone nor the
seventh is in the bass, the chord can resolve to a different inversion. Have
students identify these and provide alternative resolutions. In some cases,
voice-leading choices must be made (such as opting for an incomplete I to
avoid consecutive fifths). You may wish to use these examples for class
discussion.
142
Chapter 14
143
Chapter 14
144
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Seventh Chords of Dominant Function
1A.
1 D (or d)
6 E (or e)
2 X
3 A (or a)
7 Bb (or bb )
4 X
8 X
5 Ab (or ab )
9 Cb
10 F (or f)
1B. Students are instructed to resolve both the leading tone and the seventh. By
the time they complete this exercise, they should be comfortable with the
incomplete tonic. In these solutions, the tonic is tripled in the absence of the fifth,
although a doubled third is equally possible. Linear considerations normally will
determine which option is invoked.
1
10
Chapter 14
1C.
1D.
145
10
11
12
13
14
15
Solutions will vary. However, no matter which voice carries the seventh, it
should be resolved. Likewise the leading tone if it appears in the soprano.
The voice carrying these sensitive tones is shown.
1
10
Chapter 14
146
1E.
Both root position and first inversion are options for Nos. 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9,
and 10. The leading tone in the bass requires a root-position resolution in Nos. 2
and 5. The seventh in the bass requires a first-inversion resolution in No. 8.
1
10
2. B: I iii | IV V
| vi V V 2 | I
I | V3 I
1G.
4
1 a: viio 3
2 bb: viio
1H.
6
5
ii | I
4
2
6
b
2 D : vii 5
6
3 B: V 5
4 Ab: V
7 Db: V 2
4
8 a: V 3
6
9 F: vii 5
6
4
V | I ||
5 d: viio
6
5
4
10 e: viio 3
Things to watch:
In No. 1, the alto must rise to double the third because doubling the root
would result in consecutive fifths against the soprano. For the same reason, the
Chapter 14
147
bass must rise to the chord third in No. 3 and the tenor must rise to double the
third in No. 6. Nos. 8 and 10 resolve to a six-four chord (doubled bass).
1
10
1I.
1
Chapter 14
10
1J.
1
148
Chapter 14
149
10
Chapter 14
150
2B.
2C.
10
2D. Phrases a and b form a contrasting period. Any harmonization should reflect
the melodic sequences.
Chapter 14
151
2E.
1
2F.
4
m.6: V 2
4
m.8: IV 2
7
m.9: ii
7
m.10: V
4
m.12: viio 3
m.14: viio 34
m.16: IV 24
7
m.17: ii
7
m.18: V
4
3
4
3
Chapter 14
152
2.
3.
Precede each given tonic with the indicated chord, in an inversion and a
voicing that produces the best possible voice leading.
Dominant 7th
Leading-tone 7th
Chapter 14
4.
Indicate the keys in which each chord appears diatonically and indicate the
chords function in those keys.
5.
Complete the following two-chord resolutions in four voices and provide
harmonic analysis:
6.
For the following excerpt, provide a Roman numeral analysis of all
seventh chords. Then circle the chord seventh and draw an arrow to its note of
resolution.
153
Chapter 15
154
PART FIVE
Chapter 15
155
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Secondary Function I
Secondary dominants and leading-tone chords are the simplest forms of
tonicization. All the secondary functionsV/, V7, viio/, and viiIo7/ (vii7/) are
presented here in a single chapter since there really is little difference in their
treatment. To generalize:
Secondary dominants and leading-tone chords are treated like
primary dominants and leading-tone chords in virtually all
important respects.
SECONDARY DOMINANTS (pages 245-252)
Example 15-2 (page 247)
Playing the first four measures using exactly the same harmonization in
mm. 3-4 as in mm. 1-2 will make it clear to students how important a single
secondary dominant can be in adding variety to a repeated phrase member.
Example 15-3 (page 247)
Singing provides aural and physiological reinforcement of concepts and
brings theory closer to practice. Having altos and tenors sing the two top notes of
each chord an octave lower makes this exercise singable by the class. The points
that follow this illustration should be stressed. Students need to be alert to the
possibility that any major triad or major-minor seventh chord not diatonic in the
key might be a secondary function. At this point, you might place various triad
types and seventh chord types on the board, asking students if the chord can
function as a secondary dominant or dominant seventh chord and, if so, which
chord it would tonicize.
This chapter contains many very brief examples. While this is perhaps
necessary for clarity, students also need to see concepts and techniques within a
larger context. The following longer excerpts from Chapter 25 contain secondary
functions that might be discussed at this time:
p. 444
p. 452
p. 458
Chapter 15
156
p. 479
viio7/vi
viio /V
viio7 /vi
viio/ii,
viio7/V
viio7/vi
At this time, you may wish to return to the tonal planetary system
(Example 5-12 on page 73) and ask students to add all secondary leading-tone
triads and seventh chords. The increasingly cluttered orbits will graphically
illustrate the wide variety of harmonic choices that have suddenly become
available. As an additional class activity, you might ask students each to create a
path to the tonic, playing these at the piano to demonstrate the many possibilities.
VOICE LEADING (page 255)
Emphasize this fact: No new voice-leading principles govern secondary
functions. Students simply need to remember how to view them. If they view
them as being in the key of the tonicized chord, then they will use voice leading
practices identical to the chords theyve already part writtenV, V7. viio, viio7,
and vii7. This extends even to the deceptive cadence, as shown in Example 1512d.
Secondary Function and Chromatic Lines (page 258)
Chromatic lines usually result from either chromatic passing tones or
secondary function. Additional examples are Example 17-11 (m.15), Example 201 (m.6), Example 21-12 (m.3), and Example 22-2a (m.37).
Harmonic Sequence and Secondary Function (page 260)
As Examples 15-17a and b show, harmonic sequences, chromatic lines,
and secondary function often run in packs. Because sequences (melodic or
harmonic) are perhaps most often stepwise, chromatic lines are the inevitable
result.
Chapter 15
157
2 V/iv
3 V/V
4 V/III
6 V/iv
7 V/V
8 V/vi
9 V/ii
5 V/ii
10 V/vi
Chapter 15
158
1B.
Voicings will vary.
1
1C.
1
10
10
Chapter 15
159
1D.
1
10
Gb
Eb
Eb
Bb
Ab
Gb
Db
Db
Ab
Gb
Eb
Ab
1E.
1
10
1F.
C: I
viio/IV IV
6
g: V 5
V V3
iv |
V5
| i |V5 /V | V |
4
6
6
6 7
7
Ab: I V 2 | I V 5 | I V vi V3 /V | V | vii 3 V2 | I V /ii | ii V | I
4
6
V 5 /iv |
IV ii
1G.
1
A hemiola is produced in mm. 20-21, created by the melodic
pattern, the bass, and the harmonic rhythm, all of which suggest a duple
meter for the two measures.
Chapter 15
160
Chapter 15
161
3
The tonicizing tritone and its resolution occurs in the two uppermost notes
in mm.189-190, 191-192, 192-193, 193-194, 194-195, 195-196, and 196-197.
10
Chapter 15
162
2B.
1
10
2C.
7
7
7
1 Bb: I V /V V 2 G: I V /vi vi 3 D: I V /IV IV
4 Ab: I V 5 /ii ii 5 F:I v /V V 6 a: I vo /iv iv
6
10 E: I V /ii ii
2D.
1 V/vi or viio7/vi
2 V/vi
6 viio7/vi or V/vi
7 V7/IV or viio6/ii
9 viio7/III
2E.
1
3 viio7/vi
4 viio7/vi
8 vii7/V or viio7/iii
10 V7/IV
viio I ii 65 vii /V | V
5 viio6/iv
Chapter 15
163
C: I V 3 I V | I ii V V 4 | I viio 6/ii ii | I 6 V I |
5
2
4
7
Melodic form:
a (m. 25) b (m. 29) b1 (m. 33)
Varied repetition:
mm. 2728 repeat mm. 2526 with a new texture (melody
doubled in thirds beneath a trill).
m. 30 is a sequence of m. 29
m. 31 is a modified sequence of m. 29
mm. 3335 are a varied repetition of mm. 2931, with
dynamics reversed
The final phrase is extended cadentially (mm. 3638).
Harmonic analysis:
Chapter 15
164
3. Voice Leading
3A.
1
2
10
Chapter 15
165
3B. Voicings will vary. The bass and harmonic analysis are shown below.
1
3C.
1
10
Chapter 15
3D.
166
Chapter 15
167
1.
2.
Resolve the chords to the root-position chord they tonicize and provide
harmonic analysis.
3.
Realize the figured bass line for four voices and provide harmonic
analysis.
Chapter 16
168
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Secondary Function II
JAZZ AND POPULAR STYLES (pages 264-273)
Example 16-1 (page 264)
If youre fortunate enough to have four male singers (two of whom are
tenors!), this is an opportunity to have fun with the barbershop quartet style. Wed
recommend assigning the passage to the group a couple classes in advance.
Unless youre truly lucky, the bass in mm.13-16 will need to be sung up an
octave.
Examples 16-2a and b (pages 265-266)
Heres another opportunity for fun if you have a piano major that can play
these in class.
It is difficult to overstate the importance of the tonicizing chord group (iiV) in jazz. You might ask students to practice the following exercises at the
keyboard. The tonicized chord can be a pure triad. Optionally, the tonicized
chords (the whole notes) can be omitted to produce a succession of ii7-V7
harmonies.
1
Chapter 16
169
Chapter 16
170
m.8: Am - D
m.9: Am - D
- B
m.12: Fm
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
10
Chapter 16
1C.
1
171
mm. 1-2:
ii - V
G
mm. 5-6:
ii - V
F
mm. 9-10:
ii -
mm. 13-14
ii - V
g
mm. 15-16:
ii - V
a
m. 2:
ii - V
a
m. 3:
ii - V
C
m. 4:
ii - V
F
m. 5:
ii - V
Bb
m. 6:
ii - V
m. 8:
ii - V
C
Eb
Ab
Chapter 16
172
1D.
1E.
1
10
11
13
14
15
12
Chapter 16
173
1F. The following solutions are voiced in a pianistic manner. You can require
your students to voice the chords or simply to place block chords on the lower
staff. This depends on the ability level of your class. Alternatively, you may
require jazz majors or students studying jazz to voice the chords while the other
students place them in simple position.
Chapter 16
174
2. Melody Harmonization
2A.
Student solutionsharmonization and part writingwill vary. A possible
harmonization for each passage is given below.
1
4 6
6
6
7
6 6
4
F: I IV I vi | ii V 2 /V V viio /vi | vi vi ii V 5 /V | V V2 I |
6
ii I 4 V | I ||
2
4
6
6
6 6
6
c: i| V | V 2 /iv | iv iv | V IV V | i i | V/V | V |
6
i i | iio
2B.
2C.
1
iio | viio /V V | i ||
Chapter 16
175
Chapter 16
176
2.
Bracket and symbolize the tonicizing chord groups in the melody that
follows.
Fain and Hilliard: Alice in Wonderland
3.
Add the bass line and give the Roman-numeral symbols for each
tonicizing chord group.
Chapter 17
177
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Modulation I
Most students at this point in their studies know what modulation is. Sort
of. The true-false quiz on page 277 encourages some careful thinking about it.
Having been introduced to secondary function in the preceding chapters, students
can correctly view modulations as greatly extended tonicizations. Only
modulations to closely related keys are considered here. This is in keeping with
the generally chronological format of the text, since Baroque music rarely moves
beyond the circle of closely related tonalities. It is also pedagogically necessary
since modulation in the nineteenth century involves harmonic complexities for
which students are unprepared at this point. Two distinct kinds of modulation are
treated in this chaptermodulation by common chord and chromatic modulation.
MODULATION BY COMMON CHORD (pages 278-285)
Two terms that are used widely as synonyms are pivot chord and common
chord. I have introduced both terms here. Common chord is perhaps the clearest
at this point, but pivot chord is ultimately more useful for three reasons:
1.
The term pivot conveys the idea (accurate most of the time) that the tonal
change turns on a specific chord.
2.
In Chapter 23, enharmonic modulation will often be found to involve a
pivot chord that is diatonic in the old key but enharmonically respelled in
the new key. Although the chord is the pivotal point in the modulation, it
is technically not a common chord.
3.
Use of the term pivot permits expansion of the concept to include, if you
like, a chromatic pivota chord that functions diatonically in one key and
as a chromatic harmony of one sort or another in a new key. This happens
quite regularly in music of the late eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries,
and it helps students to understand the nature of such modulations if they
are conditioned to look for the pivotal point and assess the chords dual
harmonic function at that point.
The imagery of the pivot chord as the hinge on the door that
opens into the new tonality is useful, as is the concept of crossing
a tonal border.
Example 17-3 (page 282):
The situation where a group of chords can be considered to be pivotal is
not at all uncommon. In such cases, the modulation occurs very subtly, almost
imperceptibly. You can establish your own criteria here for locating the precise
point of modulation, although our preference is to allow some flexibility.
Chapter 17
178
Chapter 17
179
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Modulation by Common Chord
1A.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Chord:
F
c
B
g
eb
Bb
d
a
E
Ab
Keys:
F: I
d: III
B: V
C: IV
c: i
Eb: vi
Ab: iii
g: iv
B: I
g : III
E: V
F: IV
g: i
Bb: vi
Eb: iii
d: iv
b
b
b
b
e:i
G : vi
C : iii
b : iv
Bb: I
g: III
Eb: V
F: IV
b
a: iv
d: i
F: vi
B : iii
a: i
C: vi
F: iii
e: iv
E: I
c: III
A: V
B: IV
b
b
A:I
f: III
D:V
Eb: IV
1B.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Key:
Db
e
Bb
c
d
E
B
Gb
b
Ab
Key Implied:
f
a
g
E
Bb
A
f
eb
f
Db
1C. Student realizations will vary. Roman numerals given here do not include the
inversion superscripts, which are those of the figured bass.
1
Chapter 17
1D.
1
2
3
1E.
1
3
4
180
Chapter 17
181
2. Chromatic Modulation
2A.
1
2
3
4
5
Pivot-chord modulation
Chromatic modulation
Pivot-chord modulation
Pivot-chord modulation
Chromatic modulation
D: V6
E: IV6
D: viio6
D: I6
b: iio6
b: VI6
2B.
Part writing will vary. If you wish to achieve some uniformity in student
solutions, you can give the starting pitch or chord shown in the solutions below.
1
Chapter 17
2C.
1
Chromatic modulation
182
Chapter 17
2D.
183
2F.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Chapter 17
184
2G.
1
Of course, some students may argue that there is no modulation hereonly
two tonicizations. And theyd be correct to do so. Were asking them to consider
these as modulations purely for the sake of the practice in identifying keys and
common chords. In this regard, it would be just as possible to analyze the first
tonicization as a modulation to A.
Chapter 17
185
Chapter 17
2H.
186
Chapter 17
187
,
E, D, c A, b
Principal key: ___
b
b
b
b
G , b , f, A , e Principal key: ___
Principal key: ___
a, C, g, F, Bb
2.
Name the old and new keys in a modulation containing the given pivot
chord. Assume the chord to be functioning as a pre-dominant in the new key.
Give its function in both keys.
Old ___:___
New___:___
Old ___:___
New:___:___
Old ___:___
New:___:___
Old___:___
New___:___
Old___:___
New___:___
3.
Given the key signature, name the key implied by the consistent
appearance of the indicated accidentals.
Key signature
Accidental(s):
Key implied:
3 flats
4 sharps
1 flat
2 sharps
1 sharp
Db
E, Dn
C
Cn, D
C
__________
__________
__________
__________
__________
4.
Circle the pivot chord in the following modulating bass line and indicate
by Roman numeral its dual harmonic analysis.
188
PART SIX
COUNTERPOINT
(CHAPTERS 1819)
The history of Western music is the history of setting musical lines one
against another, point against point (punctus contra punctum). Early onin the
Middle Ages and Renaissancethe melodic lines determined the harmonic
structure. In the Baroque era and beyond, the melodic lines were conditioned by
the harmonic structure.
Part Six comprises two chapters. The first is an introduction to
counterpoint that builds on the foundation laid in Chapter 10 (the outer-voice
framework). It couples a greatly abbreviated species approach with a look at
various styles and concludes with the Bach Two-Part Inventions. Chapter 19
focuses on the fugue. The goal here is not to create skilled contrapuntists
impossible in two chapters at any ratebut rather to instill an appreciation of the
role of counterpoint in music and to provide some experience employing its
basics.
189
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
The Art of Countermelody
THE BASICS OF TWO-VOICE COUNTERPOINT (pages 297-307)
America lends itself well to the species counterpoint approach.
Moreover, students can see the practical value of counterpoint as a technique for
variation and arranging more readily with a familiar tune than they can with a
more traditional Gregorian-chant cantus firmus.
Essentials of Counterpoint (page 299)
The eight principles cited here are the basis of tonal counterpoint
regardless of the level at which it is written or studied.
Example 18-3 (page 369)
Two factors make b sound more truly contrapuntal than a. a involves no
dissonance; and b distributes activity among the two lines more equally.
Counterpoint in Jazz and Popular Styles (page 304)
This part of the chapter is intended to sensitize students to the presence of
counterpoint in todays jazz and popular styles. You might have your class
identify the eight principles at work in the examples. If your school has a jazz
program, or at least a jazz ensemble, you might borrow a score from the director.
Almost any such score will contain at least a two-part counterpointa
countermelody against the melodysuch as that shown in Example 18-10.
J. S. BACHS CHORALE HARMONIZATIONS (pages 308-309)
Polyphonic or Homophonic?
As with so many musical elements, texture is tinted with shades of gray.
Musical works may fall anywhere along a continuum from intense polyphony to
complete homophony. Once again, you can use Example 18-11 to demonstrate the
added musical interest that counterpoint provides. As a review, you might have
your class identify the various nonchord tones in Bachs harmonization (b).
BACHS TWO-PART INVENTIONS (pages 310-315)
A complete list of contrapuntal devices on page 312 would include
retrograde and invertible counterpoint. Neither of these techniques nor diminution
are found in Invention No. 1. However, Example 18-14 contains a perfect
example of inverted counterpoint (mm.1-8). Retrograde is, in fact, a more
190
artificial device Bach employed only rarely. It is found more commonly in the
atonal and twelve-tone repertoire of the twentieth century.
Some informal drill requiring students to illustrate the contrapuntal
devices is beneficial prior to moving ahead with the analysis of Invention No. 6.
ANALYSIS: INVENTION NO. 6 (pages 315-320)
This invention, like quite a few in the set of fifteen, is basically a rounded
binary structure with the first part coming to a cadence in the dominant and the
second part returning to the tonic. In Chapter 25 (Binary and Ternary Forms), the
CONCEPT CHECK on page 459 refers students back to this invention.
Page 315:
I often refer to invertible counterpoint as mutual imitationvoices
imitating each other at the octave (or some other interval) simultaneously. Bachs
Two-Part Inventions are filled with this. Clear examples are:
Invention No. 4, mm. 36
Invention No. 5, mm. 1220
Invention No. 8, mm. 1618
Invention No. 9, mm. 13 and 1719
Invention No. 14, mm. 16 and 1116
Not surprisingly, every one of the major-key inventions follows the
general tonal plan of Invention No. 6: tonic dominant related key(s)tonic.
Implied Harmony (page 317)
This is the most difficult part of the chapter for many students. The five
guidelines given here, together with principles of functional harmony that
students should already know, provide tangible techniques for the harmonic
analysis of two-voice music.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
ASSIGNMENT 1D on page 214: You might ask students to part write the
resulting 1:1 counterpoint, adding alto and tenor.
191
1. Two-Voice Counterpoint
1A. Handel: Suites de Pieces pour le Clavecin, second collection (no. 3)
1.
2.
3.
192
193
1C.
Handel: Sonata for Flute and Continuo, op. 1, no. 5, HWV 363b (Bouree)
1. Oblique motion predominates, as is typically in largely 2:1 counterpoint.
2. 2:1 is the predominant species.
3. Imperfect consonances occur 16 times, perfect consonances occur 8 times,
and dissonances occur 4 times.
4. On music.
5. On music.
6. The soprano is the more active voice.
1D. Students counterpoint will vary. Only the harmonic analysis is provided
here.
6
6
6
6
7
6
6
6
b: i | v viio /v v v | ii 5 - ii - V - V 2 | V viio /V V V | I ||
V
194
195
1G.
Students can have fun with this one, creating their own arrangements of
the famous tune. The 4:1 counterpoint in mm.13-16 is Pachelbels own.
196
197
2B. Bachs harmonizations of these chorales are given here, with nonchord tones
reinserted.
1 J. S. Bach: Jesu, deine tiefen Wunden
198
3B.
3C.
1. Sequence (tonal)
2. Measures 5-6 are an inverted counterpoint of mm. 3-4.
3.
a. m.8 = fragmentation and augmentation
b. m. 11 = fragmentation
c. m. 15 = inversion, fragmentation and augmentation
4.
6
7
6
d: i | viio | i | viio 5 | i | iv |
7
F: ii | V | I | ii | vii | I | vi | V | iii |
6
ii 5 V | I
3D.
1
199
200
3E.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
201
3F.
3G. This invention is filled with sequence, imitation, melodic inversion, and
invertible counterpoint. Almost every measure provides an example of one or
more of these techniques.
1. Motive: m.1, beats 1-2
2. Inverted counterpoint: mm.6-8 (vs. mm.1-3), mm.9-11
3. Melodic inversion, imitation and sequence together in mm.4-5
Imitation; mm.12-13
Melodic inversion and sequence: mm.14-16
4. The invention remains basically in Bb throughout, with tonicizations of F
(m.8), g (m.9), Eb (m. 10, 13, 14, and 17-18), and c (m.11), all closely related
keys.
5. Canonic imitation: m.16-18 (right hand imitating left)
Chapter 19
202
CHAPTER NINETEEN
The Fugue
Fugal procedure is not as rigorous or consistent as the literature written
about it might suggest. To be sure, practices coalesced at the hands of Bach to
produce fugues that can serve as textbook models. However, this does not
necessarily convey inferior status upon fugues by Bach, Handel, Pachelbel,
Frescobaldi, Dave Brubeck, John Williams, and others that do not conform to the
textbook model in all respects simply because they do not conform in all
respects. The definition given at the beginning of this chapter allows for the
diversity of fugal procedure.
THE BASICS OF FUGUE (pages 322330)
Eight fugue subjects are embedded in this discussion. You might compare
their features and then ask students to compile a list of common characteristics.
The Workbook provides additional examples for study.
Although the threefold model of exposition-development-recapitulation
has some merit, it can create the impression that the fugues structural divisions
reinforce this designan impression at odds with the fundamental premise of the
fugue, which actually shares more with rondo and ritornello forms, e.g., a theme
that returns amid digressions. The term development, as used here, refers to a
technique, not a section per se. Weve preferred the term ending to
recapitulation, which is perhaps most appropriate when a return of the subject
(one statement at the very least) in the original key occurs near the end of a fugue
in a very obvious way.
Page 329
Of the traditional features described here, the counterexposition is perhaps
the least critical and the most problematic. Fugue No. 1 of WTC I, for example,
can be said to have a counterexposition because it does contain a second complete
set of entries in the tonic-dominant axis and it commences immediately upon
completion of the exposition. Yet, Bach neither initiates nor terminates this
counterexposition with any significant event (e.g., a cadential punctuation) and,
in fact, he places one of the fugues four cadences right in the middle of it (in m.
10). There is no suggestion that Bach attached any special significance to this
passage or considered it a structural division.
If you wish to keep things as simple as possible, dont burden students
with the concept of counterexposition. After all, its just a group of entries.
Chapter 19
203
Tonal: First note answers the subjects dominant with the tonic.
Real
Real
Tonal: First note answers the subjects dominant with the tonic.
Tonal: First note answers the subjects dominant with the tonic; the
answers tail is a transposition to the subdominant (e.g., a fifth lower)
rather than dominant and contains additional modifications at the end.
Chapter 19
204
B.
The answer should be real. Countersubjects will vary. A possible solution
follows.
C.
1
Chapter 19
205
D.
1.
The exposition ends in m. 7 (or 9). A clear cadence follows the exposition
at m. 9. What type of cadence is this? HC The order of entries is BTAS.
The answer is real.
A countersubject is not present.
After the exposition, the next group entry occurs between m. 9 and m. 12.
Stretto occurs at m. 9 and m. 16.
The first episode of the fugue begins at m. 12 and ends at m. 16 with a
PAC.
The primary developmental technique employed in this episode is
imitation.
The excerpt ends in the key f.
A third group entry appears in mm. 16. This group contains entries at:
mm. 16, 17, 19, and 20.
Compare mm. 16-17 and mm. 19-20, and describe Bachs use of invertible
counterpoint in these measures. The alto of mm.16-17 is transposed and
placed in the bass in m. 19-20. The soprano is placed in the tenor. The
tenor of mm. 16-17 is placed above these voices (slightly modified in mm.
19-20.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Chapter 19
E.
206
Chapter 19
207
Chapter 19
208
F.
1.
Exposition
m. 1: S m. 4: A (tonal)
m. 9: S
End of exposition: m.13
CS: mm. 48 in alto, then following link (m. 9), mm.1012 in
soprano
2.
3.
Cadences
m. 36: Phrygian HC in D minor; m. 46: PAC in D minor; m. 56:
PAC in G minor
4.
Tonal Plan
F (m. 1) d (m. 33) g (m. 47) F (m. 56)
Brief references to Bb are scattered among mm. 5865.
The exposition and counterexposition feature a vacillation between tonic
and dominant.
5.
Contrapuntal techniques:
In mm. 3036, a fragment of the subject is stated and imitated sequentially
in the upper voices. The bass contains an inverted fragment (m. 31)
repeated sequentially in m. 33.
Chapter 19
209
2.
1.
Cite a reason why this invention should not be mistaken for a fugue.
_______________________________________________________
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Chapter 19
210
Chapter 20
211
PART SEVEN
ADVANCED CHROMATIC HARMONY
(CHAPTERS 2024)
Part Seven builds on the foundation for harmonic chromaticism laid in Part
Five. The approach is roughly chronological, and this is reflected in a general way in
the musical examples. Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms comprise
the bulk of the music in Chapter Twenty (Mixing Modes); to these are added
Schumann, Chopin, Verdi, and Gounod in Chapter Twenty-One (Altered PreDominants); Tchaikovsky and Mahler make their appearance in Chapter TwentyTwo (Other Chromatic Harmonies), which focuses on altered dominants and
embellishing diminished seventh chords; Saint-Sans and Liszt appear in Chapter
Twenty-Three (Modulation II); and Puccini and Wagner weigh in in Chapter
Twenty-Four (Harmonic Extensions and Chromatic Techniques), which introduces
triadic extensions and linear chromatic harmonies. In keeping with the basic goals of
this book, contemporary popular and jazz composers are represented in each of the
chapters as well.
Chapter 20
212
CHAPTER TWENTY
Mixing Modes
Weve combined the techniques associated with mode mixture into a single
chapter. This includes change of mode, modal borrowing, and chromatic-third
relationships. All were used during the eighteenth century (somewhat more
commonly in the Classical half) and throughout the nineteenth century as well. All
had the effect of expanding the tonal spectrum beyond closely related keys. In
addition, chromatic-third relationships helped to initiate the breakdown of the
dominant-tonic polarity so thoroughly engrained in the tonal structure of music in
the Classical period.
CHANGE OF MODE (pages 338-342)
An interesting fact of certain harmonic developments is that devices and
techniques initially employed at large structural levels are compressed, or
employed in more local ways in subsequent historical periods. This is true of change
of mode. In the Baroque era, it typically occurred only between movements, as in the
dual gavottes (one in major, the other a recasting in the parallel minor) found in
some suites. See, for example, Bachs English Suite no. 6, BWV 811. That practice
was continued by Classical composers in minuet-trio movements, where change of
mode was often employed as a primary element of sectional contrast. An example is
the third movement of Beethovens Piano Sonata op. 7. In addition, however,
Classical composers often used change of mode between phrases, as Example 20-2
shows. Composers of the nineteenth century commonly employed the technique on a
chord-to-chord basis, a technique termed modal borrowing to denote its more
temporary and short-term character.
Page 341:
You might point out that enharmonic changes of mode normally occur in
movements that are in keys with large numbers of flats or sharps. When anything
less than five flats or sharps are involved, enharmonic respelling is seldom
encountered.
MODAL BORROWING (pages 342-350)
Of the common borrowed harmonies shown in Example 20-4, the most
common of alland the earliest to be employed routinelyis the viio7. After this
chord, the borrowed subdominants are the most common, practically guaranteed to
cast a Romantic shadow on any passage.
Students might ask how many borrowed harmonies a passage can contain
before it becomes a mode change. As with modulation and tonicization, the answer
Chapter 20
213
may not be clear-cut, and it may not even be that important. The difference is one of
degree, not kind. Establish your own guidelines if you like.
CHROMATIC-THIRD RELATIONSHIPS (pages 351-359)
This part of the chapter concerns not harmonies themselves but the
relationship between harmonies. As with borrowed harmonies, the most common
chromatic-third relationships (shown in Example 20-13) occur in major-key settings.
Two of the chords (bVI and bIII) might function as borrowed harmonies, while two
(VI and III) might function as secondary dominants. Here we are noting two
thingsthe chords function and its root relationship with the preceding or
following harmony.
As with change of mode, the history of chromatic-third relationships appears
to be one of continuing compressionfrom movements (Haydn) to sections within
movements (Beethoven) to individual chords (Brahms, Wagner, and others). You
might mention that Beethoven favored this relationship in his major-key sonata-form
movements, as did Schubert. A particularly well-known example is the second
movement of Beethovens Symphony no. 5 (see Example 23-16 on page 410).
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
Chapter 20
214
Play a major tonic triad, followed by five three-chord successions, such as:
I - iv - V
VI - iv - I
ii7 - V - I
IV - viio7 - I
ii6 - iio6 - V
Ask students to identify the borrowed harmony. (Optional: Ask students to
identify the entire succession.)
Ten examples: Have students number their papers from one to ten. Play a
major tonic triad followed by one of the following: i; iii; bIII; III; vi; bVI;
VI. Students are to identify the second chord.
Chromatic-third relationships are present in a number of examples in the
ensuing chapters. You might play some of these and ask students to identify
the type of relationship. For example, in Haydns Piano Trio H. XV:18 (first
movement) on page 285: Play mm.165168, which shift from F to A.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Change of Mode and Modal Borrowing
1A.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Key: C
Key: F
B:
Key: Bb
Eb:
Key: Ab
Key: Bb:
Key: C
Key: A
D:
Key: D
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
iio
iv
i
iv
i
iio
7
ii
iio
bVI
bIII
7
viio
Chapter 20
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
215
Key: Eb
Ab:
Key: D
Key: F
Key: G
C
Key: C
Key: A
Key: D:
G:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
Chord:
iv
i
iio
7
ii
iv
i
7
ii
7
viio
bVI
bIII
1B. No. 3 in this voicing presents part-writing problems when resolving to V or iv,
necessitating the resolution to ii7.
1
Chapter 20
1C.
1
10
216
Chapter 20
1D.
1
217
Students part writing will vary. A sample solution for No. 1 follows.
D:
2
I viio 5 I I
1E.
I | iv ii
4
3
6
4
| I
viio /vi vi | ii V | I ||
Solutions will vary. Sample solutions follow. In all cases, the major tonic has
been preserved in order to maintain the general major-mode feeling. Some
borrowed harmonies create voice-leading problems (for example the
augmented second between the leading tone and minor sixth degree that
necessitates changing the voicing of the chords or even the soprano pitch).
Chapter 20
218
Using the bVI in m.3 would create an augmented second in the alto.
1F.
1
This is a mistake. No. 1 was inserted here again instead of the correct
exercise. No.1 cannot be harmonized with a borrowed submediant without
creating parallel fifths and octaves between bVI and V. The correct exercise
appears below.
Chapter 20
219
1G.
1
4
4
6
6
6
6
6
G: V 2 | I | V 2 | g: i | iv V/III | III VI | iio V5 | I v | X |
7
V | V | I | I V V3 | I | I V V3 | I
2
Ab:
3
F:
I | V 3 | I V 5 | I | iio 4 | V | iio 4 I 4 V | I
ii
4
2. Chromatic-Third Relationships
2A.
1 VI
2B.
1
2 III
3 bVI 4 III
2
5 bIII
3
6 VI 7 VI 8 bVI
4
9 III 10 VI
Chapter 20
220
2C.
When part writing a root-position bIII or bVI, doubling the root trumps the
normal caution not to double an altered tone. Remind students again that chromaticthird relationships typically occur in a context where traditional part writing rules are
somewhat relaxed.
1
10
2D.
2E.
1
Although students are free to choose their beginning soprano pitch, the
individual voices should move in the manner shown below.
2
Chapter 20
G:
221
2F.
2G.
1
1.
2.
| ii | V7 | I ||
Chapter 20
222
F: I
d: i
vi
III
3.
Harmonic analysis:
| I
F: vi | I 4 V | I iv 5 6
6
7
Ab: ii 5 | I 4 V | I
1.
2.
3.
4.
2H.
Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newly: Goldfinger
F: I bVI | I bVI | ii V | IV V | V/iii
IV
7
2I.
1.
2.
3.
Chapter 20
4.
5.
223
6.
Using Roman numerals, symbolize the relationship between the opening key
and the key to which the passage modulates. I bVI
7.
D: I V | I | V 5 I | V V 5 | I
4
6
b: III V 3 | I iio6 | I 4 V |
D: V 2 |
7
d: i V | i | V 5 i | V V 5 | i
4
6
6
7
Bb: iii V 3 | I ii | I 4 V |
A: viio4/2
Chapter 20
224
2.
Chapter 20
225
3.
4.
Chapter 21
226
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Altered Pre-Dominants
The Neapolitan sixth and augmented sixth chords are presented together in
a single chapter to emphasize their functional similarity as altered pre-dominants.
Then too, there is really no need to devote a separate chapter to the Neapolitan
sixth chord. In both of these types of altered pre-dominant, no new voice-leading
principles are involved. The basic rules of doubling apply and the extra tendency
tone (the altered tone) is resolved in the manner of all tendency tones. This point
bears repeating often.
Weve chosen to present these harmonies initially in the context of their
earliest and most typical use. For this reason, the musical examples are in minor
keys. You should feel free to discuss their use in major keys also at this point.
However, we have reserved this for a later time.
THE NEAPOLITAN SIXTH CHORD (pages 361-367)
Early examplesalways in first inversionindicate that composers
initially regarded the Neapolitan as a chromatic enhancement of the pre-dominantto-dominant motion rather than as a major triad on a chromatically lowered root.
The similarities in function and treatment of the N6 and its diatonic relatives, the
iio6 and the iv, shown in Example 21-2 reinforce this idea.
Example 21-2
You can turn this into a useful keyboard exercise by playing the examples
in this order: b, a, c. Leave off the resolution to V until after the third chord (c) is
played. In other words, play iio6 - N6 - iv - V. This effectively demonstrates the
difference and kinship in sound among the three pre-dominants while showing
clearly their voice-leading similarities. If students understand the ramifications of
this, they should be able to use the N6 in a stylistically appropriate way with little
difficulty. Example 21-3 makes the same points in a well-known passage.
Example 21-4
For some reason, students seem to have trouble remembering the unique
melodic interval (the o3) that characterizes the typical resolution of the N6. Weve
had success giving it a colorful name, such as the DLT (double leading tone).
In this edition, weve continued to use the sandwich analogy, substituting the
trendier burrito for the BLT. Regarding the inward collapse of the o3 to the tonic,
the mental image of a slab of Neapolitan ice cream is helpful, the tonic the vanilla
middle with the outer stripes the half steps above and below it.
Chapter 21
227
Example 21-5a
Perhaps Chopins penchant for running circular fifth patterns (cf. Mazurka
op. posth. 67, no. 2 on Workbook page 306) led to his employment of the
Neapolitan as a full-fledged member of the circle of fifths here and elsewhere: VI
- N - V - i. Although the root-position Neapolitan was a somewhat later
development, note that the next example (Example 21-5b), composed after Chopin
was dead, remained the more traditional usage.
Example 21-8
Almost everyone who hears this piece recognizes it. Almost no one knows
the name or composer.
AUGMENTED SIXTH CHORDS (pages 367-377)
Discussion of these chords begins with musical examples. Example 21-12,
with the melodic reduction that follows, clearly demonstrates the linear origin of
the chord. Once students understand that the double tendency tone to the dominant
that forms the augmented sixth interval is present in all three of the chords and that
the tonic is also present in each, constructing and identifying them are much easier
tasks. Weve had success with this 4-step procedure:
1. Identify the dominant of the key.
2. Write the minor second above it in the bass and the minor second below
it in an upper voice. A bit of double talk here actually seems to help:
Half step above below and half step below above. It sounds
confusing, but students remember it for just that reason.
3. Add the tonic in another voice.
4. The rest is as easy as 1-2-3. (For the It+6, double scale degree 1; for
the Fr+6, add scale degree 2; for the Gr+6, add scale degree 3.)
Again, you can stress that no new part-writing procedures are necessary. Altered
tones are not doubled and they resolve in the direction of their inflectionas
always.
The doubly augmented fourth chord, along with the enharmonic use of the
Gr+6 as V7/N, are reserved for later. This has the double advantage of considering
these applications in the proper chronological sequence (e.g., they are more typical
of nineteenth-century usage) and keeping the initial presentation of the topic as
simple and straightforward as possible.
Example 21-20
The passages in this example show all three augmented sixth chords and
reinforce several points made in the chapter.
Chapter 21
228
Example 21-21
Thelonius Monks classic ballad Round Midnight succinctly shows the
single pitch difference among the three chords. As the melody note drops from 3
to 2 to 1 , the chord changes from German to French to Italian. (Easy as 3-2-1.) It
also shows that the augmented sixth interval does not expand to the octave when
7
the chord of resolution is a V .
Suggested Additional Use of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
10 chords: Play a tonic triad, then play one of the altered pre-dominants
followed by a chord of resolution. Students are to identify the type of
altered pre-dominant. (Option: Students can be required to identify the
chord of resolution as well.)
10
Chapter 21
229
1B.
1 X
2 g
3 a
4 X
6 bb
5 e
7 eb
8 X
9 b 10 f
1C.
1
10
1D.
10
Chapter 21
230
1E.
1
1F.
Part writing will vary. Harmonic analysis for Nos. 1 and 2 follows.
1
Measure 1 contains an error: The figured bass should read: I 6+ 6.
Please see Errata.
6 6
a:
2
f:
i iv V V 2 | i
VI V V 2 | III
III
| I ||
viio 5 i N | viio /V V | i ||
Chapter 21
1G.
1
f:
231
2
Bb:
V /ii | ii | V
f:
i | VI | iv | N | V | VI | V 5 /V v ii | V |
4
b:
| I |
6
7
g: III | i | N | viio /V | V |
3
Be sure to caution students regarding the transposition of the Bb clarinet
part (sounding a major second lower than written).
6
Chapter 21
1H.
232
Chapter 21
233
2 It+6
7 Gr+6
3 Fr+6
8 Fr+6
4 ++4
9 Fr+6
5 It+6
10 Gr+6
2B.
1
10
2C.
You may wish to give this helpful hint to students: Resolve the bass first
in augmented sixth chords, downward by half step and in Neapolitan sixth chords,
upward by step. Next, resolve the altered tone (in the direction of its inflection).
1
2
3
4
5
10
Chapter 21
234
2D.
1
2E.
A goal of this assignment is to sensitize students to the commonalities in
these chords and also to the subtle differences in sound and appearance of the
augmented sixth chords.
1
Chapter 21
2F.
1
235
Chapter 21
236
2G.
1
6
6
6
6
a: i iv 4 i | i iv 4 i | C: I IV 4 I | I IV 4 I | a: V
d: V
6
6
VI 5 ii 5 | (G#7)
6
7
ii 5 viio | a: iv
Fr+
6
7
ii 5 viio |
(D9) V
E: I I
I
ii
| V V | I I
--- IV | V
V* viio
V /V | V V /V V
6
| I vi It +
| Gr+
--- V
F:
I4
Gr+6 |
Chapter 21
237
2.
3.
Chapter 22
238
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Other Chromatic Harmonies
ALTERED DOMINANTS (pages 378-384)
Just as all the most common borrowed harmonies share a common altered
tone (the minor sixth scale degree), all the altered dominants involve the same
altered scale degree2, the chord fifthwhich is either raised or lowered
chromatically. Very occasionally, other alterations of the dominant appear, such
as the v7, which has modal implications, but these are too infrequent to warrant
muddying the waters. Once again, the DO-DONT rule applies: dont double
the altered tone, but do resolve it. Example 22-1 illustrates it concisely. As
Examples 22-2 a and b show, the chord usually emerges from an unaltered
dominant that is already present.
Example 22-3 (page 381):
The second-inversion altered dominant seventh is one key signature away
from a French sixth. You can point out that the bass in the altered dominant
seventh is an altered tone (the chord fifth) where it is a diatonic tone in the French
sixth chord. Important point: The voice leading is identical in both.
If you prefer, you can require your students to indicate inversion in the
altered dominant chord symbol. The problem is that the symbol then becomes
cumbersome; whats more, the defining feature of these chords, i.e., the altered
chord fifth, gets lost in the symbol.
EMBELLISHING DIMINISHED SEVENTH CHORDS (pages 384-391)
After all the time spent stressing the leading-tone function of the
diminished seventh chord, students may be distressed to learn that, in certain
cases, it does not function in this way (as viio7). Like the functional diminished
seventh chord, stepwise motion prevails in most of the voices. There the similarity
ends.
In one case, however, an embellishing diminished seventh chord might
also be viewed in a functional waywhere it resolves to a tonic six-four chord.
For example:
Chapter 22
239
6
4
is better analyzed:
iio7
C:
6
4
V
viio7/V
In a, the symbol iio7 exists only to reflect the resolution of D upward to E in the
I 64 . If the cadential six-four chord is removed, the resolution will be directly to V.
The D should now be spelled Eb to reflect its downward resolution to D. The
spelling in bF-A-C-Eb now reflects the chords harmonic function, where
the spelling in a reflects the chords voice-leading.
The key to recognizing an embellishing diminished seventh chord is its
resolution. You can tell your students that a quick way to identify one is to look
for a common tone between the diminished seventh chord and the resolution
chord. If a common tone is present, then the chord is probably embellishing. You
might also stress that an embellishing diminished seventh chord in root position
will always resolve to a first-inversion tonic or dominant because the raised root
in the bass must resolve upward.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
ASSIGNMENT 1C on page 272: Play these chords (in random order, with
or without their resolutions) and ask students to determine whether the
chord contains a raised or lowered fifth.
Chapter 22
240
2 Eb: V-5
7
7 Gb: V +
7
5 G: Vb5
3 D: V+
4 E: V -5
8 D: V-5
9 Bb: V-5
10 Db: V +
Note: Inversions are not shown in these chord symbols. (See comment on page
379.)
1B.
1
1C.
1
10
Chapter 22
241
1D.
1
10
1E.
2
1F. For No. 3, both lead-sheet and Roman numeral symbols are given.
1
e: iv | iio | i | iv | V /V | i | V-5 | I |
Chapter 22
242
A: I V+ I | iii 4 | I V+ I | iii | I V+ I | c: VI i ii 5 |V | I |
iii
vi 3
| ii
V2
| I
V+/IV | IV viio /V | I 4
1G.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
10
Chapter 22
243
2B.
1
2C.
Part writing may vary. The best process is perhaps to write the bass of the
embellished chord first since that is given, then to follow the method
described on p. 387 for constructing the chord preceding it (the embo7).
Depending on the identity and inversion of the embellished chord, one of
the voices might not be able to move into it by step. However, in each
case, the altered tones should do so (resolving in the direction of their
inflection).
2
3
Chapter 22
2D.
1
244
2E.
Chapter 22
245
10
2F.
Chapter 22
246
Place the symbol that correctly identifies each altered dominant in the top
blank. In the bottom blank, identify the key in which the chord so
functions.
2.
Add the key signature. Then part write in four voices and resolve the
indicated altered dominants in the most appropriate manner.
Chapter 22
3.
247
Chapter 23
248
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Modulation II
Modulation is a topic too big to be covered adequately in a single chapter.
Thats why the introduction in Chapter Seventeen is followed here by a more
complete discussion. Students might take comfort in knowing at the outset that
this chapter merely delves further into the two types of modulation they already
knowcommon-chord and chromatic modulations.
THE THREE Cs: RECOGNIZING THE SIGNALS (pages 393396)
Weve extended the analogy of the tonal border introduced in Chapter
Seventeen to include the signposts that announce a new tonal regionchromatics,
clue chords, and cadences. The three Cs, as theyre called in this text, provide
students with three tangibles for identifying tonalities. Its a musical fact that most
pieces move initially to the sharp (or less flat) side of the tonic. Hence the
particular importance of determining which chromatically raised pitch is acting as
the new leading tone (ti). You may wish to reinforce the points on page 393
with immediate drill. If so, go at this time to Assignment 1A on Workbook page
281. Its worth pointing out that, where several different accidentals appear, some
may represent only tonicizations or chromatic nonchord tones within the new
tonality. Again, the more consistent the accidental, the more likely it is part of a
new key.
In the event that accidentals dont give a clear picture, students should
look for clue chords, the most important being the Mm7, which has the singular
function of dominant in tonal music. Students should be adept by now at
recognizing dominant seventh chords. However, you might do some reinforcing
drill asking students to spell or recognize these chords and the keys they imply.
Consistent accidentals and clue chords are often sufficient to identify a
key. If not, have students look for cadences. In most cases, these will reinforce
the evidence provided by accidentals and clue chords.
You might spend time teaching students how to recognize cadences,
which are often more obvious aurally than visually. In multi-part music, cadences
are often overlapped by new phrase beginnings. Students should examine the
individual musical lines for signs of a cadence. As with accidentals, final cadence
chords are good clues to the key, usually being either the tonic or the dominant.
BACK TO THE TONAL BORDER (pages 396403)
Weve given the three most common situations at the tonal border,
ordered from simple to complex. Although simplistic, the diagrams give students
a handhold in this murky region of harmonic analysis. The bulk of this section
Chapter 23
249
Chapter 23
250
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Recognizing Signals
1A.
1 Eb 2 a 3 c
4 c
5 C
b
10 c
7 G 8 D 9 f
1B.
1
1C.
You may wish to apply voice-leading principles in a more general way at
this point. More distant modulations, more nonharmonicism in the melodic lines,
and wider melodic leaps make this increasingly necessary.
1
Chapter 23
251
d: i ii viio | i
V5 /iv IV |
e:
III | vi V 5 i | V | i ||
A: I vi ii V | I iv
C:
2B.
ii V I | IV vii /V I 4 V | I ||
2C.
Chapter 23
252
3. Gr +6
This chord resolves to a major tonic six-four. The upward resolution of
the Eb would be better reflected by respelling the pitch as D
transforming the chord into a ++4 chord.
4. Measures 34-35 involve a modulation back to E minor, as follows:
C: I vi
viio /vi | vi
e: iv i
|
5. Gr+6
6. At m. 38, the music changes mode from E minor to E major.
3. The Secret Lives of Chords
3A.
1
3B.
In these solutions, the leading tone, in an inner voice, has been unresolved
in favor of a complete tonic chord of resolution. It is equally possible to
resolve the leading tone, leaving an incomplete tonic.
1
Chapter 23
253
3C.
1
3D.
Chapter 23
3E.
1
254
3F.
1
C:
I | I | e: Gr+ | Gr+ | i 4 V | i | C:
I | I | e: Gr+ |
Gr+ | i 4 V | i | V /IV | IV ii | I 4 V | I
Eb:
Eb:
E:
I vi | I vi | V | IV | iv | Gr+ |
E:
V7 | viio7/V | viio7/V | V7 |
N |
I |
V7 | I 4 | viio7/V | viio7/V | V |
Answers to Questions:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
3G.
Chapter 23
255
Chapter 23
256
Name the beginning and ending tonalities for the following passages:
2.
Name the key most likely implied by the appearance of the given clue
chord, and indicate the chords probably function:
1
Key:
___
___
___
___
___
Function: ___
___
___
___
___
3.
Provide harmonic analysis of the following figured bass line and identify
the type of modulation. Show key change where needed.
257
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Harmonic Extensions and Chromatic Techniques
TRIADIC EXTENSIONS: CLIMBING THE OVERTONE SERIES
(pages 414-428)
The idea that Western musics evolution is reflected in the harmonic series
can be extended through the sixteenth partial and beyond, where we encounter the
half step so important in the atonal repertoire and microtones that characterize
some more recent music.
The Dominant Ninth Chord (page 414)
Ninth chords tend to lose their identity when voiced so that the ninth is
compressed to a second. The identity crisis becomes worse when any member but
the root is on the bottom. Example 24-2 would sound more like a vii7 with an
added tone if the root G were transposed up an octave, for instance. Although
voicings such as those in Example 24-3 are the most typical, ninth chords do
appear in inversion (see Example 24-5) and in a variety of voicings, especially in
jazz styles.
Added Practice (page 420)
The ninth in this V9/V resolves, in both the voice and accompaniment, to
Bb in m. 54. The secondary dominant ninth chords in Example 24-7 are:
m. 186: V-9/iii
m. 188: V-9/ii
m. 190: V-9
In all, the ninth resolves downward by step and might alternatively be
analyzed as a suspension.
Other Ninth Chords (page 420)
The minor ninth and major ninth chords will be revisited in Chapter 31
(Harmonic Principles in Jazz).
Eleventh Chords (page 422)
The further the triad is extended, the greater the number of possible
voicings. Example 24-12 is typical Wagner, in that the root of the V11 forms a
pedal point, over which the upper voices weave a counterpoint. The eleventh
appears almost incidentally in these passages. The eleventh chords in Example
24-15, on the other hand, are more vertical and more purely harmonic.
258
259
260
10
1B.
1
10
261
1C.
1
10
1D.
1E.
1
c: i | V /v | V | i | VI 4 | viio 3 | V /VI | VI | V
7
-9
13
11
IV+ vii | V V
13
| V
262
1F.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
263
2. Linear Chromaticism
2A.
To avoid becoming mired in too many secondary dominants, weve
analyzed a modulation every measure or so. Other ways of analyzing this passage
are equally valid.
2B.
264
2C.
265
3. Harmonic Sequence
3A. These are challenging harmonic passages that admit several possible
analyses. Feel free to disagree or to propose alternatives.
1
266
3B.
3C.
1
Harmonic sequence: mm. 56, mm. 78 (a second lower), mm. 910 (a fourth
higher)
Melodic form: a (mm. 14) b (mm. 516); mm. 1216 are a cadential extension
(mm. 1216); a and b form a contrasting period.
2
Key: F
13
| I
The V is missing the fifth (G), ninth (D) and eleventh (F). This is typical.
Both the seventh and the thirteenth resolve downward.
267
1.
The two keys in the piu lento are Eb minor and A minor.
2.
Both chords are German augmented sixth chords, and both resolve to a
tonic six-four chord.
3.
Both diminished seventh chords are spelled according to their function as
leading-tone seventh chords.
4.
At m. 34, a harmonic sequence begins that progresses from E minor to G
minor, and then from G minor to Bb minor.
268
1.
Two examples of linear harmonies appear in m. 4. Symbolize them by
Roman numeral.
_____ _____
2.
In mm. 58, as many as four brief tonicizations can be identified. List the
tonalities.
1) _____
2) _____
3) _____
4) _____
Describe the chromatic relationships that exist among these tonalities.
__________________________________________________________________
3.
Within the final tonicization of mm. 58, a modal borrowing occurs.
Identify it.
________________
4.
Describe the type of modulation that occurs from m. 8 to m. 9 and
describe the relationship between the two tonalities.
__________________________________________________________________
5.
Tonicizations occur in mm. 1011. Name the tonicized keys. ___ ___
2
Identify the following harmonies and provide an appropriate resolution for
any three.
Chapter 25
269
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Binary and Ternary Forms
THREE WAYS OF LOOKING AT FORM (pages 437444)
Regarding symmetry: Short works are often perfectly symmetric. The
longer the work, the less symmetric its likely to be.
Regarding motivic analysis: This is the crux of most musical analyses.
How do the parts relate to each other and to the whole? This is where the three
composer choices, introduced back in Chapter 7 (page 105), make their reprise.
Regarding musical process: Motivic analysis alone does not account for
the way a work affects the listener. Identifying the musical processes sheds some
light on this admittedly subjective topic. In general, works that are primarily
thematic are more immediately accessible than those that are heavily
developmental. Could this be what made much of Beethovens music such an
earful in his day (and still does)?
Why so many thematic examples?
Most of the musical examples in the book are thematic. This is partly
because thematic passages make more sense in isolation than transitional,
developmental, or cadential passages, which most clearly reveal their role in a
larger context. Then, too, most popular music is entirely thematic.
Examples of a thematic process that relies almost entirely on a motive can
be found on Workbook page 94 (Ponchiellis Dance of the Hours) and text page
135 (Bricusse and Newleys Pure Imagination). You may wish to ask students
to search back and find examples in earlier chapters that demonstrate the other
processes. Some are cited below.
Thematic:
Schubert: Impromptu op. 142, no. 2 (Workbook page 248)
Chopin: Prelude op. 28, no. 7 (Workbook page 109)
Rossini: Domine Deus (Workbook page 256)
Developmental:
Bach: Invention no. 14 (Workbook page 227)
Haydn: Piano Trio, H. XV:18 (Workbook page 285)
Haydn: Piano Sonata, H. XVI:27 (Workbook page 247)
Transitional:
Mozart: Piano Sonata K. 332 (Workbook page 209)
Transitional leading to thematic:
Chopin: Mazurka op. 7, no. 2 (Workbook page 304)
Transitional leading to cadential:
Chapter 25
270
Chapter 25
271
B
c
AC
a (mm. 14) b (mm. 58) c (mm. 912) d (mm. 1316) d (mm. 1720) e (mm. 2124)
Tonality: E
Cadence:
E
AC
AC
******************************************************************
Chapter 25
272
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Three Ways of Looking at Form
1A.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
The opening measures are thematic. They contain a melodic idea with
clearly profiled contour and rhythms, a mix of conjunct and disjunct
motion, and a stable tonal environment. A pre-cadential extension in mm.
1012 delays the arrival of the authentic cadence until m. 13 by repeating
the three measures leading to it. A post-cadential extension follows the
cadence in m. 13 and lasts until m. 17. These measures repeat the V-I
motion under pure arpeggiation.
The first cadence is expected at m. 8. This would resolve the dominant of
m. 7 and complete an eight-measure phrase.
The cadence occurs at m. 13, after which a pronounced rhythmic change
occurs.
7
6
The harmonic pattern of m. 18viio /V - V is repeated in sequence a
step lower, tonicizing IV in m. 19, III in m. 20, II in m. 21 and returning to
the tonic in m. 22.
In mm. 1722, a two-measure pattern is repeated a third lower beginning
at m. 20. The sequence is almost a real one. Only the last beat (m. 21, beat
3) does not conform.
Even though no modulation occurs, the harmonically unstable chords of
mm.1722 give the feeling of tonal motion. The passage is non-melodic,
consisting of sequential statements of arpeggiations, giving it a transitional
character. Actually, the passage simply interrupts the cadential process on
either side of it.
6
The music beginning at m. 23 is pre-cadential, prolonging the ii leading
to the half cadence at m. 26.
Chapter 25
1B.
273
1C.
1
Chapter 25
274
Chapter 25
275
E
2.
3.
mm.5-8
mm.9-12
mm.13-16
e
mm.17-20
f
mm.21-24
Chapter 25
276
4.
m.5: AC in B (or HC in E)
m.16: AC in f
m.24: AC in E
5.
m.1
m.3
m.18
m.21
E: V /vi
7
E: vii /V
7
E: vii /V
7
E: V /IV
2.
3.
4.
5.
A1
a
d
Eb
b1
Ab
Chapter 25
A
a
277
b1
b2
mm.21-26
B
c
c1
ext.
mm.25-32
m.33
m.39
A1
a
mm.53-56 mm.57-60
b1
ext.
mm.61-63
m.64
2. The final phrase might cadence at m. 64 but for the elision and extension that
takes its place. The extension precedes the cadence and can be termed precadential.
3. Principal elements of contrast in B are the key, the texture (change in left-hand
accompaniment), the presence of pedal point, the melody, and the harmonic
rhythm.
4. The music becomes transitional at m. 49.
5. The dynamic accents help to emphasize the syncopation that gives the middle
section its vitality, perhaps in compensation for the slower harmonic rhythm and
extension melodic repetition.
6. Measures 39-49 are a prolonged dominant in C.
4 Liszt: Il Pensieroso
1.
Simple Binary
The use of a single letter to represent each phrase indicates the degree of
unity that characterizes this piece.
A
A1
Coda
1
2
3
4
a
a
ext.
a
a
ext. *
A
a
c
m.1
m.5
m.9
m.14
a-E
m.19
m.21
m.27
m.33
m.39
Measures 33-38 extend the V7 of m.37, delaying its resolution until m.39,
the would-be final cadence. The ensuing measures are a post-cadential
extension of sufficient length to justify the term coda.
2. The three tonalities of the first section, c#, e, and g, display an unusual
chromatic-third relationship (minor keys a minor third apart).
Chapter 25
278
3. Measures 33-39 twice run the circle of fifths via secondary dominants:
7
9
7
9
7
7
7
C F B E Ao each time ending with a iv V in the key of c.
4. The Neapolitan occurs, in root position and embellished, in mm. 19-20. It
appears again in the coda at mm. 40-42, amidst a tonic pedal point and resolving
directly to the tonic.
5. Answered above.
2B.
1 Corelli: Trio Sonata op. 4, no. 3
Simple Binary
1.
A
B
A
b
c
m.1
m.5
m.9
d
f A
m.14
2. The rhythmic motive heard first in the violins and the lower neighbor-note
motive first heard in the cello, both in m.1, are unifying features in this short
piece.
3. The principal tonality, A, is not reflected in this modal key signature. Typical
of music in this period, the key signature often lacks one flat or one sharp,
reflecting the role played by musica ficta in the transformation of the Dorian and
Mixolydian modes to our present-day minor and major systems.
4. The isolated B of m.3 is the first hint of a possible modulation to the
dominant. It is immediately counteracted by Bn in m.4 and thus not indicative of a
tonal change.
5. Each cadence contains the Corelli Clash, a mannerism peculiar to the
composer involving the simultaneous resolution of a 4-3 suspension in one voice
and an anticipation of the leading tone in another voice.
6. The second section begins and ends in A. Within this tonality, a tonicization of
f occurs mm.12-13).
2 Schubert: impromptu op. 142, no. 3
Form: Rounded Binary
Phrases a + b = period
Phrases c +a1 = period
A
B
A1
ext.
A
b
c
a1
m.1
m.5
m.9
m.13
m.17
Chapter 25
279
Harmonic Analysis:
m.1
4 7
6
6
4 7
6
6
7
7
Bb: I I | V 3V | I ii 5 | V 5/V V | I I | V 3V | I viio /V | V I ||
m.9
6
V/vi vi | vi
6
6
F:
ii V | I ii 5 | V
m.13 6
6
7
7
b
B : V/V V | I V 5/IV | IV viio /V | V I 4 | V I |
7
V I | V I ||
Chapter 25
280
6.
Chapter 25
281
Chapter 25
282
Cite ways in which the music beginning at m. 9 contrasts with mm. 18.
1)__________________________________________________________
2)__________________________________________________________
3)__________________________________________________________
3.
4.
Identify the chromatic harmonies at: m. 33: ___ m. 37: ___ m. 38: ___
5.
6.
Chapter 25
283
284
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
Introduction to Sonata Form
A BRIEF HISTORY (page 462)
Sonata form, the most important musical structure of the classical period,
evolved gradually, and the features that it comprises coalesced only toward the
end of the eighteenth century. Key elements include the establishment of
opposing tonal areas (usually with attendant thematic material), subsequent
melodic and harmonic development of the thematic material, and the restatement
of opening ideas with a reconciliation of the initial tonal opposition. These
features underlie the vast majority of sonata-form movements.
MOZART: EINE KLEINE NACHTMUSIK (page 463)
Weve selected the first movement of this work as the chapters topic
piece because we feel hard pressed to find an example that so closely approaches
the textbook model while being so readily recognizable and concise. Feel free
to bring your own favorite examples to the classroom.
Closing Section (page 467)
You may wish not to make a distinction between a closing theme and a
codetta. However, it seems consistent with the attention weve paid to musical
process to distinguish between music that is primarily thematic (the former) and
music that is primarily cadential (the latter). This is especially true because the
two processes are capable of producing quite different musical affects.
Development (page 468)
Development sections quite often break down into distinct subsections
based on one or more of the following: 1) material being developed; 2) tonality;
3) texture; 4) rhythmic character. You may wish to have your students identify
and label subsections based on these factors. Eine Kleine Nachtmusik contains a
more-or-less uni-sectional development.
Recapitulation (page 469)
It is usually fascinating to examine how the transition in the recapitulation
differs from its initial appearance in the exposition. On page 470 weve identified
285
four distinct composer choices, although these choices may be combined in many
ways.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
A.
Form
1.
The exposition ends in m. 45. Although mm. 12-15 might be viewed as a
transition to the secondary key, the process here is actually more cadential
than transitional, amounting to nothing more than an extension of the
cadence that occurs at m.12. (A typical feature of a transition is
modulation, which does not take place here.)
2.
The key of the second thematic/tonal area is Eb. This key is, with respect
to the home key, the relative major.
3.
The exposition ends with a cadential passage called a codetta. This
passage begins at m. 37, although the music turns cadential in nature as
early as m. 24. (Measures 24-37 can be viewed as a long cadential
extension of the short secondary theme.)
4.
The development begins in m. 46. It focuses on material from the first
thematic/tonal area. The fate motive beginning at m. 54 might be
considered a retransition, preparing for the return of C minor by way of a
prolonged viio7.
5.
The recapitulation begins in m. 57 in the key of c.
6.
In the recapitulation, the second thematic/tonal area begins in m. 74 in the
key of C. This key is, with respect to the home key, the parallel major.
7.
A coda begins in m. 106 in the key of Db. The move to a new key,
especially one as distant as the Neapolitan, is a departure from the
customary function of the coda, which is to prolong the tonic.
Other Questions
1.
The phrase/period structure of mm.1-8 is: a a (period)
2.
Fermatas occur at three points. What two musical processes does each
fermata separate (thematic, transitional, developmental, cadential)?
m.16: cadential and thematic
m.73: cadential and thematic
m.106: transitional and thematic
m.113: thematic and cadential
286
3.
4.
B.
Form
1.
The exposition ends in m. 31. There is no transition to the secondary key,
which begins abruptly at m. 14.
2.
The key of the second thematic/tonal area is Bb. This key is, with respect
to the home key, the dominant.
3.
The exposition ends with a closing theme at m. 21.
4.
The development begins at m.32 and consists of two subsections. The first
begins in f. The musical material is best described as new, as it is only
tenuously related to the melodic material found in mm. 3-4. The second
subsection begins at m. 43 in the key of Ab and develops material heard in
mm. 8-9.
5.
A very brief retransition occurs in mm. 48-50.
6.
The recapitulation begins in m. 51 in the key of Eb.
7.
In the recapitulation, the second thematic/tonal area begins in m. 64 in the
home key of Eb.
8.
A coda is not present.
Other Questions:
1.
The music at mm. 58-63 is cadential, a prolongation of the tonic of m. 58
through tonic-dominant harmony.
2.
The most remote tonal region of the movement occurs in mm. 46-47. The
key suggested at this point is ab.
3.
The developmental process is most evident in mm. 43-49, where the fivenote motive first heard in mm. 8-9 is heard in partial sequences that
tonicize f and Db. Prior to these measures, the development section is
mostly thematic.
287
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
Introduction to the Rondo
PERSPECTIVE (page 477)
The classical rondo (pronounced RON-do) evolved from the Baroque
rondeau (pronounced ron-DO) through a gradual process in which the episodes
and refrains grew in length and shrank in number. Of the many variations on the
rondo principle, only the five-part rondo is covered in this brief chapter. Still, all
the elements present in longer and more involved rondo movements are found in
the topic piece.
BEETHOVEN: PIANO SONATA OP. 13, SECOND MOVEMENT
(page 478)
Weve selected the first movement of this work as the chapters topic
piece for its familiarity, for its straightforward, transparent application of the
rondo principle, and for the opportunity it affords to revisit some chromatic
harmonic techniques covered earlier.
The Refrain (page 478)
If you prefer, you can refer to the refrain as the rondo theme. It might
also be called the first refrain, since its initial reappearance is termed second
refrain. Refrains generally tend to involve the thematic process, whereas
episodes may be thematic, developmental, or even transitional. Even if thematic
or developmental, episodes will often become transitional (more precisely,
retransitional) at their conclusion.
The Coda (page 483)
Its worth making the point that codas have the same formal function,
whether in a fugue, a sonata form movement, a rondo, or a song. In all cases, they
follow and prolong the would-be final cadence. Along the same lines, its worth
stressing the similar function of the episode (a digression, tonal and/or thematic)
in both the fugue and the rondo.
******************************************************************
288
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
A.
Form
1.
The form of the refrain is rounded binary.
2.
The first episode begins in m. 23 in the key of d. This key, with respect to
the home tonality, is the relative minor. The episode then modulates to F.
NOTE: The last sentence in Question 2 as posed in the Workbook
incorrectly refers to the refrain. Please see errata.
3.
The form of the first episode is binary.
4.
The second refrain begins at m. 45. It is an exact repetition of the original.
5.
The second episode begins at m. 67 in the key of G. This key, with respect
to the home key, is the subdominant.
6.
The final refrain begins in m. 98. Unlike the first two refrains, the
repetition of the first 8 measures is written out. This is because the melody
is given a different accompaniment. The same is true of the b section,
which receives an accompaniment different from the original both times.
7.
The transitional process is evident in mm. 84-97.
8.
This movement is primarily thematic. The transitional process occurs but
once (mm. 84-97), and the cadential and developmental processes do not
occur at all.
Other
Locate an example of each:
B.
1.
2.
289
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
both melodically and in their harmonic stability, and mm. 36-40 bear the
hallmarks of a retransition.
The refrain appears three more times: at m. 41, m. 112, and m. 205.
A retransition precedes these reappearances of the refrain. These
retransitions begin at m. 36, m. 105, and m. 179. Note: Other viewpoints
may be entertained here. The long retransition that emerges from the intempo cadenza becomes mildly developmental (mm.186-199) before
resuming its dominant prolongation. Indeed, the in-tempo cadenza might
be viewed as extending all the way to the refrain at m. 205.
The longest and most complex episode (the C section) of the movement
begins at m. 65 in the key of g. This episode contains three subsections
that differ in tonality, musical material, and texture. The first subsection,
at m. 65, is followed by a second at m. 76, in the key of Eb, and a third at
m. 91 that begins in the key of c.
The third subsection of C develops material from the refrain, stating the
music of mm. 1-4 sequentially and then compressing it.
The final refrain is followed by a coda, which begins at m. 221.
This is a seven-part rondo.
Cadential extensions occur at m. 32, 89, 103, 144, 156, 179, 213, 216 and
228.
The key at m. 95 is Bb. In this key, how would you symbolize the
tonicization in m.99?
Actually, the passage begins in Bb and quickly changes mode to bb. In Bb
minor, the tonicizations are V7/VI and V7/iv. The chord of m. 102
begins as an It+6 and changes nationality during the measure (Fr+6 and
Gr+6).
A diagram of the movement follows:
Section:
Measure:
Key:
Subsection:
Measure:
Key:
a
65
g
C
b
76
Eb
c
91
c - bb
290
PART NINE
MUSIC IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND BEYOND
(CHAPTERS 2833)
This part of the book comprises of six chapters that deal with the music of
the recently completed century. The composers singled out for extended coverage
are Debussy, Stravinsky, Bartk, Schoenberg, and Webern. Many others are
represented in the musical examples. Weve tried to vary the presentation in these
chapters in such a way that longer, in-context excerpts balance shorter examples
that isolate specific techniques.
Students generally have an easier time with this material than with
nineteenth-century music because, in certain respects, its a new beginningnew
harmonic syntax, new melodic and rhythmic techniques, and so on. Even though
this is true to an extent, its important to emphasize the continuity that
characterizes musical style as it evolves. Musics evolutionary flow might be
likened to the flow of a river, with its various branches that may either break off
to seek their own destination or spill back into the main channel. By the same
analogy, its possible to think of the various composers as tributaries feeding the
main stream.
The final three chapters are devoted to jazz, blues, and popular song. In
scope and depth of coverage, these chapters represent the books unique
contribution to the pedagogy of music theory. We, the authors, feel that its
irresponsible to send music graduates out into todays musical milieu without
adequate preparation in the area of vernacular music. All of the parceling and
paring in the book to this point has been for the purpose of creating the space
necessary for an adequate treatment of these topics.
291
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Syntax and Vocabulary
SYNTAX (pages 487-496)
Debussys great harmonic contribution was not so much an expansion of
the vocabulary as it was a retooling of the syntaxusing familiar chords in
unfamiliar ways. The resulting sound is profoundly different. You might ask
students to rearrange the five chords in Example 28-1 to form a functional
harmonic progression. The likely result would be: Gm - Fm7 - D7 - B7 - E
(iii-ii7-vii7-V7-I). Play it both ways for them.
Planing (page 488)
Debussy looked to the distant past for inspiration. Perhaps he discovered
planing in the fauxbourdon of the thirteenth century or the parallel organum of the
tenth. His prelude, The Sunken Cathedral, would suggest as much. Stepwise
parallelism invariably produces non-functional chord successions such as those on
the next page.
Concept Check (page 490)
The three passages of Example 28-6 have these features in common: 1)
They are triadic; 2) the triads move in parallel motion; 3) the triads do not
progress in the traditional functional way. Of the three, the Rodgers is the most
conservative, employing a mixture of functional and non-functional motion.
Example 28-7 (page 492)
Ask students to sing the tonic after playing this passage. This will drive
home two facts: the augmented triad is rootless, and a succession of them creates
tonal ambiguity.
Modality (page 492)
The Church modes were introduced along with scales in Chapter One to
provide perspective on our major and minor tonality. Nowfinallystudents can
see them at work. Debussys music is filled with what might be called fleeting
modality. The Sarabande from the suite Pour le piano on Workbook page 369
contains references to Dorian, Phrygian, Mixolydian, and Aeolian modes.
Jazz Studies majors will have their own way of thinking about the modes,
owing perhaps to George Russells seminal The Lydian Chromatic Concept of
Tonal Organization, and the work of David Baker, Jamey Aebersold, and others.
However, we feel it still beneficial to relate the modes to our familiar major-minor
tonality.
292
293
294
1B.
These melodies can be transformed by changing key signatures or
individual pitches as follows:
Mixolydian: Add one flat
Lydian: Subtract one flat
n
b
Aeolian: Change A to A Dorian: Change An to Ab
Change Gb to Gn
Phrygian: Remove two sharps for key signature and cancel A
Mixolydian: Change key signature to four sharps (and cancel A)
1
2
3
1C.
1
2
3
4
Chromatic planing involving Mm7 chords over F pedal and left-hand part
that implies I IV V in F
Chromatic planing involving major triads inside an A major triad,
implying A Lydian
Chromatic planing of major triads underneath a predominantly F-major
melodic line
In mm. 21-22, planing of seventh chords diatonic to A Dorian above
Dorian scale degrees 1 and 4. In mm.23-24, diatonic planing of triads
in C major (exception: m.23, beat 2) beneath a melodic line also
diatonic in C major
295
B
c
d
m. 23 m. 35
A1
Coda
a2
d
b2
m.42 m.50 m.56 m.63
The form is defined primarily by the cadences and melodic material. Texture
remains chordal and fairly dense throughout.
2. Aside from the coda at m.63, the music is primarily thematic. Debussy shows a
penchant for repeating motives in pairs, thus the prominence of the two-measure
phrase, but there is little traditional development here.
3.
mm.1-2: C
mm.3-4: R
mm.4-5: C
mm.6-7: V
mm.9-10: C
mm.11-12: V
mm.13-14: C
mm.15-16: R (of mm. 1-2)
mm.17-18: R (of mm.. 3-4)
mm.19: R (of m. 5)
mm.20: R (of m. 19)
mm.21-22: C
Syntax
1.
Functional tonal roots lie just beneath the surface here. Heres one way to
hear the passage:
C:
m. 50
V
B:
51
| i
ii
52
53
54
55
9
| V
| i
|
E: vi I v | I v I v I |
g: VI | V ||
Change the first and third chords in m. 51 to major triads and hear how much
more conventional things sound. Measures 53-54 sound distinctly Mixolydian,
while the cadence in mm. 54-55 sounds PhrygianDebussys fleeting modality
on parade.
296
Minor pentatonic on D
Minor pentatonic on F
Major pentatonic on Ab
Minor pentatonic on C
Major pentatonic on Bb
297
Whole tone
Pentatonic
Octatonic
Dorian
Pentatonic
298
2C.
1
2D.
1
2
3
4
5
2E.
1
Scale:
Scale:
Scale:
Scale:
Scale:
F G A B C D E F
Bb C D E F G A Bb
Bb C D E F Ab Bb
F G Ab Bb C D Eb F
C D E F G Ab Bb BN C
Identity:
Identity:
Identity:
Identity:
Identity:
Phrygian
Lydian
Whole tone
Dorian
Octatonic
299
2F.
No solutions are provided for this assignment.
2G.
1.
Form: A (m. 1)
B (m. 16)
C (m. 26)
The chief unifying device is the motive heard in m.1.
2.
Falling-third motive: mm. 4, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
300
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
New tonal Methods
PERSPECTIVE
The music in this chapter is neither tonal in the same way Debussys was
nor atonal in the manner of Schoenberg and Webern. It lies on a plateau that
separates those two ridges and contains a vast amount of musicmost of the
music, in fact, written during the twentieth century. Its on this plateau that we
find Ives, Hindemith, Bartk, Stravinsky, Copland, Menotti, and Crumb, to name
but a few. The styles are varied, with different harmonic vocabularies, different
approaches to rhythm and form, and so onso much so that music by only a few
of these composers can be included here. However, most of them utilized the
techniques discussed in this chapter to one extent or another.
NEW TONAL VENTURES (pages 507-515)
The quartal cushion evident in Example 29-1a appears to be more
deliberate than in much of Hindemiths music, where quartal harmonies percolate
to the surface as a by-product of his intervallic preferences. These preferences, in
turn, relate to the theories of tonality set forth in his book, The Craft of Musical
Composition, an interesting read if youve not taken the time. Although quartal
harmonies sound much alike, especially when you begin to extend them, there
would seem to be some value in finding their root in a manner similar to
triadsby stacking fourths. The symbols we suggest are by no means standard,
perhaps not even common, but we find them useful.
Example 29-4 (page 510)
a is probably everybodys favorite example of polychords because its so
clear. b is more subtle, but its probably more typical of the way composers have
used these structures. As with quartal harmonies, the symbols used to represent
these chords are by no means standard.
Example 29-6 (page 512)
The same observations hold true for polytonality. a is an utterly clear, notvery-subtle use of polytonality along with some blues inflections. Its an ideal
first example. Even more ideal, perhaps, are some of Milhaud's Saudades da
Brazil, which are great fun to play, hear, and discuss. Stravinskys polytonality
tends to be of a more complex and subtle nature. In b, melody and harmony of a
D-minor cast are set against parallel moving eighth-note triads that imply D
Phrygian.
301
302
For example, the idea in mm. 35 is repeated in part with minor pitch/rhythm
changes in m. 6. The elements of the original idea are pieced together in a
different way in the next gesture (mm. 710). Measures 1114 are yet another
variant of mm. 35.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
ASSIGNMENT 2B3 on page 392: If you have two violinists (ideal) or two
soprano melody instrumentalists in class, you might arrange an in-class
performance of this attractive duet.
Suggested Aural Quiz
An aural quiz might include identification of harmonic and melodic
structures, and perhaps the identification of the overall tonal basis of selected
excerpts (i.e., pandiatonic, bimodal, polychordal, polytonal, octatonic, and so on).
Some of this should carry over from Chapter 28. A suggested format follows:
303
1B.
1 EbQ
2 Bb+
Ab
6 GQ
EQ
7 W.T.
1C.
+11
1 C9 2
3 Bb+11
8 eb
d
4 G
FQ
5 Abm9
9 EQ
10 A13
Eb
E
+11
11
Q
9
Q
3 F 4 Am
5 E 6 Eb 7 Am 8 C 9 9 C 10
13
F
Q
G
1D.
1 is in error. The given pitch should be F, although it is possible to place a
second-inversion F triad on the bottom. The constructions shown here are basic.
Other ways of distributing the chord members are possible.
10
1E.
Student solutions will vary. None are given here.
1F.
Student solutions will vary. None are given here.
304
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
If a tonal center can be said to exist at all, its probably one of the notes in
the ostinato that is shared by the cello and first violin. The likely candidate
305
2.
3.
4.
5.
would be the lowest pitch in the pattern, B, which is also the metrically
accented pitch.
Strung together as they are heard, the first violin and cello lines form this
repeated succession of pitches: B - A - G - F - G - A. They constitute
two-thirds of a whole tone scale.
The second violin and viola are imitative, the violin initially imitating the
viola by inversion. Beginning in m. 186, the viola imitates the second
violin, the figure growing shorter over time.
By m. 189, the two upper strings are paired in imitation against the two
lower strings.
The harmonies formed by the four voices are random and linear,
composed of mixed intervals that are by-products of the two ostinatos and
the imitative inner voices. It seems likely that Bartk was more concerned
with line and process here than with beat-for-beat harmonies.
2B.
1 Stravinsky: Symphony of Psalms (first movement)
1.
2.
E probably has the best claim to tonic in this passage, owing to its
prominence in the chant-like melody.
The passage is entirely octatonic, with E Phrygian suggested by the
melody.
306
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
307
2.
308
4.
309
CHAPTER THIRTY
Atonality and Serialism
Arguably, atonal music remains a musical anomaly to most students. It
likely occupies a miniscule portion of a students listening repertoire and is
encountered by most music majors only in music history surveys and the final
semester of their music theory study.
Interestingly, it still may be perceived as new music by many students.
What has changed since the time most of us were undergraduates is that this
repertoire really is older music, and we are now charged with covering
twentieth-century music in a more inclusive way.
Furthermore, the music theory community espouses variable analytic
practices regarding this music. The goal here is to present the student with the
most common tools of analysis and a fundamental understanding to prepare them
for further study at the undergraduate and graduate level.
ATONALITY (pages 525- 539)
These first exercises familiarize students with the concepts of pitch and
interval in atonal music. They are fundamental to the understanding that there is
no longer a hierarchy of pitches indicating key feeling. Diatonicism and
chromaticism and their relative degrees of behavior no longer exists. We are
concerned only with the employment of the twelve chromatic pitches and the
intervallic relationships they produce melodically and harmonically on a free and
equal basis.
The beginning of this chapter involves the replacement of traditional
interval names with semi-tone analysis. Students may have difficulty
remembering the eleven interval numerals. A simple remedy is to have them
memorize the semitone measurement for the minor and major third (I3 and I4),
and the perfect fifth (I7) and their various enharmonic spellings. These can then
be used as measuring sticks for the intervals that surround them.
At this point, students will be ready to apply the notion that, in atonal
music, we look for ways to demonstrate common relationships among harmonic
and melodic intervals. To do this, we are concerned with the shortest distance
between two pitches. The I7 (as in the perfect fifth ascending from C to G) and I5
(descending from C to G) are related. The smaller, more direct expression of this
interval relationship is preferred, and hence the term Interval Class.
In this stage of pedagogy, students knowledge of traditional interval
inversion and MOD 12 become useful: An interval and its inversion will always
span an octave and thus comprise 12 semi-tones. By using simple arithmetic,
theyll be able to determine interval class easily and understand that there are only
six (6) interval classes.
310
Normal order, best normal order, and prime form are the concepts likely to
produce the most student confusion. Weve attempted to make the distinctions
clear on page 531, with a review of all terminology on page 538. The goal in this
greatly distilled presentation of atonal set theory is to make learning the system
less difficult rather than using it to analyze the music.
SERIALISM: THE TWELVE-TONE METHOD (pages 539-553)
After grappling with freely atonal music, students should find this part of
the chapter easier refreshingly transparent.
Example 30-27 (page 540)
Weve tried to convey here a bit of the process by which Schoenbergs
twelve-tone method evolved. Ordering gradually becomes a factor before
becoming the essence of his method.
The Matrix (page 545)
The matrix is a tool that can be especially helpful in analyzing certain
pieces and of little use in analyzing others. It really depends on the number of row
forms present in a composition. At any rate, you may choose to introduce this tool
or not.
The assignments reinforce concepts of order, transformation, and
transposition. Others reinforce the interconnection of set concepts such as derived
set, sub-set (segmentation), series interval structure, and applications for analysis.
Completion of all the analysis assignments is possible without constructing a
matrix, and while weve not included matrix construction as part of these
assignments, you are free to do so if you wish.
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Atonality
1A.
311
1B.
Two solutions, one ascending and another descending, are given for each
example.
1C.
312
1D.
(025)
6
(036)
7
(0246)
11
(047)
12
(0467)
13
(026)
(0124)
(014)
(015)
(0235)
14
(0234)
(0347)
10
(016)
15
(0134)
(0256)
1E.
Enharmonic equivalents may be used in various notations for sets and
inversions may begin on any note. In these solutions, the first note of the set is
used for the first note of the inversion.
1 Set (02356)
2 Set (0134)
3 Set (034)
4 Set (0247)
5 Set (0146)
6 Set (025)
7 Set (0267)
8 Set (03467)
9 Set (0136)
10 Set (0347)
313
1F.
314
1H.
1.
The opening set is (014). Additional appearances in mm. 17-27 are:
m. 17, beat 3 in the right hand; mm. 19, 21 and 23, beat 3, between left and right
hands; m. 24, second half of beat 1 between dotted half G3 in right hand and left
hand parts.
2.
(026) appears in m.17, beat one, left hand and again in m.18, beat 2, left
hand.
3.
As a two-phrase group: Mm. 17-20 consists of music with a trichord
orientation. A new pentachord motive begins a linear line in the anacrusis to m.
21, with an extension in m. 24 creating a two-phrase division.
As a single phrase: Despite the motivic division described above, the
three-note accompaniment in the left hand (trichord or dyad) unifies the music
from mm. 17-24 into a single unit.
As a four-phrase group: It is also possible to view this passage (mm.1724) in four units (or phrases) of approximately two measures each. The first
phrase begins in m.17 coming to a cadence in the next measure. A second phrase
begins in the right hand (m.19) with a linear motive of a quarter-note/half note
followed by a five-note pentachord. A third phrase is a modified repetition of the
former phrase. The fourth phrase maintains the essential rhythm of the last two
phrases with some pitch modification.
315
1I.
This excerpt is saturated with the trichord (014). The set occurs
harmonically in the upper three strings in mm. 1-3, m. 5, beats 1-2, and m. 6,
beats 2-3. Other trichords are a contraction of this setto (013) in violin 1, m. 4,
and in a canonic treatment of its expansion to (015) in the upper strings in m. 5,
beat 3 through m. 6, beat 1.
Webern: Fnf Stze fr Streichquartett (third movement)
316
1J.
1.
The predominant set is (027). This set is also a quartal cluster.
2.
There are four phrases in this excerpt. Each phrase consists of two
rhythmic segments of eighth- and sixteenth-notes respectively. The sixteenthnote unit acts as the consequent segment of each phrase. The phrases are
harmonically related by the trichord (027) (with a few exceptions) and the dyad
(05) and (07)IC5.
Phrase One: mm. 111-113
Phrase Two: mm. 114-116
Phrase Three: mm. 117-120 (both segments are doubled in length.)
Phrase Four: mm. 123-125 (truncated without second segment)
Phrase developments include changes in beat groupings (mm. 111 3+2+2
to 2+2+3 in m.115), changes in right hand and left hand alternations, phrase
expansion (third phrase mm.117-122), and the contraction of the rhythmic pattern
in m. 116 and the phrase length in mm. 123-125).
3.
The right-hand left-hand alternation in m. 113 is reversed in m. 116. The
rhythm in m. 116 is truncated by eliminating the 8th-note value on beat 2 and
replacing it with a 16th rest. Measure 121 has the same music as m. 113
transposed up by I5 (a perfect fourth).
4.
Measures 111 and 114 both have a 3+2+2 beat grouping, but the left-hand
right-hand juxtaposition on beat 1 in m. 111 has been reversed on the same beat in
m. 114. Measure 114 beat 2 is a transposed fragment of the figure from m. 111
beat 1. The outer right-hand trichords have also been transposed in m. 114.
Measure 115 reverses the beat grouping of mm. 111 and 114 to 2+2+3.
The trichord (027) has been inverted, placing the I2 on top of the cluster.
Measure 120 has the same pitch material as m. 115, but the beat grouping is
changed to 3+3+2 expanding this measure by an 8thnote.
Measure 122 is a repetition of ms. 121 transposed by an ascending I2.
317
Daniel McCarthy: The Drums of Moria from Time Out of Mind: Six Tales of
Middle Earth
318
2. Serialism
2A.
2B.
319
2C.
1
&
2
&
w #w
w #w
w bw bw nw
bw
w nw nw
#w
w nw
w #w
w bw
w bw
bw
320
2D.
1.
2.
321
5.
The information gleaned by answering questions 1-4 allows identification
of RI5, which is stated melodically in the right hand of mm.3-5. From this, P0 can
be constructed.
P0: Bb, F, C, B, A, F, C, D, G, Ab, D, E
RI5: A, B, F, F, Bb, C, G, E, D, C, G, D
6.
2E.
322
2.
Place the following pitch collections in normal order and then give the set
type for each.
3.
b. Provide an R4 form.
323
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
Harmonic Principles in Jazz
WHATS THE DIFFERENCE? (page 555)
Harmony resides at the core of any competent jazz artists improvisations.
Because an ongoing cross fertilization occurred between jazz and art music
throughout the twentieth century, many harmonies and techniques discussed in
this chapter may be familiar from Part Seven: Advanced Chromatic Harmony.
The context is, of course, much different. Furthermore, the topic of jazz harmony
is so deep that much has been left unplumbed. Time and space limitations
preclude discussion of, for example, upper-extension triads, modal harmonies,
dominant-seventh octatonicism, and some of the more advanced chord
substitution techniques. Tightly packed though it is, the chapter is nevertheless a
rather basic look at a vast and fascinating topic.
EXTENDING THE TRIAD (pages 556-564)
A difference between popular music and jazz lies in how far and how
often the triad is extended. Generally, the lexicon of popular music is limited to
the triad and seventh chord (those shown on page 556). Jazz is more relentless in
its pursuit of the triadic extension, and while almost any traditional jazz tune can
be harmonized by the six basic seventh chord types, most jazz artists today will
substitute the more complex extensions and alterations shown in Example 31-2.
Jazz musicians differ widely in the way they use and symbolize these higher
extensions, and students need not memorize them. The six basic seventh chord
types are sufficient. If you wish, you can require your class to recognize and/or
spell the basic ninth chords, which are obtained by adding a diatonic ninth to each
of these.
Concept Check (page 561):
The basic chord symbols are:
FMaj7 | Eb7 | FMaj7 | Eb7 | Bm7-5 Bbm | Am7 Go7 | Gm7 C7 | FMaj7
The E in m. 6 can be labeled a SUS.
Example 31-5 (page 563)
Voicing is highly varied in jazz. However, voicing with either the fifth or
seventh directly above the root is perhaps the most common. When a keyboardist
or guitarist is comping behind a soloist, the chords are voiced for their overall
sound or for the way they fit beneath the highest pitch. Individual voice leading is
a lesser concern in this context.
324
Cm7
Cm9
Cm7
Add4
11
13
Cm 9 Cm 9
11
Cm 9
| C
13
| F
13
| F
F +5
325
326
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Extending the Triad
1A.
7
1 F
6 C
Maj7
1 F
6 B
m7
+7
2 Abm
3 Em
7 B
8 Go
2 Eb
Maj7
3 D
m7
4 E
Maj7
9 G
4 C
m7-5
5 D
10 C
5 C
m7
Maj7
7 E
8 A
9 D
10 G
-11
2 Cm -5
+9
3 F+5
13
4 Bb M9
5 E9
1B.
-13
1 G -9
Mm7
Maj9
b
6
6 E
MM7
1C.
om7
-9
7 D -5
Mm7
Mm7
8 Gm13
mm7
MM7
+11
9 C -9
Mm7
Mm7
9
10 Fm +7
mM7
327
1D.
1E.
Measure:
Extended symbol:
Fm
Measure:
C /Bb
Extended symbol:
13
D sus4
13
D 11
Measure:
10
13
Extended symbol:
C m
Measure:
13
14
Extended symbol:
Basic Seventh Chord:
B -9
7-5
Gm -5
11
Gm
7-5
+9
C -9
13
C m
11
12
7-5
Bm
F-9
7
Bm /A
7
Bm
Bm
15
16
Fm 9 Fm
11
Fm
Fm
328
1F.
10
1G.
1 Thielemans: Bluesette
329
2. Chord Substitution
2A.
330
2B.
1
2C.
1
331
2D.
1
2E.
1
2
1
2
B7
F7
Bb7
E7
A7
Eb7
Ab7
D7
G
G
332
2F.
2G.
1
1.
2.
The passage consists of two statements of a 4-measure melodic-harmonic
sequence. Both 4-measure statements also comprise a 2-measure sequence. The
pitch level rises a minor third every two measures.
3.
13
m. 2, beat 3 = D 9
m. 3, beat 1 = GMaj9
m. 4, beat 1 = Cm9
333
1.
2.
334
3.
335
3B.
3C.
336
337
Pitch:
Dm7
EbMaj7
Bb7
Gm7-5
E7
F7
AMaj7
C7
Am7
D7
G
C
E
C
B
D
Db
B
Ab
Extension or Alteration:
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
_______
2. Upon the repeat of the two-measure pattern, make the substitutions that
create a chromatic descending bass line of chord roots. (The chromatic
line does not need to be unbroken.)
3. Notate the two melodic lines implied by the lead-sheet symbols. The first
pitch of each implied line is provided.
Dudley Moore: French Waltz
338
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
The Blues
BLUES FORM AND HARMONIC PRACTICE (pages 583592)
Blues form is its harmonic pattern, shown in its pristine state in Example
31-2. This pattern can be spread over twelve measures (the most common form),
twenty-four measures (with every chord duration doubled), or with minor
accommodations, over sixteen or thirty-two measures. To make an unlikely
comparison, the plagal bias toward the subdominant that lends an air of
resignation to the music of Brahms seems a fitting setting for the often
melancholy lyrics of the early blues.
Page 583
The earliest blues recordings such as those by Robert Johnson show the
favored key to be E. Guitarists will know why this is so. I (or i), IV (or iv), and
V7 are easily playable open-string chords in these keys.
Example 32-4 (page 586)
The basic blues as played today exists with many minor variations. This
one is quite common. It is interesting that the dominant seventh chord, which in
art music evokes such a strong need for resolution, has acquired an air of finality
in this style. It appears to be more evidence that, in our musical system,
conditioning trumps all.
Example 32-6 (page 590)
The harmonic substitutions here are the same ones introduced in Chapter
31. If students were unclear about extended tonicization and tritone substitution,
then they have another chance to understand these techniques now.
Example 32-7 (page 591)
Although the minor blues differs little from the major form, it seems not to
have been worked over as thoroughly as far as harmonic substitution goes. You
might challenge some of your jazz students to elaborate this version with
additional harmonies.
BLUES MELODIC PRACTICE (pages 593597)
The true origin of the blue notes is shrouded in unwritten and unrecorded
history. Explanations are really just theories. This one seems to be supported by
early blues recordings.
339
340
341
1B.
Students adept at music notation software might find a shortcut to
completing these and other exercises by doing the first one and letting the
computer transpose the rest. This is an unfortunate side effect of technology.
Requiring that students do the exercises by hand will at least make that option
less appealing.
1
342
1C.
1
1D.
The raw, unvoiced chords that students are asked to provide are a far cry
from the voiced versions and, played as notated, will not sound particularly
charming or jazzy. If you have a pianist majoring in jazz studies in your class, you
might ask him or her to play the solutions as they would likely do if they
encountered the chord symbols in an actual lead sheet. For your reference, No.2
has been voiced in a manner more typical of a minor blues performance.
343
344
B.
Monks melody is constructed largely around four pillars of the blue note
scale given on text page 594-in F, F-Ab, Bb, and Cwith the added An. Monk
employs the plagal form (dominant-to-dominant) of the scale.
Monk uses a technique of melodic development similar to that used by
Stravinsky and Bartokrepetition of melodic fragments with metric shifts and
subtle changes in pitch or rhythmto obtain a highly unified and yet constantly
varied result.
345
C.
346
347
2E.
2F.
1
2
This pattern has a Dorian sound due to the C#s. If you like, you can have
students write the entire pattern using only the pitch material of E Dorian.
Alternatively, you can encourage them to experiment with various combinations
of minor and modal inflections, as is done here.
348
2G.
The 12-bar blues structure is maintained with some harmonic alterations.
1.
The first four measures are basically tonic harmony (F9), like the traditional
blues. The next two measures (mm. 5-6) are basically subdominant harmony
(Bb9), like the traditional blues. However, tonic harmony dos not return in the
following two measures (mm. 7-8) as in the traditional blues. Measure 9 turns
toward the dominant (C79), as in the traditional blues, but these last four
measures feature a less traditional turn-around that approaches the tonic from
either side (Eb79 and Gb13). Chords serving as lower neighbors to the pillar
chords are prominent in the composition.
2.
Solutions are on the music.
3.
While it is possible to hear two-measure phrases here (all contrasting), the
4-bar phrase is so engrained in the 12-bar blues that the tendency is to hear units
of this length. The phrasing in Huz Bluz represents a departure from the
traditional a a b structure, and is best analyzed thus:
a (mm. 1-4)
b (mm. 5-8)
c (mm. 9-12)
349
2. Name the key and the measure numbers of the 12-bar blues in which the
following harmonic successions would appear:
1
2
3
3.
G7 | C7 | G7 | Db7 |
Key____ Measures________
Key____ Measures________
Key____ Measures________
Key____ Measures________
350
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
Shaping a Song
TEXT (pages 598-605)
Some things change and some things dont. With song, the lyrics have and
always will be the driving force. Sensitivity to them means according them proper
accentuation and punctuation. Interpret proper to mean adhering to the
inflections and cadence of natural speech. Any treatment of song should begin
with these considerations.
Words and Rhythm (page 599)
You can create additional interest by inviting students to bring to class
songs of their choosing and then performing the sort of text analysis done here.
Syllabic versus Melismatic Text Setting (page 600)
The singing contests that have proliferated on television in recent years
encourage contestants to make the music their own, which generally translates
into liberal melodic embellishment. Thus the melisma is more a performance
phenomenon than a feature of vernacular music as notated and published.
MELODY (pages 600-605)
Most melodies in the popular style contain much repetition. Again, you
might ask students to bring to class examples of popular songs with strong
motivic relationships. Doing so will make this study more immediately relevant
for them.
The Harmonic Factor (page 601)
It is important that students do not construct their melodies without regard
to their harmonic underpinning. They may create their melodies simultaneously
with the attendant harmonies, they may begin with a harmonic plan as suggested
here, or they may add harmony after theyve created their melody. Regardless, the
harmonic factor must be addressed. If harmonies are added after the fact, then the
melody may need to retro-fitted to accommodate them.
Song Writing Then and Now (page 604)
Its probably safe to say that song composition was more the province of
the formally schooled composer in times past than in the present day. This is
likely due to a combination of advanced technology and todays increased interest
amateur music making. At any rate, the differences in songs written then and
351
now are partly due to the different ways in which they are created, as discussed
here.
COMPOSING A SONG STEP-B-STEP (pages 606-612)
Often, lyrics that appear to be ametric can still be poured into four- and
eight-measure phrases. The Days of Wine and Roses is a case in point.
However, this must be accomplished with careful regard to the natural
accentuation of the words. The four-step process described here may seem
academic to students, but much of it becomes almost automatic over time.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
ASSIGNMENT 1A on page 434: Sample songs for both of these texts are
available to hear on the web site. After your students have wrestled with
this assignment, you may wish to play these renditions for them.
ASSIGNMENT 2B on page 434: The songs for Text a and Text c are on
contained on the Workbook CD (Tracks 200 and 201). The song for Text
b (Because of Love) can be heard on the web site.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
These assignments are composition-based and the results will vary widely. No
solutions are provided here.
Appendix A
A-1
APPENDIX A
Pitch
THE STAFF AND ITS CLEFS (page 613)
Youre free to decide how much emphasis to place on the reading of the C
clefs. In our experience, the ability to read both alto and tenor clefs has proven
more beneficial than using transpositional tricks because the note recognition is
more direct and immediate. Of the two clefs, alto is the more important for one
reason onlythe viola part in a score. Some of your studentstrombonists,
cellists, and bassoonistsmay already have been introduced to tenor clef. Our
drills include all four clefs. If you wish to change the C clefs to treble or bass, feel
free.
THE HALF STEP AND WHOLE STEP (page 616)
The half step and whole step are presented again in Chapter Two
(Intervals). They are introduced here because they are necessary for building
scales. This is also the rationale for discussing enharmonics at this point.
SCALES AND KEYS (pages 619-628)
Although its more historically accurate to speak of a lower pentachord
and upper tetrachord, viewing the major scale as two identical tetrachords
separated by a whole step provides an easier way for students to construct and
identify the major scale.
The Melodic Minor Principle (page 627)
This principle is referred to at various times. It addresses the reasons for
the variable sixth and seventh degrees in the most complete way possible and
helps students understand how all three minor scale formsmere abstractions,
after allare in fact members of a single scale. To this end, you might ask your
students to explain how the melodic minor principle produces the harmonic minor
scale of Example A1-21b.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
ASSIGNMENT 1A: For in-class drill on clef reading, assign a clef and
have the class read the letter names in tempo.
Appendix A
A-2
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Pitch and Its Notation
1A.
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
1B.
1 G3 2 E4 3 B3 4 D3 5 A4 6 F4 7 C4 8 A3 9 G4 10 E3
11 G3 12 E3 13 E4 14 A3 15 C4 16 F3 17 B2 18 D4 19 b3 20 G4
21 F4 22 D5 23 A4 24 C4 25 B5 26 G5 27 B4 28 C5 29 G4 30 E4
31 C3 32 E4 33 F2 34 D3 35 B2 36 A3 37 E3 38 G2 39 F3 40 B3
Appendix A
A-3
1C.
1
1D.
1E.
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Appendix A
1F.
1 w
2 h
A-4
3 w
4 h
5 h
6 w
7 h
8 w
9 h
10 h
1G.
Make sure students understand tat they are to write the diatonic interval.
No.7 is especially prone to error in this regard.
1
10
IH.
1
10
1I.
Enharmonic pitches are:
1 and 12; 2 and 5; 3 and 14; 4 and 19; 6 and 15; 7 and 10; 8 and 9; 11
and 16; 13 and 17; 18 and 20
1J.
Enharmonically equivalent intervals are: 1, 2, 5, 6, 9, and 10
Appendix A
A-5
10
2B.
1
10
Appendix A
A-6
2C.
1
10
2D.
Appendix A
2E.
2F.
1
A-7
Appendix A
2G.
2H.
1
1 C harmonic minor: C D Eb F G Ab B C
2 E harmonic minor: E F# G A B C D# E
3 A major: A B C# D E F# G# A
4 C harmonic minor: C# D# E F# G#A B# C#
A-8
Appendix A
A-9
B-1
Appendix B
APPENDIX B
Rhythm
ELEMENTS OF THE PROPORTIONAL SYSTEM (page 629)
This textbook assumes that entering music majors are able to read music
in at least one clef, including the rhythmic aspect. If they cannot do this, their
proper starting point in music theory is a fundamentals course, where the topics
discussed here are presented in greater detail and in a more graded fashion.
This short primer on rhythm can be fleshed out in class at your discretion.
Most students will understand note and rest values. Accent is another matter.
Most students think of accent only in dynamic terms. The tonal and agogic
accents may be new to them, yet they play important roles in the creation or
identification of meter, as discussed in the next section.
METER AND MEASURE (page 631)
Students at this point may read simple and compound meters well enough
without truly understanding the differences. As an experiment, ask your class to
explain how 3/2 and 6/4 are performed. If you like, you can combine this section
with the further discussion of meter in Chapter 1 (Metric Matters on page 11).
Weve found that students have difficulty notating rhythmic passages in
the less familiar meters, due in part to less exposure to them in general and in part
to a less-than-perfect understanding of the meters character (simple duple,
compound triple, and so on). Rhythmic transcription exercises provide the cure
for this condition.
NOTATING RHYTHM (page 636)
While students may read rhythms well enough, they may do so without
fully understanding the notational conventions that pertain, particularly regarding
ties, dots, and beaming. Although music notation can itself comprise an entire
course, this brief section provides the minimum they need to notate music
according to customary protocol.
In point of fact, freshman/sophomore music theory typically deals very
little with rhythmic notation once introduced, the thrust of the course being
melodic, harmonic, and formal.
Suggested Additional Uses of Drills and Assignments (Workbook):
B-2
Appendix B
ASSIGNMENT 2D: Once students have added the bar lines, have the class
clap the rhythms.
ASSIGNMENT 2G: Once students have completed the measure, you might
ask them to transcribe the rhythmic pattern to an equivalent meter.
ASSIGNMENT 3C: Once again, you can use these patterns for rhythmic
reading practice. This helps to reinforce students understanding of the
meters.
******************************************************************
SOLUTIONS TO ASSIGNMENTS
1. Elements of the Proportional System
1A.
1
w=4 q
w. = 4 q.
h. = 4 e.
e. = 3 x
q..= 7 x
w. = 3 h
9 q. = 2 e.
1B.
1
h.. = 14 x
e=2x
10
q. = 6 x
B-3
Appendix B
10
1C.
1
1D.
B-4
Appendix B
2B.
1
2C.
1 3 beats
2 1 beats
3 1 beats
4 4 beats
5 4 beats
6 1 beats
7 4 beats
8 7 beats
9 3 beats
10 1 beats
2D.
B-5
Appendix B
2E.
1
2F.
B-6
Appendix B
2G.
3. Notating Rhythm
3A.
1
B-7
Appendix B
10
3B.
1
3C.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
10
B-8
Appendix B
3D.
1
3E.
1
B-9
Appendix B