1.3 Scales and Melody
Scales
- A @@scale@@ is a collection of arranged pitches used as the basis for music
- The distance between any two pitches is an @@interval@@
- An @@octave@@ is an interval between two pitches where they sound very similar, just higher or lower. the frequencies are related in a 2:1 ratio
- The @@diatonic scale@@ is the Western music set of seven pitches which make up the octave (eight span), as the first is repeated (just the white keys)
- The @@chromatic scale@@ is the 12 pitches, including the diatonic scale and the five in between (white and black keys)
- Diatonic pitches are notated on @@lines and spaces@@ in the staff
- Chromatic pitches are notated with either flat (@@b@@) or sharp (@@#@@)
- A @@half step@@ (semitone) is the smallest easily identifiable interval (C to C#, B to C, E to F, etc.)
- A @@whole step@@ is two half steps, and the distance between two white keys which are separated by a black key
Melody
- A melody is an organized series of pitches built from any scale
- Pitches can be organized in a melodic line
- A tune is a simple, easily singable, catchy melody (a special, relatively short, kind of melody)
- Motives and themes are like the tunes of longer pieces?
- Phrases are typically 2, 4, or 8 bars long, sometimes longer, but balanced!
- Balance between phrases can be strengthened with parallelism (same notes, different words)
- Sequence is the duplication of a phrase at 2+ different pitch levels
- A climax is a distinct high point
- A cadence is a stopping or pausing place
- The distinctive fragment of melody repeated in a composition is its motive
- A theme (topic) is the basic subject matter of longer pieces