Unit 2: Music Fundamentals II: Minor Scales and Key Signatures, Melody, Timbre, and Texture
Scales - An ordered collection of pitches in whole- and half-step patterns.
The word comes from Latin “scalae” meaning stairs.
Natural minor scale - The sixth scale in the rotation of church modes.
There are three forms of the minor scale and they all come from the natural minor scale which is:
Three forms of minor - Natural, harmonic, and melodic.
Minor pentachord - Same first five notes that the three forms of minor start with.
Natural form of minor - No alterations to the key signature.
Harmonic form of minor - The 7th scale degree is raised both ascending and descending.
Melodic form of minor - The 6th and 7th scale degrees are raised.
Scale degree - Each step of the scale.
Tonic - The beginning pitch of the scale.
Scale degree 1 - The tone on which the scale is built, the tonal center.
Do = Tonic
Scale degree 2 - Above the tonic.
Re = Supertonic
Scale degree 3 - Halfway between the tonic and dominant.
Mi = Mediant
Scale degree 4 - A fifth below the tonic
Fa = Subdominant
Scale degree 5 - Perfect fifth above the tonic
So (Sol) = Dominant
Scale degree 6 - In between the subdominant and the tonic
La = Submediant
Scale degree 7 - Half step below Do.
Ti = Leading tone
Natural minor scale
The 7th scale degree is a whole step below tonic, meaning it’s subtonic.
Harmonic minor scale
The 7th scale degree is raised and a leading tone, it is one-half step below the tonic.
Melodic minor scale
The 7th scale degree is leading and the 6th scale is the raised submediant.
Parallel keys - Major and minor keys with different key signature but same tonic.
Relative keys - Major and minor scales that have the same pitches and key signature.
Three forms of minor - Natural, harmonic, and melodic.
Natural form of minor - No alterations to the key signature.
Harmonic form of minor - The 7th scale degree is raised both ascending and descending.
Melodic form of minor - The 6th and 7th scale degrees are raised.
Parallel keys - Keys that share the same tonic note but have different key signatures.
For example, the parallel key of C major is C minor.
Parallel keys are said to have a "parallel" relationship because they share the same tonic note.
Closely related keys - Keys that have a small number of differences in their key signatures.
The most closely related keys are the keys that share the most notes in common.
For example, the closely related keys of C major are G major, F major, D minor, and A minor.
Closely related keys are said to have a "relative" relationship because they share many of the same notes.
Distantly related keys - Keys that have a large number of differences in their key signatures.
The most distantly related keys are the keys that share the fewest notes in common.
For example, the distantly related keys of C major are E major, Bb major, Ab minor, and F# minor.
Distantly related keys are said to have a "distant" relationship because they share very few of the same notes.
Modulation - The process of changing from one key or tonal center to another.
Usually occurs to closely related keys because they have common chords between them.
Occurs within a phrase by using a chord common to both the old and new key or by changing tonal centers directly as a new phrase or section begins.
Chromatic scale - Symmetrical scale with all pitches spaced a half step apart.
Sharps are used for the ascending scale.
Enharmonic equivalent flats are used for the descending scale.
Heptatonic scales - There are seven tones in the scale. Major and minor scales are heptatonic.
Hexatonic scale - There are six tones in this scale. The whole-tone scale is hexatonic.
Whole-tone scale - Each pitch is a whole step apart.
Pentatonic scale - Has five tones. It contains no half steps or active tones.
Major pentatonic - To build it, in the Circle of Fifths, start from C up to 5 consecutive pitches.
Relative minor pentatonic - It uses the same pitch as the C pentatonic but it starts on A.
Interval - The distance between two pitches.
They can be melodic or harmonic.
The exact interval size is described by quantity and quality.
Quality - Expressed by a number and determined by counting the distance between one letter name and the next letter name.
A minor interval is one-half step smaller than major.
Diminished interval - An interval that is one-half step smaller than perfect or minor.
Augmented interval - An interval that is one-half step larger than major or perfect.
Consonant intervals - Stable
Dissonant intervals - Unstable, the impression of activity or tension.
Inverted intervals - Intervals are inverted by transferring the lower note an octave higher or by transferring the higher note an octave lower.
Major intervals invert to minor intervals.
Augmented intervals invert to diminished intervals.
Simple intervals - Intervals that are one octave or smaller in quantity.
They are expanded to a compound interval by adding seven
Compound intervals - Intervals that are larger than an octave.
They are reduced to a simple interval by subtracting seven.
Timbre - Determined by how the sound is produced, what the instrument is made of, and the range of an instrument.
Melody - A logical progression of pitches and rhythms. A linear succession of notes that form a recognizable unit, which is used to separate a melody from random pitches.
The melody is the most important part of a composition.
Melodies don’t always begin on the downbeat.
A good melody must have movement.
The best melodies are contoured and contained or limited in range usually within an octave.
Longer melodies use repetitions, have a distinct form and are built from simple motifs and short melodic phrases.
Conjunct - When the melody uses stepwise motion.
Disjunct - When the melody uses skipwise motion.
Motivic transformation - Changing or transforming the original motif by using these compositional devices:
Fragmentation - When a portion of a motif or a larger musical idea is used, often repeated, and/or varied.
Melodic sequence - A form of variation that refers to repeating the original motif starting on a different pitch.
Melodic inversion (Inversion) - The imitation of the melody performed upside down from the original melody.
It moves in the opposite direction by the same diatonic interval.
Mirror inversion - If the inverted intervals are exact.
Retrograde - When the melody is played backwards.
Retrograde inversion - It plays the pitches of the original motif backwards and inverted.
Rhythmic transformation - Changes the motif or theme’s rhythm in order to vary it from previous statements of the motif.
Augmentation - A form of rhythmic variation where the pitches remain the same but the rhythms are equally lengthened (note values are made longer).
Diminution - The opposite of augmentation, note values are made shorter.
Rhythmic displacement - Keeps the original rhythmic structure intact but moves it to a different place in the measure.
Texture - Basic element of music. How much is going on in the music at any given moment.
Monophonic - Has only one melodic line with no harmony or counterpoint.
Homophonic - Has one melodic line that draws your attention. The other parts provide accompaniment.
Chordal homophony - Every line or voice moving together with exactly the same or nearly the same rhythm.
Melody with accompaniment - Clearly has only one melodic line, but the harmony is not limited to chords moving together.
Ostinato - Short melodic, rhythmic, or harmonic pattern that is repeated throughout an entire composition or some portion of a composition.
Ragtime - An American style of music that was popular at the turn of the 20th century.
Sequence - The repeated melodic pattern at a different interval.
Heterophonic - There’s only one melody but different variations of it are being sung or played at the same time.
Alberti bass - An accompaniment figure played on a keyboard instrument with the left hand. The chords are played as arpeggios or broken chords.
Walking bass - A style of bass accompaniment or line that creates a feeling of regular quarter-note movement, similar to the regular alternation of feet while walking.
Polyphonic (Polyphony, Counterpoint, Contrapuntal) - If more than one independent melody is occurring at the same time.
Imitative - If the individual lines are similar in their shapes and sounds.
Fugue - A form of composition popular in the Baroque era, in which a theme or subject is introduced by one voice and is imitated by other voices in succession.
Nonimitative - If the voice shows little or no resemblance to each other.
Countermelody - A secondary melody or line written to be played simultaneously with a more prominent melody.
Solo - A single performer or a passage that is to be performed by a single performer.
Soli - A directive to perform an indicated passage of a composition with an entire section of an ensemble.
Tutti - All members play.
Syncopation - The rhythmic displacement of the expected strong beat created by using dots, rests, ties, accent marks, rhythm, and dynamics.
Hemiola - A special type of syncopation where the bead is temporarily regrouped into twos.
Accents - Markings used in music notation to indicate emphasis or stress on a particular note or beat.
There are different types of accents:
Regular accent - Indicated by a diagonal line above or below the note.
Strong accent - Indicated by a vertical line above the note.
Staccato accent - Indicated by a dot above or below the note, and it indicates that the note should be played short and detached.
Agogic accent - A type of accent that is created by emphasizing the duration of a note.
It is indicated by a small dot placed above or below the note, and it indicates that the note should be played longer than the surrounding notes.
Fermata - A symbol used in music notation to indicate that a note or rest should be held longer than its written value.
It is indicated by a dot with a curved line above or below it, and it is placed above or below the note or rest that it affects.
Tenuto - A marking used in music notation to indicate that a note should be held for its full value.
It is indicated by a horizontal line above or below the note, and it indicates that the note should be played with a slight emphasis.
Meter - The organization of beats into regular groups.
There are different types of meter:
Duple meter - Two beats per measure
Triple meter - Three beats per measure
Quadruple meter - Four beats per measure.
Other meter types include:
Compound meter - A combination of duple and triple meter.
Irregular meter - It has an irregular grouping of beats.
Scales - An ordered collection of pitches in whole- and half-step patterns.
The word comes from Latin “scalae” meaning stairs.
Natural minor scale - The sixth scale in the rotation of church modes.
There are three forms of the minor scale and they all come from the natural minor scale which is:
Three forms of minor - Natural, harmonic, and melodic.
Minor pentachord - Same first five notes that the three forms of minor start with.
Natural form of minor - No alterations to the key signature.
Harmonic form of minor - The 7th scale degree is raised both ascending and descending.
Melodic form of minor - The 6th and 7th scale degrees are raised.
Scale degree - Each step of the scale.
Tonic - The beginning pitch of the scale.
Scale degree 1 - The tone on which the scale is built, the tonal center.
Do = Tonic
Scale degree 2 - Above the tonic.
Re = Supertonic
Scale degree 3 - Halfway between the tonic and dominant.
Mi = Mediant
Scale degree 4 - A fifth below the tonic
Fa = Subdominant
Scale degree 5 - Perfect fifth above the tonic
So (Sol) = Dominant
Scale degree 6 - In between the subdominant and the tonic
La = Submediant
Scale degree 7 - Half step below Do.
Ti = Leading tone
Natural minor scale
The 7th scale degree is a whole step below tonic, meaning it’s subtonic.
Harmonic minor scale
The 7th scale degree is raised and a leading tone, it is one-half step below the tonic.
Melodic minor scale
The 7th scale degree is leading and the 6th scale is the raised submediant.
Parallel keys - Major and minor keys with different key signature but same tonic.
Relative keys - Major and minor scales that have the same pitches and key signature.
Three forms of minor - Natural, harmonic, and melodic.
Natural form of minor - No alterations to the key signature.
Harmonic form of minor - The 7th scale degree is raised both ascending and descending.
Melodic form of minor - The 6th and 7th scale degrees are raised.
Parallel keys - Keys that share the same tonic note but have different key signatures.
For example, the parallel key of C major is C minor.
Parallel keys are said to have a "parallel" relationship because they share the same tonic note.
Closely related keys - Keys that have a small number of differences in their key signatures.
The most closely related keys are the keys that share the most notes in common.
For example, the closely related keys of C major are G major, F major, D minor, and A minor.
Closely related keys are said to have a "relative" relationship because they share many of the same notes.
Distantly related keys - Keys that have a large number of differences in their key signatures.
The most distantly related keys are the keys that share the fewest notes in common.
For example, the distantly related keys of C major are E major, Bb major, Ab minor, and F# minor.
Distantly related keys are said to have a "distant" relationship because they share very few of the same notes.
Modulation - The process of changing from one key or tonal center to another.
Usually occurs to closely related keys because they have common chords between them.
Occurs within a phrase by using a chord common to both the old and new key or by changing tonal centers directly as a new phrase or section begins.
Chromatic scale - Symmetrical scale with all pitches spaced a half step apart.
Sharps are used for the ascending scale.
Enharmonic equivalent flats are used for the descending scale.
Heptatonic scales - There are seven tones in the scale. Major and minor scales are heptatonic.
Hexatonic scale - There are six tones in this scale. The whole-tone scale is hexatonic.
Whole-tone scale - Each pitch is a whole step apart.
Pentatonic scale - Has five tones. It contains no half steps or active tones.
Major pentatonic - To build it, in the Circle of Fifths, start from C up to 5 consecutive pitches.
Relative minor pentatonic - It uses the same pitch as the C pentatonic but it starts on A.
Interval - The distance between two pitches.
They can be melodic or harmonic.
The exact interval size is described by quantity and quality.
Quality - Expressed by a number and determined by counting the distance between one letter name and the next letter name.
A minor interval is one-half step smaller than major.
Diminished interval - An interval that is one-half step smaller than perfect or minor.
Augmented interval - An interval that is one-half step larger than major or perfect.
Consonant intervals - Stable
Dissonant intervals - Unstable, the impression of activity or tension.
Inverted intervals - Intervals are inverted by transferring the lower note an octave higher or by transferring the higher note an octave lower.
Major intervals invert to minor intervals.
Augmented intervals invert to diminished intervals.
Simple intervals - Intervals that are one octave or smaller in quantity.
They are expanded to a compound interval by adding seven
Compound intervals - Intervals that are larger than an octave.
They are reduced to a simple interval by subtracting seven.
Timbre - Determined by how the sound is produced, what the instrument is made of, and the range of an instrument.
Melody - A logical progression of pitches and rhythms. A linear succession of notes that form a recognizable unit, which is used to separate a melody from random pitches.
The melody is the most important part of a composition.
Melodies don’t always begin on the downbeat.
A good melody must have movement.
The best melodies are contoured and contained or limited in range usually within an octave.
Longer melodies use repetitions, have a distinct form and are built from simple motifs and short melodic phrases.
Conjunct - When the melody uses stepwise motion.
Disjunct - When the melody uses skipwise motion.
Motivic transformation - Changing or transforming the original motif by using these compositional devices:
Fragmentation - When a portion of a motif or a larger musical idea is used, often repeated, and/or varied.
Melodic sequence - A form of variation that refers to repeating the original motif starting on a different pitch.
Melodic inversion (Inversion) - The imitation of the melody performed upside down from the original melody.
It moves in the opposite direction by the same diatonic interval.
Mirror inversion - If the inverted intervals are exact.
Retrograde - When the melody is played backwards.
Retrograde inversion - It plays the pitches of the original motif backwards and inverted.
Rhythmic transformation - Changes the motif or theme’s rhythm in order to vary it from previous statements of the motif.
Augmentation - A form of rhythmic variation where the pitches remain the same but the rhythms are equally lengthened (note values are made longer).
Diminution - The opposite of augmentation, note values are made shorter.
Rhythmic displacement - Keeps the original rhythmic structure intact but moves it to a different place in the measure.
Texture - Basic element of music. How much is going on in the music at any given moment.
Monophonic - Has only one melodic line with no harmony or counterpoint.
Homophonic - Has one melodic line that draws your attention. The other parts provide accompaniment.
Chordal homophony - Every line or voice moving together with exactly the same or nearly the same rhythm.
Melody with accompaniment - Clearly has only one melodic line, but the harmony is not limited to chords moving together.
Ostinato - Short melodic, rhythmic, or harmonic pattern that is repeated throughout an entire composition or some portion of a composition.
Ragtime - An American style of music that was popular at the turn of the 20th century.
Sequence - The repeated melodic pattern at a different interval.
Heterophonic - There’s only one melody but different variations of it are being sung or played at the same time.
Alberti bass - An accompaniment figure played on a keyboard instrument with the left hand. The chords are played as arpeggios or broken chords.
Walking bass - A style of bass accompaniment or line that creates a feeling of regular quarter-note movement, similar to the regular alternation of feet while walking.
Polyphonic (Polyphony, Counterpoint, Contrapuntal) - If more than one independent melody is occurring at the same time.
Imitative - If the individual lines are similar in their shapes and sounds.
Fugue - A form of composition popular in the Baroque era, in which a theme or subject is introduced by one voice and is imitated by other voices in succession.
Nonimitative - If the voice shows little or no resemblance to each other.
Countermelody - A secondary melody or line written to be played simultaneously with a more prominent melody.
Solo - A single performer or a passage that is to be performed by a single performer.
Soli - A directive to perform an indicated passage of a composition with an entire section of an ensemble.
Tutti - All members play.
Syncopation - The rhythmic displacement of the expected strong beat created by using dots, rests, ties, accent marks, rhythm, and dynamics.
Hemiola - A special type of syncopation where the bead is temporarily regrouped into twos.
Accents - Markings used in music notation to indicate emphasis or stress on a particular note or beat.
There are different types of accents:
Regular accent - Indicated by a diagonal line above or below the note.
Strong accent - Indicated by a vertical line above the note.
Staccato accent - Indicated by a dot above or below the note, and it indicates that the note should be played short and detached.
Agogic accent - A type of accent that is created by emphasizing the duration of a note.
It is indicated by a small dot placed above or below the note, and it indicates that the note should be played longer than the surrounding notes.
Fermata - A symbol used in music notation to indicate that a note or rest should be held longer than its written value.
It is indicated by a dot with a curved line above or below it, and it is placed above or below the note or rest that it affects.
Tenuto - A marking used in music notation to indicate that a note should be held for its full value.
It is indicated by a horizontal line above or below the note, and it indicates that the note should be played with a slight emphasis.
Meter - The organization of beats into regular groups.
There are different types of meter:
Duple meter - Two beats per measure
Triple meter - Three beats per measure
Quadruple meter - Four beats per measure.
Other meter types include:
Compound meter - A combination of duple and triple meter.
Irregular meter - It has an irregular grouping of beats.