Chapter 10 - Melodic Composition
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.
Anacrusis (Pick-up notes) - When the melody begins before the first full measure. It’s an incomplete measure that combines with the final measure of the phrase to equal the meter
Conjunct - When the melody uses stepwise motion.
Disjunct - When the melody uses skipwise motion.
When creating a melody, the harmonic structure or chord progressions presents your “menu” of note choices for the melody.
Creating contrapuntal motion between the bass and the soprano impacts your choice of melody notes.
There are four scale tones that helps define the tonality and mode of a melody:
Tonic - It’s the tonal center of the composition.
Mediant - Defines its harmonic nature whether it’s major or minor
Dominant - Fifth grade of the scale
Seventh degree - It positions the melody to return to the tonic.
The purpose is for your melody to move from unstable to stable, especially at the end of a phrase.
Melodies are constructed in phrases.
Phrases - Single coherent musical thoughts that move toward a goal, the cadence.
Sub-phrase - A melodic unit smaller than a phrase and doesn’t end with a cadence.
Often, phrases occur in pairs.
Period - When the first phrase of a pair ends with a weaker cadence and the second with a stronger harmonic conclusion forming an antecedent-consequent relationship.
The most common antecedent phrase ending is a half cadence followed by the consequent phrase ending with a perfect authentic cadence.
Parallel period - When two phrases making up the period begin identically, or the second phrase is a variation of the first.
Contrasting period - When the two phrases are different from each other.
Repeated parallel period - Two phrases that form a parallel period repeated exactly.
When two phrases both end with a strong cadence, there is no antecedent-consequent relationship. There are just two phrases.
When phrases are analyzed, they’re labeled with lowercase alphabet letters.
Phrases that are similar but not identical receive the same letter with the prime mark or with numbers.
Phrases that are the same receive the same letter.
Phrase expansion - Expanding phrases beyond normal phrase lengths by adding material to the beginning, middle, or end.
Introduction (Prefix) - Material added to the beginning.
The use of repetition is the most critical aspect of musical structure.
Literal repetition - Exact repetition in the same voice.
Imitation - In multiple-voice compositions, when the melody repeated in the second part imitates the one in the first.
Melodic motif - Short group of notes repeated throughout the melody to establish its identity and provide thematic unity.
It defines the melody and characterizes and unifies the composition.
It can be melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic.
Leitmotif - A motif thematically associated with a person, place, or idea.
Musical theme - A complete melodic phrase anywhere from two to eight measures.
Main musical idea that defines the composition, reinforces it through repetition and serves as the basis for expanding and elaborating the melody, often through variation.
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.
Ex. → Variations of a melody
Modulation - The process of changing from one key or tonal center to another.
Ornamentation (Embellishment) - The technique of adding or decorating the melody with non-chord tones such as passing tones, neighboring tones, and suspensions.
Octave displacement - Moving one or more notes of the melody to a different octave.
Mode mixture - Involves combining chords from the parallel major or minor mode to increase harmonic resources.
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.
Non-chord tones (Non-harmonic tones) - Notes that don’t belong and create a temporary dissonance against the members of the chord.
NCT’s may occur in any voice but are more common in the melody.
They have three parts:
Preparation - The first chord tone.
NCT - The dissonant tone.
Resolution - The chord tone it leads or resolves to.
Passing tones (PT) - Melodic embellishments that fill in between the preparation and the resolution by stepwise motion.
Accented passing tone - Occurs when the passing tone that is not part of the chord occurs on the beat.
Chromatic passing tone - A non-diatonic note (requiring an accidental) connecting two chord tones, one whole step apart.
Neighbor tones (NT) - Non-chord tones that decorate a line by moving from one pitch to another one-step above (upper neighbor) or below lower neighbor) and then returning to the original pitch.
Chromatic neighbor - When the neighboring tone is an accidental a half-step above to below the chord tone (but not the leading tone in minor).
Incomplete neighbor - Non-harmonic tone approached by skip or leap in one direction and resolved by stepwise motion in the opposite direction. It occurs in a weak rhythmic position.
Appoggiatura - A specific kind of incomplete neighbor that leaves the preparation by leaping up and then resolves down by step. This is an accented non-chord tone because it occurs on the beat.
Escape tone - Another form of incomplete neighbor that leaves the chord tone by step then resolves in the opposite direction by leap.
Suspension - Occurs when a note in the preparation chord is held over (suspended), creating a momentary accented dissonance (on the beat) that is resolved downward by step to the resolution.
Most common types of suspension
9-8
7-6
4-3
Rearticulated suspension - When the suspended note is not tied to its preparation.
Retardation - Suspended note that resolves upward.
Anticipation tone - It leaves early from the preparation chord by step to become a part of the resolution chord.
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.
Anacrusis (Pick-up notes) - When the melody begins before the first full measure. It’s an incomplete measure that combines with the final measure of the phrase to equal the meter
Conjunct - When the melody uses stepwise motion.
Disjunct - When the melody uses skipwise motion.
When creating a melody, the harmonic structure or chord progressions presents your “menu” of note choices for the melody.
Creating contrapuntal motion between the bass and the soprano impacts your choice of melody notes.
There are four scale tones that helps define the tonality and mode of a melody:
Tonic - It’s the tonal center of the composition.
Mediant - Defines its harmonic nature whether it’s major or minor
Dominant - Fifth grade of the scale
Seventh degree - It positions the melody to return to the tonic.
The purpose is for your melody to move from unstable to stable, especially at the end of a phrase.
Melodies are constructed in phrases.
Phrases - Single coherent musical thoughts that move toward a goal, the cadence.
Sub-phrase - A melodic unit smaller than a phrase and doesn’t end with a cadence.
Often, phrases occur in pairs.
Period - When the first phrase of a pair ends with a weaker cadence and the second with a stronger harmonic conclusion forming an antecedent-consequent relationship.
The most common antecedent phrase ending is a half cadence followed by the consequent phrase ending with a perfect authentic cadence.
Parallel period - When two phrases making up the period begin identically, or the second phrase is a variation of the first.
Contrasting period - When the two phrases are different from each other.
Repeated parallel period - Two phrases that form a parallel period repeated exactly.
When two phrases both end with a strong cadence, there is no antecedent-consequent relationship. There are just two phrases.
When phrases are analyzed, they’re labeled with lowercase alphabet letters.
Phrases that are similar but not identical receive the same letter with the prime mark or with numbers.
Phrases that are the same receive the same letter.
Phrase expansion - Expanding phrases beyond normal phrase lengths by adding material to the beginning, middle, or end.
Introduction (Prefix) - Material added to the beginning.
The use of repetition is the most critical aspect of musical structure.
Literal repetition - Exact repetition in the same voice.
Imitation - In multiple-voice compositions, when the melody repeated in the second part imitates the one in the first.
Melodic motif - Short group of notes repeated throughout the melody to establish its identity and provide thematic unity.
It defines the melody and characterizes and unifies the composition.
It can be melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic.
Leitmotif - A motif thematically associated with a person, place, or idea.
Musical theme - A complete melodic phrase anywhere from two to eight measures.
Main musical idea that defines the composition, reinforces it through repetition and serves as the basis for expanding and elaborating the melody, often through variation.
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.
Ex. → Variations of a melody
Modulation - The process of changing from one key or tonal center to another.
Ornamentation (Embellishment) - The technique of adding or decorating the melody with non-chord tones such as passing tones, neighboring tones, and suspensions.
Octave displacement - Moving one or more notes of the melody to a different octave.
Mode mixture - Involves combining chords from the parallel major or minor mode to increase harmonic resources.
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.
Non-chord tones (Non-harmonic tones) - Notes that don’t belong and create a temporary dissonance against the members of the chord.
NCT’s may occur in any voice but are more common in the melody.
They have three parts:
Preparation - The first chord tone.
NCT - The dissonant tone.
Resolution - The chord tone it leads or resolves to.
Passing tones (PT) - Melodic embellishments that fill in between the preparation and the resolution by stepwise motion.
Accented passing tone - Occurs when the passing tone that is not part of the chord occurs on the beat.
Chromatic passing tone - A non-diatonic note (requiring an accidental) connecting two chord tones, one whole step apart.
Neighbor tones (NT) - Non-chord tones that decorate a line by moving from one pitch to another one-step above (upper neighbor) or below lower neighbor) and then returning to the original pitch.
Chromatic neighbor - When the neighboring tone is an accidental a half-step above to below the chord tone (but not the leading tone in minor).
Incomplete neighbor - Non-harmonic tone approached by skip or leap in one direction and resolved by stepwise motion in the opposite direction. It occurs in a weak rhythmic position.
Appoggiatura - A specific kind of incomplete neighbor that leaves the preparation by leaping up and then resolves down by step. This is an accented non-chord tone because it occurs on the beat.
Escape tone - Another form of incomplete neighbor that leaves the chord tone by step then resolves in the opposite direction by leap.
Suspension - Occurs when a note in the preparation chord is held over (suspended), creating a momentary accented dissonance (on the beat) that is resolved downward by step to the resolution.
Most common types of suspension
9-8
7-6
4-3
Rearticulated suspension - When the suspended note is not tied to its preparation.
Retardation - Suspended note that resolves upward.
Anticipation tone - It leaves early from the preparation chord by step to become a part of the resolution chord.