Course Technology, a part of Cengage Leaing , 304 pages
20 Channel Center Street
Boston, MA 02210
USA
Гармония для компьютерного музыката
Contents
An Introduction to Musical Harmony
Rhythm
Melody
Harmony
Chords
The Interval
Simple and Compound Intervals
Drone and Melody as a Simple Type of Harmony
Aural Qualities of Intervals: Consonance and Dissonance
Enharmonically Equivalent Intervals
Intervals and Emotions
Conclusion
Tonality and the Key System
Popular Music Harmony Notation
The Functions of the Seven Triads
Conclusion
The Principles of Part Writing
Voice Leading
Studying Part Song Writing
Three Kinds of Part Motion
Consecutive Octaves and Fifths
Disjointed Voice Leading
Conclusion
Voicing the Common Triad and Its Inversions
The Major Common Triad
The Minor Common Triad
Voicing Major and Minor Common Triads
Chordal Doubling
Chordal Spacing
Chordal Inversion
Conclusion
Tonic and Dominant Harmony
The Authentic Cadence
Chordal Inversions
The Cadential Six-Four
The Three Primary Triads
A Harmony for All Seven Notes of the Scale
Adding Three Parts above a Bass Line
Harmonizing Melodies with the Three Primary Triads
Example Harmonization
Reading the Melody for the Best Chords to Use
Establishing a Harmonic Rhythm
Sketching in the Bass Line and Adding the Inner Parts
Adaptation of the Harmony for Various Force
Secondary Triads
Chord Progressions and Root Movement
Repetition, Arpeggiation, and Melodic Decoration
The Chord of the Dominant Seventh
Secondary Seventh Chords
Seventh Chord Harmony in the Major Key
Seventh Chord Harmony in the Minor Key
Modulation
Suspended and Added Note Chords
Chords of the Ninth
Chords of the Eleventh
Thirteenth Chords
Modal Interchange
Secondary Dominant Chords
Modal Harmony
Diatonic Modal Harmony
Modal Colors
The Harmonic Form of Chromatic Scale
A Common Chromatic Pot of Chords
20 Channel Center Street
Boston, MA 02210
USA
Гармония для компьютерного музыката
Contents
An Introduction to Musical Harmony
Rhythm
Melody
Harmony
Chords
The Interval
Simple and Compound Intervals
Drone and Melody as a Simple Type of Harmony
Aural Qualities of Intervals: Consonance and Dissonance
Enharmonically Equivalent Intervals
Intervals and Emotions
Conclusion
Tonality and the Key System
Popular Music Harmony Notation
The Functions of the Seven Triads
Conclusion
The Principles of Part Writing
Voice Leading
Studying Part Song Writing
Three Kinds of Part Motion
Consecutive Octaves and Fifths
Disjointed Voice Leading
Conclusion
Voicing the Common Triad and Its Inversions
The Major Common Triad
The Minor Common Triad
Voicing Major and Minor Common Triads
Chordal Doubling
Chordal Spacing
Chordal Inversion
Conclusion
Tonic and Dominant Harmony
The Authentic Cadence
Chordal Inversions
The Cadential Six-Four
The Three Primary Triads
A Harmony for All Seven Notes of the Scale
Adding Three Parts above a Bass Line
Harmonizing Melodies with the Three Primary Triads
Example Harmonization
Reading the Melody for the Best Chords to Use
Establishing a Harmonic Rhythm
Sketching in the Bass Line and Adding the Inner Parts
Adaptation of the Harmony for Various Force
Secondary Triads
Chord Progressions and Root Movement
Repetition, Arpeggiation, and Melodic Decoration
The Chord of the Dominant Seventh
Secondary Seventh Chords
Seventh Chord Harmony in the Major Key
Seventh Chord Harmony in the Minor Key
Modulation
Suspended and Added Note Chords
Chords of the Ninth
Chords of the Eleventh
Thirteenth Chords
Modal Interchange
Secondary Dominant Chords
Modal Harmony
Diatonic Modal Harmony
Modal Colors
The Harmonic Form of Chromatic Scale
A Common Chromatic Pot of Chords