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Preface | p. ix |
Basics I: Pitch on the Staff and the Keyboard; Scales; Key Signatures | p. 1 |
Pitch on the staff | p. 2 |
Pitch on the keyboard | p. 4 |
Intervals: Half steps and whole steps | p. 5 |
Major scales | p. 7 |
Scale-degree names | p. 8 |
Major key signatures | p. 8 |
Minor scales | p. 10 |
Scale-degree names in minor | p. 12 |
Minor key signatures | p. 12 |
The circle of fifths | p. 12 |
Relative and parallel keys | p. 13 |
Scales and keys | p. 14 |
The "Basics Quiz" #1 | p. 15 |
Basics II: Intervals; Chords; Staff Notation | p. 19 |
Intervals | p. 20 |
Spelling ascending intervals | p. 20 |
Perfect and major intervals | |
Minor intervals | |
Diminished intervals | |
Augmented intervals | |
Terminology for other intervals | p. 23 |
Identifying intervals | p. 23 |
Inversion of intervals | p. 24 |
Spelling descending intervals | p. 25 |
Compound intervals | p. 27 |
Consonance and dissonance | p. 27 |
Chords | p. 28 |
Triads | p. 28 |
Triads in a key | p. 28 |
Chords larger than a triad | p. 30 |
Seventh chords | p. 30 |
Inversion of chords | p. 31 |
Figured bass | p. 31 |
Staff notation | p. 33 |
Basics Quiz #2 | p. 35 |
Pitch Notation from Earliest Times | p. 37 |
Basics III: Duration, Time Signatures | p. 40 |
Note and rest values | p. 40 |
Tempo | p. 41 |
The beat | p. 42 |
Grouping of beats | p. 42 |
Varieties of the beat (simple and compound) | p. 42 |
Time signature (meter signature) | p. 43 |
Simple time | |
Compound time | |
Other interpretations of time signatures | p. 48 |
In a fast tempo | |
In a slow tempo | |
Numerators of 5 and 7; other numerators | |
Beaming notes for rhythmic clarity | p. 52 |
Triplets, duplets, and quadruplets | p. 53 |
Rhythmic transcription | p. 53 |
Basics Quiz #3 | p. 55 |
Early Rhythmic Notation | p. 56 |
What Is Music Theory? | p. 57 |
Tonic and Dominant I: Cadences | p. 59 |
The cadence | p. 59 |
The cadence in relation to form | p. 60 |
Harmony at the cadence (major keys) | p. 61 |
Spelling tonic and dominant chords (major keys) | p. 63 |
The "Difficult" Triad Spellings | p. 65 |
Cadences incorporating dominant harmony | p. 66 |
The cadence in minor keys | p. 70 |
Spelling tonic and dominant triads (minor keys) | p. 71 |
Cadences incorporating dissonances | p. 72 |
Other cadences: The Picardy third and the "empty fifth" | p. 74 |
Cadences in a melodic line | p. 76 |
Spelling intervals from major triads | p. 77 |
Triads outlined in melodies | p. 79 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 79 |
The Universality of the Cadence | p. 82 |
Tonic and Dominant II: Part-Writing | p. 83 |
Conventional procedures | p. 85 |
Writing a single triad | p. 85 |
The connection of repeated triads | p. 89 |
Writing the authentic cadence | p. 91 |
Writing in phrase lengths | p. 97 |
Harmonizing a melody | p. 99 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 100 |
Melody harmonization using lead sheet symbols | p. 102 |
The Subdominant Triad | p. 107 |
Spelling the subdominant triad | p. 107 |
Plagal cadences | p. 108 |
IV or iv in other progressions | p. 111 |
The subdominant triad in melodic writing | p. 115 |
Writing the progression IV-I or iv-i | p. 116 |
Writing the progression IV-V or iv-V | p. 119 |
Parallel fifths and octaves; the melodic augmented second | p. 119 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 126 |
The progression I-IV-V-I | p. 128 |
Melodic harmonization | p. 128 |
The Three Demons of Part-Writing | p. 130 |
The Melodic Line I | p. 133 |
Form | p. 133 |
The phrase | |
The period | |
Repetition and sequence | |
Pitch | p. 142 |
Intervals and scale passages | |
The leading tone | |
Minor keys: The sixth and seventh scale steps | |
Harmonic implication | p. 149 |
Rhythm and meter | p. 153 |
Melodic composition | p. 154 |
Some Varieties of Melodic Expression | p. 157 |
C Clefs; Transposing Clefs | p. 160 |
C clefs | p. 161 |
A clef for the tenor voice | p. 165 |
Transposing instruments | p. 165 |
Writing for transposing instruments | |
The Triad in Inversion | p. 169 |
The triad in first inversion | p. 169 |
The triad in second inversion | p. 173 |
The cadential six-four chord | |
The pedal six-four | |
The passing six-four | |
Writing a triad in first inversion | p. 179 |
Writing to or from a triad in first inversion | p. 181 |
Writing successive triads in first inversion | p. 184 |
Writing a triad in second inversion | p. 185 |
Other part-writing considerations | p. 187 |
The melodic augmented fourth | |
Overlapping voices | |
Hidden octaves and hidden fifths | |
Melody harmonization | p. 191 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 194 |
The Theory of Inversion | p. 196 |
Figured Bass | p. 202 |
Harmonic Progression; The Leading-Tone Triad and the Supertonic Triad | p. 205 |
Root movement | p. 205 |
Harmonic progression | p. 206 |
Harmonic progressions in minor keys | p. 207 |
Other common types of progressions | p. 209 |
The diminished triad | p. 211 |
The leading-tone triad | p. 212 |
The supertonic triads | p. 214 |
Writing the diminished triad | p. 222 |
Writing to and from the diminished triad | p. 223 |
Writing the supertonic triad | p. 225 |
Melody harmonization | p. 228 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 229 |
The Devil in Music | p. 232 |
Nonharmonic Tones I: Passing Tones and Neighbor Tones | p. 236 |
Defining nonharmonic tones | p. 236 |
The passing tone | p. 236 |
The neighbor tone | p. 240 |
Writing passing tones and neighbor tones | p. 241 |
Figured bass symbols | |
The seventh above the root | |
Avoiding parallels | |
Accented nonharmonic tones | |
Simultaneous nonharmonic tones | |
Relaxing part-writing procedures to heighten melodic interest | p. 245 |
Nonharmonic Tones II: Suspensions and Other Dissonances | p. 250 |
The suspension | p. 251 |
The 4 3 suspension | |
The 7 6 suspension | |
The 9 8 suspension | |
The 2 3 suspension | |
Special uses of the suspension | p. 257 |
Change of bass note | |
The ornamental resolution | |
Suspensions in the six-four chord | |
Chain suspensions | |
The double suspension | |
Suspensions in instrumental writing | |
Other nonharmonic tones | p. 261 |
Retardation | |
Anticipation | |
Appoggiatura | |
Escaped tone | |
Successive neighbor tones | |
Pedal | |
Various other uses of nonharmonic tones | p. 270 |
Successive different nonharmonic tones | |
Simultaneous different nonharmonic tones | |
Unprepared nonharmonic tone | |
"Consonant" nonharmonic tones | |
The Dominant Seventh and Supertonic Seventh Chords | p. 278 |
The seventh as a nonharmonic tone | p. 278 |
Passing tone figure | |
Suspension figure | |
Appoggiatura figure | |
Upper neighbor figure | |
Characteristics of the dominant seventh chord | p. 281 |
The supertonic seventh chord | p. 283 |
Characteristics of the supertonic seventh chord | p. 284 |
Intervals in the V[superscript 7] chord | p. 292 |
The V[superscript 7] chord in the melodic line | p. 292 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 294 |
The Submediant and Mediant Triads | p. 296 |
Root movement by downward thirds | p. 297 |
Root movement by downward fifths | p. 298 |
Root movement by seconds; the deceptive cadence | p. 299 |
The vi-iii-IV progression | p. 303 |
Inversions of the submediant and mediant triads | p. 305 |
Writing the submediant and mediant triads | p. 308 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 317 |
Melody harmonization | p. 319 |
The Melodic Line II: Form, continued; Melody Harmonization, continued; Melody Writing | p. 320 |
Melodic extensions | p. 320 |
The phrase group and the double period | p. 324 |
Extension in motivic development | p. 327 |
Harmonizing a melody without lead sheet symbols | p. 331 |
Tempo | |
Harmonic rhythm | |
Differentiating chord tones and nonharmonic tones | |
Application to the keyboard | p. 336 |
Melody writing | p. 339 |
Another Metrical Concept | p. 343 |
The v and VII Triads; the Phrygian Cadence | p. 347 |
The minor dominant triad (v) | p. 347 |
The subtonic triad (VII) | p. 350 |
The progression iv-VII | p. 351 |
The triads vianddeg; and III+ | p. 351 |
Half cadences; the Phrygian cadence | p. 351 |
Writing the v and VII triads in a minor key | p. 356 |
Writing the Phrygian cadence | p. 358 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 364 |
Harmonic Sequence | p. 366 |
Sequence: Roots down a fifth and up a fourth | p. 368 |
Sequence: Roots up a fifth and down a fourth | p. 369 |
Sequence: Roots down a third and up a fourth | p. 370 |
Sequence: Roots down a third and up a second | p. 374 |
Sequence: Roots down a fourth and up a second | p. 375 |
First inversion in series | p. 376 |
Writing sequences | p. 381 |
Summary | p. 383 |
Secondary Dominant Chords; Elementary Modulation | p. 385 |
Chromaticism | p. 385 |
Secondary dominant chords | p. 385 |
Spelling secondary dominants | p. 388 |
Use of secondary dominant | p. 389 |
The Hemiola | p. 391 |
The deceptive progression | p. 393 |
Secondary dominant chords in the harmonic sequence | p. 394 |
The V/V at the cadence | p. 396 |
Modulation | p. 398 |
Return to the original key | p. 401 |
Modulation or secondary dominants in the melodic line | p. 409 |
Writing secondary dominant chords | p. 411 |
Keyboard harmony | p. 417 |
The Essentials of Part-Writing | p. 420 |
Conventional Procedures | |
Instrumentation | p. 423 |
Ranges | |
Clefs | |
Transposition | |
Elementary Acoustics | p. 428 |
The Medieval Modes | p. 433 |
Answer Key | p. 438 |
Index of Compositions | p. 461 |
Subject Index | p. 465 |
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