Basics of Tertian Harmony.Pages

Basics of Tertian Harmony.Pages

Basics of Tertian Harmony KEY CONCEPT: PITCHES Western Music has 12 pitches. Each of those 12 pitches has a major scale, a minor scale, a chromatic scale, a major triad, and a minor triad, as well as augemented and diminished triads. Every major scale and minor scale use seven of the 12 pitches. Example: The C Major scale is C D E F G A B C. These notes are diatonic. Diatonic = within the key. Numbering each pitch of the scale, we have: C D E F G A B C 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti Do APPLICATION: Write Major Scales. Recite major scales. Finger major scales. Play major scales. 1 (do) 2 (re) 3 (mi) 4 (fa) 5 (sol) 6 (la) 7 (ti) 8 (do) C G D A E B F# or Gb C# or Db Ab Eb Bb F C G D A E B F#/ Gb C#/ Db Ab Eb Bb F KEY CONCEPT: THIRDS Western Music is built upon tertian harmony meaning that it is built using thirds. To build thirds, start on a note of a major or minor scale, skip over the next note to the third note. Example: C to E [C-skip D-E] D to F [D-skip E-F] To make a third, one letter is always skipped. APPLICATION: Build thirds in the C major scale. KEY CONCEPT: TRIADS A triad is made of three notes. The three notes must each be a third apart, or two thirds stacked on top of one another. Example: The notes in a C Major triad are C E G which are 1, 3, and 5 in the C Major scale. C is 1, or the root C to E is the first third E is 3, or the third G is 5, or the fifth E to G is the second third APPLICATION: Build triads in C major starting on each note of the scale. You will always skip one letter between the three notes when building the triads. APPLICATION: Build triads from the following major scales D E F# G A B C# D G A B C D E F# G C D E F G A B C F G A Bb C D E F Bb C D Eb F G A Bb Eb F G Ab Bb C D Eb KEY CONCEPT: TRANSPOSITION Seeing and Hearing C-pitched instrument - sounds what you see on the page (Perfect Prime) i.e. written C sounds C: Flute, oboe, bassoon, trombone, euphonium, tuba, xylophone, marimba, vibraphone, timpani Piccolo - sounds one octave (Perfect Octave) higher to what you see printed Bb-pitched instrument - sounds one diatonic step lower (Major Second) to what you see printed i.e. written C sounds Bb: Bb trumpet, Bb clarinet Bb bass clarinet and Bb tenor saxophone - sounds one diatonic step plus one octave (Major Ninth) lower to what you see printed Eb-pitched instrument - sounds six diatonic steps (Major Sixth) lower to what you see printed i.e. written Eb sounds C: Eb alto saxophone Eb baritone saxophone sounds six diatonic steps plus one octave (Major Thirteenth) lower to what you see printed. F-pitched instrument - sounds five diatonic steps (Perfect Fifth) lower than what you see printed i.e. written F sounds C: Horn APPLICATION: Transpose given pitches .

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