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Music Theory and Composition

A Practical Approach
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Music Theory and Composition: A Practical Approach presents a pragmatic, accessible approach to music theory through an emphasis on melody and counterpoint. This focus explains the "why" of musical construction more clearly than the traditional approach of beginning with chords. By starting with a single melodic line and gradually adding voices in counterpoint, the book drills part-writing while simultaneously explaining functionality, first with scale degrees and then with harmony. The text has students learn musical techniques and progressively build on their functions and importance to create their own compositions. With short, digestible chapters, Music Theory and Composition clearly presents otherwise complicated ideas not as strict rules, but as artistic ideals, encouraging the interactive creation of new compositions as a tool for learning. The textbook is versatile and easily customizable, suiting oDifferent skill levels with species counterpoint providing a framework for the beginner while providing an interesting challenge for more experienced students oDifferent curricular schedules with complete exercises in two, three, and four voices, allowing for an optional skip from two voices to four oDifferent pedagogical approaches with species exercises encouraging students to consider harmonic choices and figured bass ensuring functional progressions Instructor Resources: (email textbooks@rowman.com for access) *Instructor's Manual: The Instructor's Manual includes sample syllabi and student handouts *Test Bank: The test bank includes sample tests and answer keys in MS Word format. Student Resources: *Companion Website with Downloadable Workbook Sections: http://textbooks.rowman.com/stone Additional Features: *complete curriculum for first-year theory courses *over 500 musical examples drawn from Common Practice Era compositions as well as more contemporary and popular pieces *focus on active composition throughout the text and workbook sections *large pop music section to expand student's application of theory *conversational tone to encourage student engagement Designed for first-year college music theory courses, but accessible enough for the interested lay reader or high school student, the text offers a true balance of counterpoint and harmony.
Preface A Note for Instructors A Student's Introduction Acknowledgments Preludes - Rudiments Prelude 1 - Notation of Sound Prelude 2 - Meter Prelude 3 - Scales and Key Signatures Prelude 4 - Intervals Prelude 5 - Triads Prelude 6 - Seventh Chords Part I - Melody Chapter 1 - Melodic Construction Chapter 2 - Major Key Functionality Chapter 3 - Minor Key Functionality Chapter 4 - Chromaticism in Melodies Part II - Species Counterpoint to Chorale Style Chapter 5 - Background for Species Chapter 6 - First Species in Two Voices Chapter 7 - Second and Third Species in Two Voices Chapter 8 - Fourth Species in Two Voices Chapter 9 - Fifth Species (Florid Counterpoint) in Two Voices Chapter 10 - Two-Voice Counterpoint Chapter 11 - Three Voices and Chords Chapter 12 - First Species in Three Voices Chapter 13 - Second and Third Species in Three Voices Chapter 14 - Fourth Species in Three Voices Chapter 15 - Fifth Species (Florid Counterpoint) in Three Voices Chapter 12-15 Redux Chapter 16 - Four Voice Counterpoint and Chorale Style Chapter 17 - Figured Bass Chapter 18 - Other Dissonances Chapter 19 - The Purpose of Chorale Style Part III - Diatonic Harmony to Form Chapter 20 - Roman Numerals and Harmonic Progressions Chapter 21 - Tonic and Dominant: The Fundamental Relationship Chapter 22 - Predominants: The Basic Progression Chapter 23 - Intensifying the Motion: Adding Dissonance 1.Sevenths 2.Cadential 6/4 Chapter 24 - Submediant Chapter 25 - Mediant Chapter 26 - Harmonic Rhythm Chapter 27 - Harmonizations Chapter 28 - Linear Chords Chapter 29 - Sequences Chapter 30 - Tonicization Chapter 31 - Modulation Chapter 32 - Phrase-level Analysis Chapter 33 - Small Forms Part IV - Color Chords and Bold Chromaticism Chapter 34 - Modal Mixture Chapter 35 - Neapolitan Chapter 36 - Augmented Sixth Chords Chapter 37 - Altered Dominants Chapter 38 - Enharmonic Reinterpretation Chapter 39 - Third Relations Part V - Popular Music Chapter 40 - Introduction to Popular Music Chapter 41 - General Stylistic Elements Chapter 42 - Sonorities from Jazz: Stable Sevenths, Extended Tertian Chords, and Added Note Harmonies Chapter 43 - Lead Sheet Notation Chapter 44 - Pop Progressions Following Classical Diatonic Functions Chapter 45 - Blues and the Retrogression Chapter 46 - Mediant and Ascending Thirds Chapter 47 - Supertonic, Linear Harmonic Motion, and Diatonic Summary Chapter 48 - Chromaticism from Classical Music Chapter 49 - Chromaticism from Jazz - Tritone Substitution Chapter 50 - Pop Chromaticism 1: L and VII Chapter 51 - Pop Chromaticism 2: Quality Change Chapter 52 - Three Analyses Appendices Appendix A - Melodies for Study Appendix B - Cantus Firmi and Figured Basses for Exercises Appendix C - Church Modes Appendix D - Extended Tertian Harmony Glossary About the Author
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