Price
$49
Course Type
Online
Duration
4 hours
Date
Various dates throughout the year
Entry Requirements
All Levels

About this course

Have you ever wondered how the musical scale came about? Or why certain pitches sound better together than others? "Music Theory", by award-winning composer, Jonathan Peters, is a comprehensive course in the study of music. Much more than just memorization of musical terms and definitions...this course explains the "why".

Please click on "What am I going to get from this course" below to see all of the topics covered in this course.

What are the requirements?

  • No previous musical knowledge is needed.
  • A computer with internet connection, a monitor, and speakers to hear audio samples.

What am I going to get from this course?

  • Over 75 lectures and 4 hours of content!
  • 352 Diagrams
  • 89 Audio examples
  • 45 Quizzes
  • 910 Quiz questions
  • 369 Memory Questions
  • 16 Exercises
  • Experiments and free downloadable music apps
  • This course covers all of the following concepts and subject material: Definition of Music — The elements of music (rhythm & pitch) — Division of pitch into melody and harmony — Rhythmic notation (parts of a note) — Discussion on relative durations of sound — Notes - whole, half, quarter, eighth, and sixteenth — Why notes are named the way they are — Relative durations vs. assigning numerical values — The unit of measurement — Beat — Tempo — Meter — Distinguishing between rhythm and meter — Bar lines and measures — Time signatures — 2/4, 3/4 and 4/4 meters — Determining the meter without a time signature — Natural division of rhythms — Strong and weak pulses — Rests - whole, half, quarter, eighth and sixteenth — Assigning numerical values to rests — The whole rest and meter — Dotted notes — Numerical values of dotted notes — History of dotted notes — Dotted rhythms — The 3:1 ratio in dotted rhythms — The tie — Ties vs. dotted notes — Advantages and disadvantages of notating with ties vs. dots — Re-designation of the unit — 3/8 and 6/8 meters — New numerical values of notes — Understanding relative durations with regard to a new unit of measurement — Strength of pulses — Designating the half note as the unit — Notating 2/2 meter or cut time — Numerical values of note durations in 2/2 meter — Comparison of 4/4 meter and 2/2 meter — Reasons for 2/2 meter — Classifying meters — Simple meter — Compound meter — Duple meter — Triple meter — Quadruple meter — Complex meter — Artificial divisions of the beat or beats — Artificial division of parts of the beat — Common types of tuplets — Definition of triplets — Identifying triplets — Ratio of triplets — Numerical value of triplets — Definition of duplets — Identifying duplets — Ratio of duplets — Artificial divisions in relation to simple and compound meters — Sound waves — Frequency — Indefinite vs. definite pitch — Modern vs. ancient definition of pitch — Pitch experiment — Introduction to the staff — How the mind sees number — Ledger lines — Clefs — Movement on the staff (step, skip, repeat) — The musical alphabet — Letter names on the staff — The grand staff — Direction of note stems (and rationale) — Introduction to the keyboard — Groups of black keys — Letter names of keys — Correlation of staff to the keyboard — Half steps and whole steps — Sharps and flats on the keyboard — Enharmonic equivalents — Enharmonic keyboard notes — Reading sharps and flats on the staff — Sharps and flats within measures — The natural sign — The definition of interval — Melodic vs. harmonic intervals — Identifying intervals on the keyboard — Identifying intervals on the staff — Ratios and intervals — Pythagoras and the monochord — Consonance and dissonance — Definition and history of the modern scale — The major scale — Intervals and the major scale — Basis of the scale — Basis of the whole tone — Greek Tetrachords — Greek Semi tone and whole tone — Constructing scales on the keyboard — Constructing scales on the staff — Definition of "key" — The key signature — The circle of 5ths — The order of sharps — The order of flats — How to determine the key from the sharps/flats — How to determine how many and which sharps/flats are in a given key — Enharmonic keys — Interval number vs. interval quality — Major, minor and perfect interval qualities — Determining an intervals' number and quality — Connection of interval qualities to the major scale — Identifying intervals on the staff — Augmented and diminished interval qualities — How augmented and diminished intervals are formed — The double sharp — Why the double sharp is necessary — The double flat — Why the double flat is necessary — The tritone — Abbreviations for interval qualities — Enharmonic intervals — Complementary intervals — Which qualities, when inverted, become which qualities — Simple intervals — Compound intervals — Reducing compound intervals — How to determine the quality of compound intervals — Open and closed harmony — Difference between intervals and chords — Major and minor chords — Deriving the ratio of the major and minor 3rds using the monochord — The Pythagoras experiment and the major chord — Block and broken chords — Augmented and diminished chords — Music's move from the horizontal to the vertical — Mathematical proportions of the major, minor, augmented and diminished triads — Understanding the harmonic mean — The harmonic mean and the major chord — Understanding the arithmetic mean — The arithmetic mean and the minor chord — The geometric mean and the augmented and diminished chords — Relation of chords to the major scale — Number of possible triads constructed from the pitches of the major scale — Order and quantity of triad qualities formed from the major scale — Roots of chords, scales, and keys — Comparison of the major and minor scales — Tetrachords in minor scales — The natural minor scale — Constructing natural minor scales on the keyboard — Constructing natural minor scales on the staff — The harmonic minor scale — The melodic minor scale — Ascending vs. descending melodic minor scale — Constructing harmonic minor scales on the keyboard — Constructing harmonic minor scales on the staff — Constructing melodic minor scales on the keyboard — Constructing melodic minor scales on the staff — Relative keys — Determining the relative minor — Determining the relative major — Determining the key of music with shared key signatures — Parallel keys — Difference between parallel and relative keys — Relation of chords to the natural minor scale — Order and quantity of triad qualities formed from the natural minor scale — Relation of chords to the harmonic minor scale — Order and quantity of triad qualities formed from the harmonic minor scale — The major scale degrees — Naming the scale degree using Roman numerals — Naming triads using Roman numerals — Benefit to using degree vs. letter name — Primary chords and their importance — Relationship between chords — Chord inversions — Root position, 1st inversion and 2nd inversion — Intervals in chord inversions — The root rule — How to identify chord inversions by name, quality and inversion — Voices of a chord — Voice leading — Inversions and the primary chords — Chord progressions — Use of inversions to improve transition between chords — Introduction to function — Function names of the scale degrees — Extending the triad — Dominant seventh chords — Other names and notation of the dominant seventh chord — Why the dominant seventh chord is named the way it is — Inversion of the dominant seventh chord — 3rd inversion — Finding the root in a dominant seventh chord — How to identify a dominant seventh chord — Dominant seventh chords with missing notes — Major 7th chords — Minor 7th chords — Diminished 7th chords — Musical punctuation — Perfect authentic cadence — Imperfect authentic cadence — Half cadence — Plagal cadence — Deceptive cadence — Hexatonic scale — Whole tone scale — Chromatic scale — Pentatonic scale — Tonal music — Tonal centers — Polytonal music — Atonal music — Free atonal — Strict atonal — Twelve-tone technique — Tone rows — The ancient Greek modes — History of the church modes — Modern modes — The harmonic series — Overtones — Fundamental of a pitch — Complex vibration of a string — What the numbers of the harmonic series express — Hearing overtones (and experiment) — Timbre — Nature's hierarchy of harmonic sound — Objective measurement of consonance and dissonance — History of consonance and dissonance — Tuning pitches — Brief history of tuning systems — Pythagorean tuning — Just intonation — Equal temperament — Definition of cents — Tuning of the modern piano — Benefits and shortcomings of the different tuning systems — Apps that demonstrate and compare some of the tuning systems — Overview of the four main periods of western art music

What is the target audience?

  • Any person wanting to learn about music.
  • Beginners to advanced music students.
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