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Home > SparkCharts > Music > Music Theory & History > Music Theory and Notation
Contents
Music Theory and Notation The Staff Clefs Rhythm, Notes, and Rests Meter and Time Signature Pitch Scales Key and Key Signature Intervals Harmony and Dissonance Chords Tempo Dynamics Expression and Articulation Themes, Motifs, and Structures Instruments and Ensembles Musical Forms and Genres Eras and Movements in Western Music Notable Composers in Western Music
The Staff
Music usually is notated on a five-line staff. The staff includes notes, rests, and instructions about key, rhythm, and other musical elements.
Clefs
A clef is a notation that assigns specific pitch values to the lines and spaces on the staff. Because the instruments of the orchestra possess widely varying registers (pitch ranges),composers use different clefs for different instruments to avoid having to use too many ledger lines (small line segments that extend the staff above or below the standard five lines). The treble clef (G clef) is used for higher-pitched instruments like the flute or violin. The bass clef (F clef) is used for lower-pitched instruments like the tuba or cello. The C clef is movable, and its name depends on where it is aligned on the staff. The following staves show where the same pitch (middle C) appears on different clefs:
Music for instruments with a wide range (such as the piano) is notated on the grand staff, which combines the treble clef and the bass clef:
Rhythm refers to the arrangement of beats in a piece of music. Rhythm is expressed graphically with notes and rests (durations of silence in which no notes are played). Notes are named based on their duration. The longest note in conventional use is the whole note; the shortest in conventional use is the 128th note:
Adding a dot to a note or rest increases the duration of that note or rest by one half:
A tie over two or more notes of the same pitch indicates that the notes under it should be held or sustained:
Sometimes, composers break rhythms into three equal parts called a triplet. There are also quintuplets, septuplets, and other groupings, collectively called tuplets.
Two of the frequently used standard time signatures are abbreviated with symbols:
Most time signatures in Western music are duple (the number of beats per measure are divisible by two) or triple (the number of beats per measure are divisible by three). Some time signatures are irregular and cannot be described as duple or triple. Two common irregular time signatures are 5/4 time and 7/8 time:
Pitch
Pitch refers to the sound frequency of a note (i.e., whether the note is high or low). In Western music, there are 12 named pitches, which together are called the chromatic scale.
Some pitches have two namesfor example, C and D are the same pitch. Such pitches are called enharmonic equivalents. The name given to an enharmonic pitch depends on notation and key. The space between two adjacent pitches in the chromatic scale is called a half step (also known as a semitone ). Two semitones equal one whole step or whole tone. Accidentals are symbols used in musical notation to raise or lower the pitch of specific notes:
A natural cancels any of the above accidentals and returns a note to its natural pitch.
The space between a given pitch and the next pitch with the same letter name (for example, from C to C or from F to F) is called an octave.
Scales
A scale is an ascending or descending series of pitches. The pitches that make up a scale are called degrees, and each is assigned a name and number. From lowest to highest, the scale degrees are called the tonic (I), supertonic (II), mediant (III), subdominant (IV), dominant (V), submediant (VI), and leading tone (VII).
The name of a scale is determined by its starting pitch and its key signature. Most Western scales consist of a series of whole steps and half steps in a specific order. The two most common Western scales are the major scale and the minor scale.
There are three types of minor scales: Natural minor: The basic form of a minor scale (the c minor scale above is natural minor). Harmonic minor: A minor scale with the seventh degree elevated a half step. Melodic minor: A minor scale with the sixth and seventh degrees elevated a half step each.
Other types of scales have been used throughout the history of Western music: Pentatonic scale: A five-tone scale widely used in indigenous folk music around the world. Whole-tone scale: A six-tone scale with a whole step between adjacent notes. Debussy and other Impressionist composers explored uses of this scale in the late 1800s. Octatonic scale: An eight-tone scale composed of alternating whole steps and half steps between adjacent notes. The octatonic scale came into widespread use in the 20th century.
Intervals
An interval is the space between any two pitches. Intervals are described with a numerical measure that counts the number of semitones that each interval spans (counting both the top and bottom pitches). Numerically, an interval may be described as a second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth (octave), and so on. Intervals also are described in terms of quality. An interval may be: Perfect (P): An interval whose constituent pitches appear in both the major and minor form of a given scale. For example, the interval between C and G is called a perfect fifth because the pitches C and G appear in both the C major and c minor scales. The only intervals that may be perfect are the fourth, fifth, and eighth (octave). Major (M): An interval whose constituent pitches appear in the major form of a given scale. Seconds, thirds, sixths, and sevenths may be major. Minor (m): An interval whose constituent pitches appear in the minor form of a given scale. Seconds, thirds, sixths, and sevenths may be minor. Diminished (d or ): A perfect or minor interval that has been reduced by a semitone. Augmented (A or +): A perfect or major interval that has been increased by a semitone. The same interval may have different names depending on the context in which it appears. For example, the tritone is a special interval that spans three whole tones. The tritone maybe described as either an augmented fourth (A4) or diminished fifth (d5). The following staves show the intervals from a minor second to a major ninth:
Chords
A chord is a group of three or more pitches that sound simultaneously. The intervals between the notes within a chord determine the chord quality. Chords, like intervals, may be:
M m + major minor diminished augmented
half-diminished
A triad is a chord that contains three pitches separated by major or minor thirds. A chord with four pitches separated by major or minor thirds is called a seventh chord. Triads and seventh chords form the basis of harmony for the vast majority of traditional Western music. The following staff shows several chords built on the note C. The notations in blue indicate the intervals between the notes within each chord:
Tempo
The tempo of musical composition is the speed at which it is played. Tempo and meter are closely connected. Tempo establishes the relationship between meter and actual time and thus affects how the meter and time signature of a composition sound to the ear. If a piece in 6/8 time is played at a slow tempo, the ear tends to perceive six beats per measure; if played at a fast tempo, the ear tends to perceive only two beats per measure. Musicians often use a device called a metronome to keep track of tempo. A metronome marks time by making a regular ticking or beeping sound a specified number of beats per minute. Often, tempo is described in terms of metronome number or metronome mark (M.M.), i.e., the number of ticks or beats per minute. Use of metronome marks enables the musician to determine tempo accurately with a metronome. Alternatively, a composer may allow more casual interpretation of tempo by using only suggested ranges of beats per minute. The composer can use tempo marks to change tempo throughout the course of a musical composition. These marks often take the form of descriptive terms from Italian, including: Largo: very slow (M.M.=4060) Larghetto: very slow, but faster than largo (M.M.=6066)
Adagio: slow (M.M.=6676) Andante: somewhat slow; a leisurely walking tempo (M.M.=76108) Moderato: medium tempo; not particularly fast or slow (M.M.=108120) Allegro: fast (M.M.=120168) Presto: very fast (M.M.=168208) Prestissimo: as fast as possible (M.M.>208)
Dynamics
Dynamics are directions, written in a piece of music, that indicate the volume at which a note or musical passage should be played. Composers typically indicate dynamics using abbreviations for a number of Italian terms:
piano: soft
forte: loud
beginning and dying away of the sound of a note or a group of notes. Common articulation marks include:
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