(Phase 2 is the complete composition, due Monday, November 23. This will have a separate blog post)
Harmonic Vocabulary
- Tonic triad -- root position and first inversion (I and I6 in major; i and i6 in minor)
- Dominant triad -- root position and first inversion (V and V6 in major and minor)
- Dominant seventh chord -- root position and all inversions (V7, V65, V43, V42 in major and minor)
- Subdominant triad -- root position and first inversion (IV and IV6 in major; iv and iv6 in minor)
- Supertonic triad -- root position (ii/major key only) and first inversion (ii6 in major, iiº6 in minor)
- Six-four chords -- Cadential, Neighboring, Passing (and Arpeggiating)
- Leading-tone triad -- first inversion only (viiº6)
Assignment for Wednesday:
Write a pair of phrases (each one 8 measures long) using the harmonic vocabulary listed above. (It doesn't have to use every one of the chords, but should use at least some of the newer chords.) The phrases should go together.
Use the chords in a manner appropriate for common-practice music.
Choose one of the following keys:
- D major
- Eb major
- E major
- F major
- G major
- Ab major
- A major
- Bb major
- B major
- C minor
- D minor
- E minor
- F minor
- F# minor
- G minor
- Bb minor
- B minor
Choose duple, triple, or quadruple meter
Harmonic rhythm should be one chord per measure (mostly), may speed up toward the cadence.
Write a bass line and Roman numerals, and sketch out a melodic framework (one or two main notes per chord)
Ultimately you will turn these phrases into a short composition for one or more class members. The pieces will be performed on the last day of class. We will have a composition workshop on Wednesday, where we critique the chord progressions.
Due at 1PM on Friday, November 20. I will make an assignment on Sakai for you to upload it.
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