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myla
Lessons on harmony? Mark Unseen   Dec 23 18:19 UTC 1997

Hi all, I'm a new guy jhere(at m-net i mean) and i was thrilled to see this
conference. for a long time I have been looking for lessons on harmony. i'm
a totally self-taught musician and i think it's time i learnt something
formal. anyone know of any good sites on the net, where i can pick lessons
on harmony? Thanks a lot for all those who took time off to reply...
9 responses total.
srw
response 1 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 24 08:10 UTC 1997

Hmm, well this is Grex, not M-net. I did some advanced web-searching, and all
I could find was some book reviews. Apparently there are a lot of good books
on Music theory and harmony, but nothing evident on the web.

that's weird, because just about everything is somewhere on the web.
md
response 2 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 24 15:24 UTC 1997

Walter Piston's textbook on harmony is great.  The best thing you
can do to start is give yourself some ear training.  Get some
blank music paper, a pencil, and the key signature of a Bach
chorale; then have someone play the first stave of the chorale for 
you on the piano a couple of times, while you write the notes you
hear down on the music paper.  No fair peeking at the score until 
you're all done.  You and your friend can trade off.  As you start
getting it right, move on to more complex music.  There might be
software that includes ear training, but I've never seen it, and
I doubt if there's much useful on the web.  
remmers
response 3 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 25 02:10 UTC 1997

Goodness, I haven't thought about Piston's harmony book in
years. It was the textbook when I took harmony back in college.
I might still have it somewhere...
md
response 4 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 25 02:37 UTC 1997

Was Piston teaching at Harvard when you were there, John?
md
response 5 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 25 02:40 UTC 1997

NO PARALLEL FIFTHS!!!
remmers
response 6 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 25 11:04 UTC 1997

I don't believe he was.

Parallel fourths were also a no-no, as were direct fifths.
davel
response 7 of 9: Mark Unseen   Dec 28 01:07 UTC 1997

I think I won't recount my experience with parallel fifths ...
faile
response 8 of 9: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 00:52 UTC 1998

<jessi raises an eyebrow at that last comment>
Piston just got his rules from Bach, but of course, Bach broke his own rules
shamelessly.  there is a decent first year theory book by Kostka and Payne.
It covers tonal harmony and has an intorduction ot 20th century stuff... more
from me later....
bunn
response 9 of 9: Mark Unseen   May 7 14:31 UTC 1998

still looking for some on-line music instruction? try:

http://orathost.cfa.ilstu.edu/~kwfansle/onlinemusicpage.htm

(out of Illinois State Univ.)
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