Category Archives: A Rudiments

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #61 February (2017) Spotlight Feature

MulgrewMiller-AC-61Mulgrew Miller is the artist in the February 2017 Spotlight Feature. My students and I are taking a closer look at him by studying a transcription I did of him playing a tune by Charlie Parker titled, “Relaxin’ at Camarillo”.

First, I must send a special “Thank you!” and shout-out to Dr. Kenneth Beilman for video taping several songs performed by Mulgrew’s trio, in 1999 at his 10th annual jazz event, and making them available to the public on his YouTube channel.  The trio was rounded out by Richie Goods on bass and Rodney Green on drums. Thank you Dr. Beilman!

I didn’t know Mulgrew very well but I met him several times through mutual friends and we also shared a music teacher in Boston… (Madame Margaret Stedman Chaloff).

I wish I would have gotten to know Mulgrew better but perhaps through the study of his music and artistry, I, along with my students and you, can get to experience, on some level, some of the love that emanated from his heart during his time here–(1955-2013).

The PDF transcription that appears in the video is available for $5.00 in my website store. The entire performance of  Mulgrew’s right hand only is documented and I also included Richie Goods walking bass solo. I paginated the document so that each page has 3 or 2 choruses.

Also, for an enhanced study experience, there is a $7.00 “zip” package that contains the PDF and a TRANSCRIBE! .xsc file that’s been thoroughly sectioned on a chorus-by-chorus basis whereas each chorus of the audio is named, looped, and synced to an edited video of the performance–I spliced-out the contiguous portion of Rodney’s drum solo. (If you’re not familiar with the TRANSCRIBE! program, go to https://www.seventhstring.com/ for more information.)

In either case, the transcription is a 23-pager, so make sure your printer is properly papered and fired-up if you’re going to render a print-out.

That’s all the time I have for now but, stop by frequently because more transcriptions of Mulgrew and many other great artists will be appearing in the “Spotlight Feature“.

Practice well and keep making great music!

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #43 Musical Symbols At A Glance / A Few Short Lessons

The music symbols in the following graphics represent some of the tools a musician uses to express and communicate his or her ideas to the player and/or listener of music.

NotePalette

Like a painter who uses various colors from a palette and sets to canvas with different brush sizes and strokes to create a picture, a musician creates various musical colors with different symbols and tools from a musical palette and sets to manuscript.

  A Glance at Some Important Musical Symbols

Clefs
Time Signatures
Rests and Notes
Various Tools
Dynamics
Expression Marks 1
Expression Marks 2

Clicking each column’s graphic opens a window that displays info about that column’s symbols. A few of these secondary pop-up windows have links to some short lessons on the material.

Study well! I’ll see you next post.

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #42 Intervalics 101 (8ths)

PartyBalloonsOkay! It’s time to take a look at the last interval of the series!  champagne-celebration

8ths – a.k.a. octaves. These intervals are easily identified because both notes share the same letter name.  When written in standard music notation, the upper note will occupy a space if the lower note is on a line and vice versa, notwithstanding any accidentals which may be attached to either note.

Several perfect octaves are illustrated in the graphics just below.

Harmonic and Melodic 8ths on a treble staff

On the piano keyboard, both notes of a perfect octave share the same letter name and they are 8 major scale steps apart (up or down).

Perfect_8th_Skip-Over_Example

 Play some octaves starting on as many keys as you can with this playable onscreen piano keyboard.

Major Scale Legend
1-8 = scale steps
w = whole step (major 2nd)
1/2= half step (minor 2nd)
1 w 2 w 3 1/2 4 w 5 w 6 w 7 1/2 8


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 8ths in the key of C.

= natural
= sharp
X = double sharp
= flat
♭♭ = double flat


Perfect 8th = C to C (The 8th note of a major scale remains unmodified)
Augmented 8th = C to C (The 8th note of a major scale is sharped once)
Minor 8th *(N/A)
*(Minor functionality isn’t allowed on any perfect interval.)
Diminished 8th = C to C **(The 8th note of a major scale is flatted once)
**(Perfect intervals become diminished with only one flat)


This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

After working with the “open-book” drag-and-drop drill exercises in this section, move on and dive into some deeper waters with the staff and keyboard exercises just below.


Dive into “deeper waters” with these staff and keyboard exercises

The blue staff 2 or 8 opens a page where only numeric values are required in your answer.

A pictorial link to staff drills on 2nds thru 8ths Clicking the treble staff or keyboard icon opens a respective interval ID page where numeric and quality values are required.

Staff Drills Keyboard Drills Staff Drills Staff Drills

Since each exercise utility is never-ending and presents questions indefinitely, you may want to set some type of completion benchmark for yourself such as, answering 25 up to 100 questions correctly or using the timer, located at the top of each utility, to set a time limit, such as 5 to 10 minutes. 

In any case, keep working until you have a success rate that’s between 90% and 100%.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #41 Intervalics 101 (1sts-7ths)

Interval Roundup

Wanted Poster

Go To 1sts Post Go To 2nds Post Go To 3rds Post Go To 4ths Post Go To 5ths Post Go To 6ths Post Go To 7ths Post

This post is a round-up and review of the intervals we’ve covered in the series up to this point. The things I intended to cover in this series, like interval ID and modification, were done earlier.  For your convenience, I’ve included lots of links to each of the earlier posts in numerical order.

Go To 1sts Post Go To 2nds Post Go To 3rds Post Go To 4ths Post Go To 5ths Post Go To 6ths Post Go To 7ths Post

Cowgirl and Cowboy Rounds 'em Up

Knowing all of the intervals within an octave enhances your musicianship in lots of ways. Your voicing, ear training, transposition, and reading abilities are among the things it enhances.


Construction of Intervals (1sts thru 7ths) from the steps of a Major Scale

Start with #1 then select any other scale step. Extract both numbers and your interval is created!

Major Scale Legend (a.k.a Major Heptachord {since we stop at 7})
1-7 = scale steps
w = whole step (major 2nd)
1/2=  half step (minor 2nd)
1 w 2 w 3 1/2 4 w 5 w 6 w 7

Play a major heptachord in as many keys as you can with this playable onscreen piano keyboard.
Start with any key and follow the schematic’s instructions, step-by-step, (or 1/2 step where needed). 


Construction of Generic Intervals 1sts – 7ths from the 7-Letter Music Alphabet

C D E F G A B

Simply choose any two letters and your generic interval is instantly created. If there’s only 1 letter in between the 2 you’ve chosen,  you have a 3rd. If there are 2 letters in between, you have a 4th etc.
*(All accidentals are excluded In generic intervals. Only letter names and staff position matter.)

When written in standard music notation, intervals from 1sts thru the 7ths look like this in C

Harmonic and melodic intervals on a treble staff

Go To 1sts Post Go To 1sts Post Go To 2nds Post Go To 2nds Post Go To 4ths Post Go To 4ths Post Go To 5ths Post Go To 5ths Post Go To 6ths Post Go To 6ths Post Go To 7ths Post Go To 7ths Post

Keep the following points in mind:

 1. The staff represents a piano’s white keys only. The black keys are notated by accidentals. (Staff steps, unmodified by accidentals, are whole steps, except for the half steps at E to F and B to C) (One staff step = the distance from any staff line to the very next staff space or vice versa, up or down)

 Click here for the onscreen piano keyboard


(The video below shows intervalic 7ths being played up and down an octave in the key of C.)

I recommend practicing rudiments of any type in “musical” contexts because it provides more avenues to make music with the rudiments before starting to apply and use them in songs. 

Reveal this hidden “You Play” version: (to play along with the rhythm section without me)


This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

After working with the “open-book” drag-and-drop drill exercises in this section, move on and dive into some deeper waters with the staff and keyboard exercises just below.


Dive into “deeper waters” with these staff and keyboard exercises

The blue staff 2 or 7 opens a page where only numeric values are required in your answer.

A pictorial link to staff drills on 2nds thru 7thsClicking the treble staff or keyboard icon opens a respective interval ID page where numeric and quality values are required. 

Staff Drills Keyboard Drills Staff Drills Staff Drills

Since each exercise utility is never-ending and presents questions indefinitely, you may want to set some type of completion benchmark for yourself such as, answering 25 up to 100 questions correctly or using the timer, located at the top of each utility, to set a time limit, such as 5 to 10 minutes. 

In any case, keep working until you have a success rate that’s between 90% and 100%.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #40 Intervalics 101 (7ths)

Intro / Op-Ed

Sevenths are among the first intervals I bring to the attention of my students who are are interested in studying chord voicings. The use of 7ths, as they relate to jazz, may be heard by listening to the left hand of pianists like “Bud” Powell and Sonny Clark during their solos. 

Sevenths come directly out of the major scale and although it’s a common practice to think of the major scale as an 8-note scale, the note we think of as 8 is only an octave-repetition of scale step 1. Scale step 8 is really scale step 1 of the major scale, starting in a different octave.  So in reality, major scales are 7-note scales and there’s a term for 7-note scales. Heptachords! Ta! Da!

Heptachords are 7-note scales and perhaps the MAJOR heptachord is the most well-known of all heptachords because it actually IS the major scale upon which our music system is based.

Now I don’t know about you but saying “major scale” rolls off of my tongue a lot easier than saying “major heptachord”! I have to be careful to not bite my tongue when I say it! I use these kinds of terms in class as a way to provide a historical perspective. It’s good to know this kind of stuff but don’t get hung-up on names! They’re only words that are part of the historical record.  Don’t over-analyze because too much analysis breeds paralysis! 😈 So, with that said, on we go!


Construction of Major 7ths from the 1st and 7th notes of major heptachords

Major 7th intervals are made by extracting the first and last note of a major heptachord. Just select and extract the 1st and 7th scale steps only and the interval is ready to be deployed.

Major Heptachord Legend (a.k.a Major Scale)
1-7 = scale steps
w = whole step (major 2nd)
1/2=  half step (minor 2nd)
1/2= half step (minor 2nd)
1 w 2 w 3 1/2 4 w 5 w 6 w 7

Start with C and follow the schematic’s instructions, step-by-step, the C major heptachord will reveal itself on your piano’s white keys. Play the heptachord in the keys of G, D, A and E too.


Construction of Generic 7ths from the 7-Letter Musical Alphabet

C D E F G A B

1. Select any letter from the 7-letter sequence
(In doing that you’ve established the interval’s letter name and root… think of it as scale step “1”.)

2. Skip over the next 5 scale steps.
(In doing that you skip over scale steps 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 because your mission is to make a 7th.)

3. Having skipped over scale steps 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, select the very next letter in the sequence.
(In doing that, you’ve selected scale step “7” as the interval’s upper note and then you extract scale steps 1 and 6.)

That’s it! You’ve constructed a 7th… a generic 7th*.
*(All accidentals are excluded In generic intervals. Only letter names and staff position matters.)

7ths – These intervals may be identified by their letter names because both letter names are the 1st and 7th letters of an alphabetically sequenced 7-letter string (heptachord).

When written in standard music notation, 7ths will have exactly 5 unoccupied staff steps in between the interval’s lower and upper notes–a space/line/space/line/space, OR, a line/space/line/space/line. Also, five alphabetically sequenced letters will be skipped over.

Harmonic and melodic intervals on a treble staff

Keep the following points in mind:

1. The staff represents a piano’s white keys only. The black keys are notated by accidentals. (Staff steps, unmodified by accidentals, are whole steps, except for the half steps at E to F and B to C) (One staff step = the distance from any staff line to the very next staff space or vice versa, up or down)

2. Every staff line and every staff space correlates to a specific white key on the piano.
(This point applies to all ledger lines and ledger spaces.)

3. If 5 consecutive staff steps are skipped over, 5 correlating piano keys are also skipped over!  (This “skip-over/fly-over” concept and analogy is illustrated in the key of C in the photos just below.) (Your eyes skip-over the 5 staff steps while your fingers “fly-over” the 5 correlating piano keys.)

Illustration of notes being skipped and flown over


  (The video below shows LH 7ths being used in a practice exercise on blues chord changes.)
In jazz and pop music chord symbol notation, 7ths, as in X7th, are played as minor 7ths or b7s. The only time a major 7th is played is when a specific instruction calls for it like (EbMaj7).

Reveal this hidden “You Play” version: (to play along with the rhythm section without me)


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 7ths in the key of C.

= natural
= sharp
X = double sharp
= flat
♭♭ = double flat


Major 7th = C to B (The major 7th is unmodified)
Augmented 7th = C to B (The major 7th is sharped once)
Minor 7th = C to B (The major 7th is flatted once)
Diminished 7th = C to B♭♭ (The major 7th is flatted twice)

This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #39 Intervalics 101 (6ths)

Intro / Op-Ed

Sixths are consonant intervals that add stability to many situations where stability is desired. They’re beautiful sounding intervals that add richness to the music in which they are used. Things like block chords, melodic passages, and improvisations are enhanced with their use.     

Hopefully,  the mechanics of transforming major intervals into their other states of modification is “old hat” Image of an old collapsible top hat to you by now.  With that said, we’ll quickly move through this post and the rest of this series starting from here. If you have any questions, just sign-up for a few lessons.


Construction of Major 6ths from the numerical scale steps of Hexachords

Hexachords are 6-note scales. The Major Hexachord is a  major scale subgroup that’s comprised of major scale notes 1 thru 6.  Extracting the 1st and 6th notes make a major 6th.

Major Hexachord Legend
1-6 = scale steps
w = whole step (major 2nd)
1/2=  half step (minor 2nd)
w  w  3 1/2  4 w  6

If you start with C and follow the schematic’s instructions, step-by-step, the C major hexachord will  reveal itself on your piano’s white keys. Play the hexachord in the keys of G, D, A and E too.


Construction of Generic 6ths from the 7-Letter Musical Alphabet

C D E F G A B

1. Select any letter from the 7-letter sequence
(In doing that you’ve established the interval’s letter name and root… think of it as scale step “1”.)

2. Skip over the next 3 scale steps.
(In doing that you’re skipping over scale steps 2, 3, 4, and 5 because your mission is to make a 6th.)

3. Having skipped over scale steps 2, 3, 4, and 5, select the very next letter in the sequence.
(In doing that, you’ve selected scale step “6” as the interval’s upper note and then you extract scale steps 1 and 6.)

That’s it! You’ve constructed a 6th… a generic 6th*.
*(All accidentals are excluded In generic intervals. Only letter names and staff position matters.)

6ths – These intervals may be identified by their letter names because both letter names are the 1st and 6th letters of an alphabetically sequenced 6-letter string (hexachord).

When written in standard music notation, 6ths will have exactly 4 unoccupied staff steps in between the interval’s lower and upper notes–a space/line/space/line, OR, a line/space/line/space. Also, four alphabetically sequenced letters will be skipped over.

Harmonic and melodic intervals on a treble staff

Keep the following points in mind:

1. The staff represents a piano’s white keys only. The black keys are notated by accidentals. (Staff steps, unmodified by accidentals, are whole steps, except for the half steps at E to F and B to C) (One staff step = the distance from any staff line to the very next staff space or vice versa, up or down)

2. Every staff line and every staff space correlates to a specific white key on the piano.
(This point applies to all ledger lines and ledger spaces.)

3. If 4 consecutive staff steps are skipped over, 4 correlating piano keys are also skipped over!  (This “skip-over/fly-over” concept and analogy is illustrated in the key of C in the photos just below.) (Your eyes skip-over the 4 staff steps while your fingers “fly-over” the 4 correlating piano keys.)

Illustration of notes being skipped and flown over


  (The video below shows 6ths being used in block chords and descending scale passages.)


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 6ths in the key of C.

= natural
= sharp
X = double sharp
= flat
♭♭ = double flat


Major 6th = C to A (The major 6th is unmodified)
Augmented 6th = C to A (The major 6th is sharped once)
Minor 6th = C to A (The major 6th is flatted once)
Diminished 6th = C to A♭♭ (The major 6th is flatted twice)

This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #38 Intervalics 101 (5ths – [Perfect 5ths / Power Chords])

Intro / Op-Ed

Of all the intervals we’re covering, perfect 5ths are among the strongest and most versatile!

Perfect 5th is lifting weights

The interval is so strong that, with only 2 notes, (almost like a triad having 1 of its 3 hands tied behind its back!), it can hold its own as a “power chord” and sonically cut-thru and even overshadow chords that have a much higher note density. The use of this interval on pianos, as an “anchoring” type of “power chord”, can be heard in the LH boogie-woogie stylings of pianists like James P. Johnson and Sammy Price, and also in the sheer power of either hand of Dorothy Donegan and in the LH bomb-dropping, sonic-booms of McCoy Tyner.

The interval’s versatility is shown by its chameleon-like ability to comfortably blend in with both major and minor tonalities. This special ability is due to the fact that “power chords” lack 3rds, which is one of the reasons that the perfect 5th is an ever-present tool of “top-40” poppers as well as slammin’ hard rockers! Its use and presence in playing situations is easily revealed to people with trained ears.  Its use and presence are also evidenced on many of today’s pop music lead sheets and piano scores that are populated with chord symbols like C5, F5, and G5… musical shorthand that signals a perfect 5th is to be played where those chord symbols appear.

Now with all of that being said about perfect 5ths and “power chords”, I want to make sure I say a few words about the following:

Is the “power chord” really a chord?

“It takes a minimum of 3 notes to make a chord” is a point that’s taught in music theory classes.

In many instances, in its role as a “power chord”, the perfect 5th is further strengthened by doubling its root note with an octave (see *2 – just below). This reinforcement adds a third note which bolsters and gives credence to the notion of referring to these intervals as chords. However, even with an added 3rd note, “power chords” still remain classified as an interval! Why? Let’s consider the consistency and congruency of the following three scenarios.

1 – Consider middle C. Add 2 more Cs to it in ascending octaves. You’ve got 3 notes! Is it a triad?

Illustration of example 1 on piano and treble staff

If you said yes, you’ve got one of these  Professor Matthews' Red X coming your way with an invitation to stay after class! If you said no, you’ve got one of these Professor Matthews' Green Checkmarkcoming your way with an invitation to skip class today!  Three Cs spread over 3 consecutive octaves is not a triad. It’s a triple octave unison! 

*2 – Consider C perfect 5th (C and G or 1 and 5). Add another C exactly 1-octave above the root.

Illustration of example 2 on piano and treble staff 

You have 3 notes! Is it a triad? No! You have a Perfect 5th interval with a doubled root!

3 – Consider C major triad (root position, 1-3-5). Add another C exactly 1-octave above the root.

Illustration of example 2 on piano and treble staff

You’ve got 4 notes! Is it a 7th chord? No! It’s a triad with a doubled root, a 4-note triad if you will.

Octave-doubling any note(s) of an interval or a chord does not change the entity’s classification.  The rule that says “it takes a minimum of 3 notes to make a chord” governs chord classification and the 3 notes must be 3 different notes, not an octave doubling of an original unit member.

So although perfect 5ths are also known as “power chords”, by definition, they are not chords. They are intervals, and it is my hope that that you’ll get to know these intervals a little better through the work you’re doing in this series. 


Construction of Perfect 5ths from the scale steps of Pentachords/Pentascales

Pentachords and pentascales (synomous terms), are the first 5 notes of a diatonic scale. Major pentachords and/or major pentascales are comprised of major scale notes 1 thru 5.  Extracting only the 1st and 5th notes of this major scale subgroup yields a perfect 5th interval.

Major Pentachord/Pentascale Legend
1-5 = scale steps
w = whole step (major 2nd)
1/2=  half step (minor 2nd)
w  w  3 1/2  4 w 

If you start with C and follow the schematic’s instructions, step-by-step, the C major pentascale will  reveal itself on your piano’s white keys. Play the pentascale in the keys of G, D, A and E too.


Construction of Generic 5ths from the 7-Letter Musical Alphabet

C D E F G A B

1. Select any letter from the 7-letter sequence
(In doing that you’ve established the interval’s letter name and root… think of it as scale step “1”.)

2. Skip over the next 3 scale steps.
(In doing that you’re skipping over scale steps 2, 3, and 4 because your mission is to make a 5th.)

3. Now, having skipped over scale steps 2, 3, and 4, select the very next letter in the sequence.
(In doing that, you’ve selected scale step “5” as the interval’s upper note and then you extract scale steps 1 and 5.)

That’s it! You’ve constructed a 5th… a generic 5th*.
*(All accidentals are excluded In generic intervals. Only letter names and staff position matters.)

5ths – These intervals may be identified by their letter names because both letter names are the 1st and 5th letters of an alphabetically sequenced 5-letter string (pentachord or pentascale).

When written in standard music notation, 5ths will have exactly 3 unoccupied staff steps in between the interval’s lower and upper notes–a space/line/space, OR, a line/space/line. Also, three alphabetically sequenced letters will be skipped over.

Harmonic and melodic intervals on a treble staff

Keep the following points in mind:

1. The staff represents a piano’s white keys only. The black keys are notated by accidentals. (Staff steps, unmodified by accidentals, are whole steps, except for the half steps at E to F and B to C) (One staff step = the distance from any staff line to the very next staff space or vice versa, up or down)

2. Every staff line and every staff space correlates to a specific white key on the piano.
(This point applies to all ledger lines and ledger spaces.)

3. If 3 consecutive staff steps are skipped over, 3 correlating piano keys are also skipped over!  (This “skip-over/fly-over” concept and analogy is illustrated in the key of C in the photos just below.) (Your eyes skip-over the 3 staff steps while your fingers “fly-over” the 3 correlating piano keys.)

Illustration of notes being skipped and flown over


Perfect Intervals: (This section is reposted from AC #37… slightly revised. Click to view)

 

Perfect Intervals: What are they? Why are they called “perfect”?

Part of the answer to both questions has to do with the overtones and harmonics that only this particular class of intervals produce. Many piano tuners rely on perfect intervals in their craft. However, since the details that explain overtones and harmonics go far beyond the scope of this post, I’ll simply tell you which intervals are “perfect” and I’ll mention a distinguishing and affirming “key” characteristic of perfect intervals, (“Key” pun intended).

Which intervals are perfect?

There are only 4 of ’em! They come directly out of the major scale. Memorize ’em! (1-4-5-8)

1-1 Perfect 1st or Perfect Unison – (The 1st note of a major scale doubled directly upon itself)
1-4 Perfect 4th – (The 1st and 4th notes of a major scale)
1-5 Perfect 5th – (The 1st and 5th notes of a major scale)
1-8 Perfect 8th or Perfect Octave – (The 1st and 8th notes of a major scale)

Here’s an optional verification process you can use to confirm an interval’s “perfect” status.

Perfect Interval Evaluative Characteristics Affirmation Test (P.I.E.C.A.T.)
(OK! I confess! I just made-up this tongue-in-cheek acronym but many cats have been known to eat non-cat-like foods. I had a cat that loved vinegar potato chips! Anyway, here’s how the test works…)

A “purr-fect” interval is affirmed when the upper note of any given interval is also found in the major scale that begins on that interval’s lower note, AND, the lower note of that interval is also found in the major scale that begins on that interval’s upper note. Here’s another way to say it…

If your interval’s top note is present in its bottom note’s major scale, AND, its bottom note is present in its top note’s major scale, voilà! You’ve ID’d a “purr-fect” interval via “P.I.E.C.A.T.“!

a pretty cat is about to eat some pie with a fork!

“Did somebody say pie cat? Yummy! Mmmm! Got Milk?


  (The video below shows how you might use LH Power Chords to anchor and drive a groove.)


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 5ths in the key of C.

  = natural
= sharp
X = double sharp
=  flat
♭♭ = double flat


Perfect 5th = C to G (The 5th note of a major scale remains unmodified)
Augmented 5th = C to G (The 5th note of a major scale is sharped once)
Minor 1st *(N/A)
*(Minor functionality isn’t allowed on any perfect interval.)
Diminished 5th = C to G **(The 5th note of a major scale is flatted once)
**(Perfect intervals become diminished with only one flat)

This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #37 Intervalics 101 (4ths)

Intro / Op-Ed

As the parenthesized number in the title suggests, 4ths are the main focus of this post. However, before we take a look at them, I want to say a few words about major scales. The scope of my comments is limited to the 1-octave span of the scale (major scale steps 1-8 only).

If you’re unsure about what you’re doing when you’re writing or playing major scales, you might try working from a “blueprint” that details a system for placing the scale’s notes in their proper sequential order. This helps minimize or eliminate mistakes in construction and/or execution. The “blueprint” I suggest you use contains numeric and intervalic information about the scale.

Scale ConstructionThe numeric information gives you an outlined overview of the scale steps. Counting each step, as you move along (1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8), helps with keeping you aware of exactly where you are at each step of the construction process.  

The intervalic information places the notes in order by measuring intervals: whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half. This tells you the exact spacing required between each scale step.  

The bone structure of a major scale is a string of major and minor 2nds, mostly whole steps between each note with the exceptions of steps 3 to 4, and 7 to 8.
The construction crew discusses the major scale specifications

Legend
1-8 = scale steps
w = whole step (major 2nd)
1/2=  half step (minor 2nd)
w  w  3 1/2  4 w  6  w  7 1/2  8

If you start with C and follow the schematic’s instructions, step-by-step, the C major scale will   reveal itself on the white keys of your piano. Play the scale in the keys of G, D, A and E also.
Use this onscreen piano keyboard to play the scale in these 5 keys or go for all 12 if you like!


Constructing 4ths

Our musical alphabet uses only the 1st seven letters of our Arabic alphabet, A B C D E F G. However, for the reasons I mentioned in AC #10, I’ll use the same letter sequence but I’ll have the string start with C.

Now, to make a 4th, simply follow theses steps.

C D E F G A B

1. Select any letter from the 7-letter sequence.
(In doing that you’ve established the interval’s letter name and root… think of it as scale step “1”.)

2. Skip over the next 2 scale steps.
(In doing that you’re skipping over scale steps 2 and 3 because your mission is to make a 4th.)

3. Now, having skipped over scale steps 2 and 3, select the very next letter in the sequence.
(In doing that, you’ve selected scale step “4” as the interval’s upper note and then you extract scales steps 1 and 4.)

That’s it! You’ve constructed a 4th… a generic 4th*.
*(All accidentals are omitted or ignored In generic intervals. Only staff position matters.)

4ths – These intervals may be identified by their letter names because both letter names are the 1st and 4th letters of an alphabetically sequenced 4-letter string.

When written in standard music notation, 4ths will have exactly 2 unoccupied staff steps in between the interval’s lower and upper notes–a line and a space, OR, a space and a line–two alphabetically sequenced letters.

Harmonic and melodic intervals on a treble staff

Keep the following points in mind:

1. The staff, by itself, represents a piano’s white keys only. Black keys are notated by accidentals. (Staff steps, unmodified by accidentals, are whole steps, except for the half steps at E to F and B to C)

2. Every staff line and every staff space correlates to a specific white key on the piano.
(This point applies to all ledger lines and ledger spaces.)

3. If two consecutive staff steps are skipped over, both correlating piano keys are also skipped! (One staff step = the distance from any staff line to the very next space or vice versa–up or down)

Perfect 4ths are formed by extracting the 1st and 4th notes of any major scale.

Perfect Intervals

What are they? Why are they called “perfect”?

Part of the answer to both questions has to do with the overtones and harmonics that only this particular class of intervals produce.  Many piano tuners rely on perfect intervals in their craft. However, since the details that explain overtones and harmonics go far beyond the scope of this post, I’ll simply tell you which intervals are “perfect” and I’ll mention a distinguishing and affirming “key” characteristic of perfect intervals, (“Key” pun intended).

Which intervals are perfect?

There are only 4 of ’em! They come directly out of the major scale. Memorize ’em! 

1-1 Perfect 1st or Perfect Unison
1-4 Perfect 4th
1-5 Perfect 5th
1-8 Perfect 8th or Perfect Octave

Here’s an optional verification process you can use to confirm an interval’s “perfect” status.

Perfect Interval Evaluative Characteristics  Affirmation Test (P.I.E.C.A.T.) 😆
(OK! I just made-up this tongue-in-cheek acronym but here’s how the test works…)

A perfect interval is affirmed when the upper note of any given interval is also found in the major scale that begins on that interval’s lower note, AND, the lower note of that interval is also found in the major scale that begins on that interval’s upper note. Here’s another way to say it…

If your interval’s top note is present in its bottom note’s major scale, AND, its bottom note is present in its top note’s major scale, voilà! You’ve affirmed a perfect interval via “P.I.E.C.A.T.“!

a pretty cat is about to eat some pie with a fork!

“Did somebody say pie cat? Yummy! Mmmm! Got Milk?


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 4ths in the key of C.

  = natural
= sharp
X = double sharp
=  flat
♭♭ = double flat


Perfect 4th = C to F (The 4th note of a major scale remains unmodified)
Augmented 4th = C to F (The 4th note of a major scale is sharped once)
Minor 1st *(N/A)
*(Minor functionality isn’t allowed on any perfect interval.)
Diminished 4th = C to F **(The 4th note of a major scale is flatted once)
**(Perfect intervals become diminished with only one flat)

This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #36 Intervalics 101 (3rds)

Intro / Op-Ed

Since 3rds are made from scales and chords are made of couplings of various kinds of 3rds, I’ll start this post by saying a few words about scales and chords.

Scales, at their basic level, are formed by stringing and connecting a series of 2nds together and each note in the string may or may not have a modifying accidental attached to it. In the case of most traditional scales, like the major scale, every scale step and its letter name must be arranged in numerical and alphabetical order. Also, consecutive sequencing of the same letter name is not allowed (using the same letter name twice in a row is not allowed). At the root of all scales, you’ll find intervals.

Chords, at their most basic level, are formed by extracting every other note of any given scale which creates a series of connected 3rds and each note in a chord may or may not have a modifying accidental attached to it. At the root of all chords, you’ll find intervals.

Thirds

Thirds are very important intervals to understand because our system of harmony, tertian harmony, is based on them. Our musical alphabet uses only the 1st seven letters of our Arabic alphabet, A B C D E F G. However, for the reasons I mentioned in AC #10, I’ll use the same letter sequence but I’ll have the string start with C.

Now, to make a 3rd, simply follow theses 3 steps.

C D E F G A B

1. Select any letter from the 7-letter sequence.
(In doing that you’ve established the interval’s name and root… think of it as scale step “1”.)

2. Skip over “scale step 1’s” next-door-neighbor.
(In doing that you’re skipping over scale step 2 because your mission is to make a 3rd.)

3. Now, having skipped over scale step 2, select the very next letter in the sequence.
(In doing that, you’ve selected scale step “3” as the interval’s upper note and then you extract scales steps 1 and 3.)

That’s it! You’ve constructed a 3rd… a generic 3rd*.
*(All accidentals are omitted or ignored In generic intervals. Only staff position matters.)

When 3rds are stacked on top of each other in a totem-pole-like fashion, they form chords, and in order to understand chords, it’s critical that you understand 3rds in general and major 3rds in particular.

Understanding major 3rds.

Major 3rds are particularly significant because they are the intervals by which the basic major and minor tonality and functionality of chords and scales are distinguished or determined.

Major 3rds are formed by extracting the 1st and 3rd notes of any major scale. Even when you’re dealing with non-major 3rds, (like augmented, diminished, or minor 3rds etc.), you’re still dealing, with the same letter names of the 1st and 3rd notes of a major scale. The specific major scale with which you’re dealing is determined by the name of the 3rd’s lowest note. The interval’s functionality (major/minor etc.) is determined by the name of the 3rd’s upper or top note, and in the case of major 3rds, the top note is unmodified (diatonic–which means only scale tones are allowed). Further analysis of the major 3rd reveals that it is an extraction of the 1st and 3rd notes of a subset of major scale notes which I call the major trichord (major scale steps 1, 2, and 3)–not to be confused with the major triad (major scale steps 1,3, and 5).  

For example: If you were to play the first 3 notes of the C major scale (C-D-E), you would have played scale steps 1-2-3, you would have covered the distance of two full whole steps, and you would have simultaneously played the C major trichord. When you extract only the 1st and 3rd notes of any major trichord, and/or any major scale, you’ve extracted a major 3rd.

When building major 3rds on a piano, either point below will help guide your construction.

1 – Place your fingers on the first 3 scale steps of any major scale you chose, then play the 1st and 3rd notes… (the outer “book-end” notes).

2 – Place your fingers on only 2 whole steps of any major scale you chose, then extract the 1st and 3rd notes… (the outer “book-end” notes).

Either process should lead you to a successful construction of a major 3rd.


More review, extra emphasis, a few cautious tips, and another hypothetical

3rds – These intervals are easily identified because of the contiguous way in which both letter names are alphabetically sequenced. With 3rds, the letter names of both notes will be alphabetically adjacent to exactly one letter in between them (the “skip-over” process mentioned just a few paragraphs above).

When written in standard music notation, both notes will be written in consecutive spaces or on consecutive lines, notwithstanding any accidentals which may be attached to either note.

Harmonic 3rds and Melodic 3rds pictured on a treble staff

Don’t let yourself be fooled by the sound or the physical spacing of your fingers on the piano keys when certain accidentals are used! Read your instrument panel and fly by the instruments!

On the piano keyboard, things can get a little trickier, as I illustrated with the hypothetical example in AC #35. Here’s another example. Look at the photo. What interval does that look like? Click the player… What interval does it sound like? Can you ID it beyond a shadow of a doubt?

The interval denies your assertion and cries, “Not guilty! Mistaken ID”! Can you be 100% certain of your ID?

I think NOT! You need more information! With the info you’ve been given, you just can’t be sure!

What looks like C might in fact be a B or a D♭♭ and what looks like E could easily be D X  or F. We could argue probability all day long and, in many cases, probability will get you by just fine! However, probability and certainty are two different things. I’ll probably agree with you as to what it looks, sounds, and feels like, but our deductions would only be guesses.  Without some other type of corroborating evidence, we can’t be certain that the interval we see is even a 3rd! 

Here’s what I think would happen to both of us if we were in some special type of people’s court trying to prove our interval ID case and our courtroom transcripts read something like this…  “Judge it looks like such-and-such, and it sounds like so-and-so, and it feels like it might be a…

The Honorable Judge Umust B. Wright and bailiff Orville Tossit Outler BAM!!! The Judge stops our case mid-sentence during my argument and says…!

BAM!!! goes the Judge's gavel before the end of Art's sentence!. BAM!!! “Case dismissed!” Click the player to hear the judge order his bailiff to show us the way out before calling me back for a sidebar. We were lucky to escape without being fined for wasting the court’s time! Now of course I’m just kidding around here but we really needed more information because our piano-scenario-only evidence was too inconclusive to prove anything. The Judge made the correct ruling!

In this particular hypothetical, you’ve been presented with both notes of an unknown interval on the piano keyboard without being told the note name of either piano key or anything about type of interval for which you’re looking. Also, you haven’t been given any other relevant, supportive information like a key signature, a sheet music representation, or replica of the interval. Under these circumstances, the interval might be a unison/1st or a 2nd, it could be a 3rd, it may be a 4th, and so on.  You just don’t have enough info to definitively identify the interval pictured in the piano photo. In order to correctly identify the interval in this particular hypothetical, beyond the shadow of a doubt, you need to have the letter names of both notes of the interval.

Hopefully that’s all clear now and after a few more post-closing words, it’ll be time to take either the end-of-the-post-easy-quiz or a couple of aspirin! (:-) 

Major 3rds occupy the 1st and 3rd notes of any given major scale. They occupy the outermost notes of 2 full whole steps. Once you’re able to clearly see and understand how to construct and analyze the major 3rd, analyzing, constructing, or identifying 3rds in any of their modified states should become a much easier task because each of the modifying accidentals that may be applied to the major 3rd is self-explanatory in terms of what it does to achieve its modification. Now that was a mouthful but trust me! This stuff is not difficult at all if you proceed on a step-by-step basis and don’t get ahead of yourself… or your teacher!

Let me ask you a question that’s unrelated to music.  Once you learned your “ABCs”, how many times have you had to go back to re-study and re-learn the alphabet because you’d forgotten it? For most of you the answer is, “Not once”, because you studied and learned it thoroughly, and you use it in some form, every day of your life! The same thing applies to the language of music!

Thoroughly studying and learning the 15 major scales and their major intervals, by spelling them and writing them out, is what I recommend for you to do as a multi-week or multi-month project, once you’ve completed your study of intervals in this particular series of posts. There’s no rush or speed contest here! Just take your time, move systematically, and study thoroughly!


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 3rds in the key of C.

= natural
= sharp
X = double sharp
=  flat
♭♭ = double flat


Major 3rd = C to E (The major 3rd is unmodified)
Augmented 3rd = C to E (The major 3rd is sharped once)
Minor 3rd =  C to E (The major 3rd is flatted once)
Diminished 3rd = C to E♭♭ (The major 3rd is flatted twice)

 This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys. 

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,

 

"Gotta get to my study room!"

AC #35 Intervalics 101 (2nds)

Intro / Op-Ed

Moving into 2nds introduces minor intervals, so a preliminary discussion of major, augmented, minor, and diminished intervals is in order.

As I mentioned in AC #34, the major scale is the scale upon which our music system is based.

Question: When an interval is classified as a “major interval”, what does that mean?
Answer:  Both notes of the interval are unmodified, unaltered notes of the major scale.

Question: When an interval is classified as a “minor interval”… it is “minor” compared to what?
Answer: Compared to its unmodified, unaltered  major scale counterpart.

Question: When an interval is diminished or augmented… that’s in contrast to what?
Answer: In contrast to its unmodified, unaltered major scale counterpart.

Let me emphasize this major scale point once more!  The major scale is the scale upon which our music system is based. It is the backdrop against which intervalic modifications like minor, augmented, and diminished are contrasted or compared.

We’ll have a cursory examination of the major scale in the AC #37 post, but for now, I’d like to keep your attention focused on 2nds because of the various types of 2nds that will appear in the drill exercises at the end of this post, which I hope you’ll do.

Let’s take a closer, analytical look at 2nds.

2nds – These intervals are very easy to identify because the letter names of both notes will be alphabetically adjacent to each other.  An interval with letter names that display that kind of juxtaposition is a 2nd of some type, notwithstanding any accidental modifiers that may be attached to either letter.  If the two letter names form a whole step, you have a clear signal that you’re dealing with the first and second notes of some given major scale because the first two notes of any major scale is a major 2nd and all major 2nds are whole steps. The specific major scale to which both notes belong is determined by the interval’s first or lowest note, with the stipulation that it’s and ascending interval being identified.

Generic Alphabetical Identification: This is easy in the case of 2nds because the letter names of both notes are alphabetically adjacent such as A is to B, and B is to C, and C is to D, etc.  Whenever both note names of an interval have this kind of consecutive alphabetical adjacency, you have a 2nd of some type.

Standard Music Notation Identification: This is easy in the case of 2nds because when 2nds are written on a staff, one note is a line note, the other note is a space note, and both note heads will be in the closest line/space proximity of each other that is possible on a music staff. (The note heads of 2nds never share the same line or space on a music staff) 

Piano Keyboard Identification: On the piano keyboard, 2nds are still easily identified by their core note names. However, depending on the accidentals attached to the notes, identifying 2nds, or any other interval, can get a little tricky if you’re not careful! I’ll explain what I mean.

Airline pilots can fly planes by relying mostly on the information coming to them from their instrument panel because visual conditions in the air and on the ground may be misleading. Similarly, regarding interval ID and music-reading, conditions in your ear and on the piano may also be misleading and unreliable from time to time, and in those cases, good reading abilities will allow you to rely on your own “instrument panel”… the musical staff!

The following is a hypothetical example of where conditions in your ear and on the piano might be misleading and unreliable. Using ascending notes within the same octave, do the following…

Play Bdouble flat and double sharp on a piano. What does it look, feel, and sound like to you?


If you answer “4th” in my theory class, I’ll have to place one of these next to your answer! Red X

Don’t be fooled by physical spacing of the keys or the sound of the interval! 

Notwithstanding any of the accidentals which may be attached to either note of any interval, if the core note names have consecutive alphabetical adjacency, you have a 2nd of some type!

 Hypothetical Interval ID Question

When you strip away or ignore the accidental modifications of both notes, you should see that the core note names are B and C, and B to C is a 2nd at the core! Now when you reapply the accidental modifiers to both notes, your analysis should reveal the specific type of 2nd it is. 

Does anyone have the answer for this hypothetical? If so, I’d love to give you one of these! Green Check Mark

Let’s continue with 2nds and move on to the drill section.


The most commonly used accidentals are shown in the lineup just below followed by examples of the most common occurrences of 2nds in the key of C.

= natural (cancels 1 accidental)
= sharp (raises a note by one 1/2 step)
X = double sharp (raises a note by two 1/2 steps)
=  flat (lowers a note by one 1/2 step)
♭♭ = double flat (lowers a note by two 1/2 steps)


Major 2nd = C to D (The major 2nd is unmodified)
Augmented 2nd = C to D (The major 2nd is sharped once)
Minor 2nd =  C to D (The major 2nd is flatted once)
Diminished 2nd = C to D♭♭ (The major 2nd is flatted twice)

This link will open an Acrobat/Adobe flash type of applet where you’ll be asked to correctly match ten intervals via a drag-n-drop process. Doing the exercise at least 4 or 5 times will give you an introductory workout on identifying and matching the intervals in C and other keys.

Study well and have fun,

See you next post,