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Lecture 1 on the Overtone Series
Lecture 2 Lecture 3 Lecture 4
First lecture: Structure of music and "Great Composers
and Great Music."
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Second lecture: What is the Overtone Scale.
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Third lecture: Analyzing classical and jazz selections
and how the overtone scale is applied in music.
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This series of lectures will be on the overtone
scale.
We hear great music but because we don't always understand
the principals of music, some of the "awe" we should have is
not understood. Hopefully this series of lectures will inspire all music students, beginning through advanced and give the desire to
not only learn music, but to appreciate music.
WHAT IS A "GREAT WORK OR GREAT COMPOSER"
Lecture 1
Music consists of melody,
harmony and rhythms, this explanation is in its simplest of forms.
There is music which has great rhythms, which is used for dancing,
there are songs that have beautiful melodies, and songs that are
written with outstanding modulations in harmonic structures.
Let's compare musical structure to a house. The foundation and
structure would consists of scales, chords and modulations (simple
meaning for modulation is changing scales or keys in a composition).
The rooms could be a sonata, because a sonata because it contains
different parts. Furniture and decoration would be a melody and
rhythms, completing and fulfilling the structure and
rooms. Are you getting the idea? Building music is
not simple. Do composers start with a melody then build the
foundation, or do composers build a foundation and then add the
melody. Let's assume that most pop music starts with melody and
rhythm then builds a simple foundation, but classical and jazz usually
build with the foundation first.
When studying the overtone series and how it
applies to the foundation of music you will begin to have an idea of
how a composers mind work. Yes, the "Great Composers"
have a thorough knowledge of music and the fascination is that they
can use music "math", building great structures, and at the
same time build such beautiful sounds and melodies.
The overtone scale series was built from
nature and its development to the tempered piano came into existence
only in the last 300 years. We use tempered instruments today,
which means that they were tampered with to give us the 12 major
scales. The overtone scale we use today actually comes from the
fundamental C string. There are overtone scales that we can not
use with our system of twelve major scales. This study is so
fascinating and with the appearance of computers maybe we will be able
to produce tones that can not be included in our instruments of
today. The system of the 12 major scales and triads (chords) is
a very organized system. The other system we have in music is
developing music chromatically. This means that we can move half
steps and whole steps without regards to the major scales. When
developing music with both systems one would tend to think that only
chaos would be the result. Mozart was a master of using
both methods, and this is part of his genius. Later we will look at
his work and show how he used this combination. Do you think
Mozart started with melody or the foundation?
The next question would be, who
developed the tempered system of 12 major scales and how was this
accomplished. So many questions and that is the purpose of this
first lecture. Even without a musical education you can
begin to understand the complexity of music. Answering
some of these questions will be our goal over this series of
lectures. I hope you
have enjoyed this simple explanation and that it will set you on the
path of learning more about music.
Author Alana LaGrange.
If you have a response
or would like to add more information, please E-mail.
Lecture 2 Lecture 3 Lecture 4
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© by Alana LaGrange 1999 All rights reserved Music and You does not grant permission for copying text, graphics, music lessons, or sound recordings from this site. Please contact me for permissions. alana@musicandyou.com
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