5.8 KiB
id, aliases, title, tags, dg-publish
| id | aliases | title | tags | dg-publish | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Music Theory |
|
true |
Music Theory
Note
Pitch
Refers to the human perception of frequency. It is usually only appropriate to prefer "pitch" over "note" when one is specifically referring to frequency.
Notes are enharmonic (or enharmonically equivalent) if they represent the same pitch.
Pitch Class
| mod 12 | name |
|---|---|
| 0 | C |
| 1 | C♯/D♭ |
| 2 | D |
| 3 | D♯/E♭ |
| 4 | E |
| 5 | F |
| 6 | F♯/G♭ |
| 7 | G |
| 8 | G♯/A♭ |
| 9 | A |
| 10 | A♯/B♭ |
| 11 | B |
Important
Adjacent sharps and flats (e.g. C♯ and D♭) only represent the same pitch in equal temperament tuning, but they are still considered enharmonic in others.
Note: Semitones and Steps
It is common to speak of whole or half steps between pitches, but I find this confusing in a way music educators ought to better anticipate. In equal temperament tuning, all pitch classes are--- according to human perception---equally spaced. There is no missing half between E and F or B and C, because there are no halves at all. C# is as legitimate a pitch class as C.
[!info] In some disciplines, accidentals are marked on every note, even "redundantly", in acknowledgement of this fact.
What is meant by the poor terminology is this:
- "half step" = 1 semitone
- "whole step" = 2 semitones
There is no more nuance, E--F is also a "half step".
\score{
a~ ais
b~ c
\layout {}
}
This is an unhelpful convention. Inexcusable, though, is conflating semitone increments with intervals. Wikipedia music theory articles frequently link "half step" and "whole step" to minor second and major second respectively, which is a category-mistake.
Accidentals
| ascii | unicode | lilypond | Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| bb | 𝄫 | eses | double flat |
| b | ♭ | es | flat |
| ♮ | ! | natural | |
| # | ♯ | is | sharp |
| x | 𝄪 | isis | double sharp |
Octave
Octave is a property of staff position, not pitch. B♯3 is enharmonic with C4
Duration
- beats
- speed
Intensity
- pianissimo
- piano
- forte
- fortissimo
Interval
Refers to the difference between two pitches. Intervals are notated with an en dash (C♯--E).
Interval Number
Equal to the difference in staff position plus one.
Important
The number of an interval is not related to the difference in pitch. F♯ and G♭ are enharmonic, but F♯--G♭ is a second. F and F♯ are a semitone apart, but F--F♯ is a first.
Interval Quality
An interval of unspecified quality is called "generic".
difference in semitones
Perfect, Major, and Minor Intervals
The common intervals
| dP1 | dS2 | Short | Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | P1 | Perfect unison |
| 1 | 1 | m2 | Minor second |
| 1 | 2 | M2 | Major second |
| 2 | 3 | m3 | Minor third |
| 2 | 4 | M3 | Major third |
| 3 | 5 | P4 | Perfect fourth |
| 4 | 7 | P5 | Perfect fifth |
| 5 | 8 | m6 | Minor sixth |
| 5 | 9 | M6 | Major sixth |
| 6 | 10 | m7 | Minor seventh |
| 6 | 11 | M7 | Major seventh |
| 7 | 12 | P8 | Perfect octave |
Augmented and Diminished Intervals
| dP1 | dS2 | Short | Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | A1 | Augmented unison |
| 1 | 3 | A2 | Augmented second |
| 2 | 5 | A3 | Augmented third |
| 3 | 6 | A4 | Augmented fourth |
| 4 | 8 | A5 | Augmented fifth |
| 5 | 10 | A6 | Augmented sixth |
| 6 | 12 | A7 | Augmented seventh |
| 1 | 0 | d2 | Diminished second |
| 2 | 2 | d3 | Diminished third |
| 3 | 4 | d4 | Diminished fourth |
| 4 | 6 | d5 | Diminished fifth |
| 5 | 7 | d6 | Diminished sixth |
| 6 | 9 | d7 | Diminished seventh |
| 7 | 11 | d8 | Diminished octave |
Compound Interval
A compound interval is one greater than number 8.
Key
A key is a set-theory of pitch classes created by modifying a starting pitch class (the tonic) according to some sequence of intervals.
| Key | Interval Sequence |
|---|---|
| Major | W--W--H--W--W--W--H |
| Natural Minor | W--H--W--W--H--W--W |
Modes
| Mode | Interval Sequence |
|---|---|
| Ionian | W--W--H--W--W--W--H |
| Dorian | W--H--W--W--W--H--W |
| Phrygian | H--W--W--W--H--W--W |
| Lydian | W--W--W--H--W--W--H |
| Mixolydian | W--W--H--W--W--H--W |
| Aeolian | W--H--W--W--H--W--W |
| Locrian | H--W--W--H--W--W--W |
Scale
A scale is a progression of the elements of a key in ascending or descending order.
Scale Degrees
- degree 1: tonic
- degree 2: supertonic
- degree 3: mediant
- degree 4: subdominant
- degree 5: dominant
- degree 6: submediant
- degree 7: called the subtonic if it is 2 semitones/"a whole step"/a major second below the tonic or the leading tone if it is 1 semitone/"a half step"/a minor second below the tonic
- degree 8: tonic