Displaying 1 to 16 of 16 resources labelled with 'Chord progressions'
Video podcast demonstrating how to teach a C Major 12 Bar Blues progression on the piano. Students must have an understanding of 7th chords and inversions.
Official classification: Piano, Improvising, Chords, 12 Bar Blues, Video, Chord progressions, Unit 8. Jazz improvisations
Root motion is the movement from one chord's root to another chord's root.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Analyzing the notes and chords of a song is a major part of music theory.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Composers will often arrange the notes of a chord in numerous ways in order to vary its sound. This process is called voicing.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Like triads, seventh chords can be inverted by moving the lowest note up an octave.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
In addition to diatonic triads, every major and minor scale has seven diatonic seventh chords.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
A seventh chord is the combination of a triad and an interval of a seventh.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Triads, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
When analyzing music, each diatonic triad is identified by a roman numeral.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Triads, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Every major and minor scale has seven special triads, called diatonic triads, which are formed from that scale's notes.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
In this analysis, we will be examining bars 48-50 of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata (Opus 27, Number 2, Movement 1).
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
In the previous lessons, we learned how to construct Neapolitan chords. In this lesson, we will learn how to use them.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Although hundreds of different chord progressions are possible, most tend to follow a pattern.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
In the previous lessons, we learned how to construct, identify, and analyze first inversion triads. One question still remains: when exactly do we use them?
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
While root position and first inversion triads can be used freely, second inversion usually occurs only in three situations.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Chords, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Tags: djembe, Percussion, Drums
In this analysis, we will be looking at the first few bars of Auld Lang Syne, a traditional Scottish ballad.
Official classification: Understanding Notation, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 4, Chord progressions, Curriculum support, Musictheory.net
Moving poem with some disturbing images of slavery in the US.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPBH57BWhpE
Contains an evocative backing track using drone and minor tonality but no harmonic changes ie uses one chord all the way through. It uses simple musical techniques to achieve an intense emotional effect.
Official classification: Poetry, Video, Minor Scales, Chord progressions, Drone, Curriculum support, Slavery
Displaying 1 to 16 of 16 resources labelled with 'Chord progressions'