Learning harmony is anything but easy...
While there are rules that are more or less always valid, it's not an exact science.
The risk of choosing the wrong method is very high, the danger of doing useless exercises is always lurking, and the fear of wasting time, and often also money, with approaches that only create more confusion threatens every musician!
Our brain processes information in a certain order, which is why the order in which you study topics is as important as the topics themselves!
Learning the right chords, practicing them in the right order, allows you to avoid confusion and helps you learn smoothly, giving you that gratification that only music can give!
I'm Richardus, the Musicus Practicus of the web, and in this Musicus' Guide, I'll show you a very effective path that I have personally tested, and with which I have seen remarkable progress with my Apprentice Musicians all over the world through my online lessons!
I will reply to you within 24 hours and will show you which is the best path for you
When we talk about harmony, we are discussing an aspect of musical composition that's as important as others.
Harmony is what describes the vertical dimension of music, in simpler terms, chords.
It's also true that thinking of a composition only in terms of chords is a very limited approach. In fact, there are other techniques to learn, such as counterpoint and musical rhetoric.
Harmony (Chords), Counterpoint (Melodies), Rhetoric (Figura Suspirans)
Now let's break down the Harmony journey into stages, each with specific and precise skills to learn.
The first important stage of this journey is the study of consonances and chords that do not contain dissonances in their construction.
Consonances are those intervals that sound good (from the Latin cum-sonare), and in music, there are four, or in some cases five:
Consonances
The chords formed by these consonances are:
Chords with Consonances
If consonances are intervals that sound good together, dissonances are intervals that do not sound good together and therefore require special treatment, which in my online lessons and in The Partimento Method, I call the PSR Rule, that is, Preparation, Suspension, and Resolution Rule.
Dissonances
The chords formed by these dissonances are:
Chords with Dissonances
Dissonances can also be simple or double.
Simple dissonances, with their resolutions, are also known as:
Simple Dissonances
Double dissonances, with their resolutions, are also known as:
Double Dissonances (or Double Suspensions)
Once you've become proficient in mastering consonances and dissonances, the third stage of this journey is the study of chromaticism and diminutions.
Chromaticism is the use of sharps and flats in a succession of chords.
Chromaticism (organe notes)
Diminutions are the use of different notes that do not affect the harmony but are useful for better connecting two chords.
It's essential to recognize them to know on which bass note the right chord should be placed, thus avoiding mistakes and creating the most effective combination.
Diminutions (orange notes)
Without guidance, you risk getting lost in the desert
Without practice, skills deteriorate
If you don't change the Method, Results won't improve
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