Alan Belkin - General Principles of Harmony
Alan Belkin - General Principles of Harmony
Presentation
This book is the final installment in a series of four short works on the teaching of musical composition. Its aim is to provide some general principles of harmony, in concise, practical terms, and to provide guidance for student composers. This will not be a "theory" text, nor an analysis treatise, but rather a guide to some of the basic tools of the trade. This book is the last in a series. The others are: Form, Counterpoint, and Orchestration. All are based on my own experience as a composer. This series is dedicated to the memory of my teacher and friend Marvin Duchow, one of the rare true scholars, a musician of immense depth and sensitivity, and a man of unsurpassed kindness and generosity.
A note concerning the musical examples: All the musical examples here are my own, and covered by copyright. Unless indicated otherwise, most are intended for piano or for strings.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Why this book? Discussion of other approaches Limits of our discussion A new approach to understanding harmony 2. Basics A definition of harmony Intervals Chords Progressions 3. Principles of coherence and continuity Pitch and interval limitations Linear aspects: melody and bass lines; voice leading An aside: open vs. closed harmonic systems Hierarchy, landmarks, cadences 4. Principles of movement, interest and variety General aspects of harmonic accent Creating momentum and renewing interest on various structural levels Locally
2 Higher Levels Harmonic rhythm Modulation and harmonic transition Transitions between various types of harmony Harmony, texture, and orchestration Spacing and register Doubling Timbre Harmony with multiple planes of tone Criteria for evaluating harmony; pedagogy Bibliography, acknowledgements