Grade 6 Harmony Course and Exercises Preview
Grade 6 Harmony Course and Exercises Preview
Grade 6 Harmony Course and Exercises Preview
com
Grade Six
Harmony
Complete Course, Exercises & Answers
PREVIEW
(ABRSM Syllabus)
BY
www.mymusictheory.com
Victoria Williams www.mymusictheory.com
Grade 6 Harmony Course
Music Teachers
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BY
www.mymusictheory.com
Victoria Williams www.mymusictheory.com
Grade 6 Harmony Course
A1 INTRODUCTION TO HARMONY
What is harmony? The first three questions in the ABRSM Grade Six Music Theory Exam are all
about harmony - but what exactly do we mean by "harmony"?
When we look at music with our analytical hats on, we can think about it in two different ways. We
can look at it from left to right - this is the melody and rhythm. Or, we can look at it from top to
bottom - this is the harmony.
For example, here are a few bars by Bach from his "O haupt voll Blut und Wunden". There are 4
melodic lines (or "voices") here, the soprano, alto, tenor and bass.
Soprano:
Alto
Tenor
Bass
On each beat of the bar, those four voices combine to make chords. The science of how we combine
notes into chords, and how the chords work together, is called "harmony".
TONAL HARMONY
For Grade 6, we are going to study Tonal Harmony. This just means that we're going to focus on the
kinds of chords used by composers from roughly the 17th to the 19th centuries - composers like
Bach, Mozart, Haydn and Schubert.
Chord inversions
How to complete a bass line and add a suitable figured bass (Q.1b in the exam)
How to recognise "melodic decoration" (which means notes which aren't part of the main
chords)
TRIADS
A triad is a 3-note chord. Take a note (call it the "root"), add a third and a fifth above it, and you have
created a triad. (All triads are chords, but not all chords are triads.)
Take a note: We'll take an F:
or a minor third:
or a minor triad:
We can also build a triad with a minor 3rd and a diminished 5th, like this:
Look at each degree of the major scale and see if it produces a major, minor or diminished triad.
We normally use the harmonic (not melodic) variety of the scale to work out triads in music theory.
Watch out! Chord 3 is an augmented triad- rarely used in practice.
NAMING TRIADS
Here are three methods we can use to name triads:
1. We can use the letter name of the root of the triad, and then add either "major", "minor" or
"diminished" (or "augmented") to it.
E.g. C major (or just "C" for short), E minor (or "Em") and B diminished ("B dim").
2. We can use Roman numerals. Each degree of the scale gets a Roman numeral. We use capitals for
major, small letters for minor, and a small circle for diminished. (Augmented chords have a + sign,
but we don't use them in grade 6.)
Major Scales:
1
ii
iii
IV
vi
vii
Minor Scales:
1
ii
iv
VI
vii
3. We can use the technical name of the degree of the scale, plus major/minor/diminished as
needed.
1
tonic
supertonic
mediant
subdominant
dominant
submediant
leading
note
The Roman numeral system is the most useful, because it lets us understand the triad in relation to
the key of the music, and it's a nice, short way of writing triads. Make sure you learn the Roman
numerals!
NAMING CHORDS
Triads are very "theoretical" things - we use them a lot when we analyse music, but we don't see
them so often in practice. Triads only have 3 notes, but in real life, chords usually have more than 3
notes. Very often they have 4 notes, but can have many more.
The simplest kind of 4-note chord is a triad with the root repeated in a higher octave. (Sometimes
the third or fifth of the triad is repeated instead of the root.)
Chords which contain only the notes which already exist in the triad use the same naming systems
as triads, so this is C major, or I (in the key of C major).
Another kind of 4-note chord is one which has a note added which doesn't exist in the triad, for
example this one:
Here we've got a G major triad, with an F at the top. F is an interval of a 7th above the root, G, so we
call this chord G7, or V7 (in C major). Or we can use the technical name of "dominant seventh" (in C
major). Dominant seventh chords are extremely common. You've probably come across lots of them
in your music making, but in fact for grade six music theory, you only need to be able to recognise
them - you don't have to actually write any! :)
Minor
Diminished
Major
Major
Major
Minor
Diminished
EXERCISE 2
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
F minor ii
Gb major VI
G# major V
A# dim vii
Ab minor ii
B dim ii
F# minor i
D minor vi
F minor i
EXERCISE 3
10