Composition Course Lesson 1
Composition Course Lesson 1
Composition
with Sérgio Assad
INTRODUCTION
Welcome to the tonebase Composition
Course! This course is an excellent first step
toward the world of composition and
harmony. If you’ve never written as much
as the shortest melody before, don’t worry.
While sharing his step-by-step process,
Sergio Assad writes a sixteen-bar
composition for the guitar, walking you
through the process of writing your own
from scratch. While this course is geared
toward those who play guitar, anyone is
willing to watch, regardless of your
primary instrument or background in
music theory. Whether you’re a music
theory expert or don’t know the first thing
about chords, this course will get you
writing in no time!
LESSON 1:
GETTING STARTED
SINGING EXERCISE
ASSIGNMENT #1
CHORDS
Depending on your current level of knowledge, you are free to skip as much as you feel
comfortable with. However, there’s no harm in taking a few moments to review!
Notes are arranged into scales, either Major or Minor, and these form the basis of
virtually all Western music. Below are two scales beginning on the note C, Major on the
left and Minor on the right.
Chords, three or more notes played together, are constructed from these scales. A C
Major chord, for example, begins on C and contains two other notes from the C Major
scale stacked in thirds above it (C, E, and G). The E is called the third of C Major, and the
G is called the fifth. Chords can be stacked from any note within a scale. By stacking thirds
above each note of a scale, six other chords can be generated.
Composition Course 06
For example, the key of C Major contains D minor, E minor, F major, G major, A minor,
and B diminished. All of these chords are considered to be in the key of C Major.
Similarly, examine all the chords contained within A Minor: B diminished, C major, D
minor, E minor, F major, and G major.
The chords contained within a particular scale are called diatonic chords, since they
come straight from the notes within that key. Musicians often label diatonic chords with
roman numerals, like I, IV, or V, which define the chord in relation to the key. (Ex: If I is
A Minor, IV is D Minor, VI is F Major, etc.)
There is one more quality of chord that’s useful to know for this exercise, but not
essential: the half-diminished chord. Half-diminished chords can be found by stacking
a seventh chord with the seventh note of a Major Scale. A B half-diminished chord
contains the notes B, D, F, and A.
Composition Course 07
ASSIGNMENT #2
To help develop a greater understanding of major and minor chords, stack each
note of the G Major scale in thirds, and label the chords that result. The first one
is completed for you. When you're done, check your work on page 24!
DOMINANTS
All this is to say that V in a minor key will almost always be altered so that it contains a
major third.
When dominant chords resolve to tonic chords, tension is released. For this reason,
composers like to make dominant chords more tense in order to have a bigger release.
This is done by adding more dissonant notes. Dominant chords almost always contain a
seventh. In fact, without the seventh, they’re nothing more than a major chord. For
example, if E major is a V chord and it’s functioning as a dominant, it will have a seventh,
a D-natural, added to it. With the seventh, a dominant chord can also be called a seventh
chord (ex: “E-seven”, written E7: E, G-sharp, B, and D).
ASSIGNMENT #3
Spell out a V7 chord in the following keys: D minor, A major, and C-sharp
minor. The first one is already done for you. Check your work on page 24!
Composition Course 09
SCALE-CHORD THEORY
There are several different scales you could use over each of these chords. However, Assad
recommends certain scales that refer to a very idiomatic way of writing for classical guitar.
That is, they are usually easy to play on guitar and have been used in much of the most
popular repertoire. Play around with the following scales throughout the range of your
guitar, and use them to invent your own melodies. Assad suggests using the A Natural
Minor scale over the tonic chord, pictured below. The notes A, C, and E are chord tones,
suggesting they are more important for creating melodies.
Next comes D Minor, for which Assad uses the D Dorian scale. Here, D, F, and A are chord
tones.
Finally, over E7, Assad will use the A harmonic minor scale. Yes, you read that right- Assad
uses a scale that starts on A for an E chord. Why would he do that? It turns out that the
harmonic minor scale contains notes that sounds very tense over the E7. A harmonic
minor contains a G-sharp, an important note that also serves as the leading tone to A. In
this instance, since the chord itself is E7, the chord tones are still E, G-sharp, B, and D.
Composition Course 10
ASSIGNMENT #4
Experiment with these three scales (A natural minor, D minor, and A harmonic
minor) until they feel very comfortable. Play them across the range of the guitar,
in any order you want. No restrictions!
CHORD VARIATIONS
There are countless ways to alter chords Composers can also put a note in the
to make them more expressive. Below bass line other than the root. For a D
are two that Assad uses early on in his Minor chord, D is the root, and it’s most
example composition: common for D to also be in the bass.
However, as Assad does in his piece, it’s
A note that composers often add is the also possible to put F in the bass instead.
sharp-five. The fifth note of E Major, B,
SECONDARY DOMINANTS
To generate even more tension and release, composers like to use chords other than
diatonic chords. A common choice is to use what is called a secondary dominant. Remember
that V is the dominant to I because it’s a major chord built on the fifth scale degree (for
example, A Minor’s dominant chord is built on E).
Let’s pick another diatonic chord within A Minor, perhaps D Minor, the IV chord. A very
pleasing way to lead into D Minor would be with the dominant of D Minor, or A7. A7
would therefore be a secondary dominant in the key of A Minor.
If these harmonic concepts are very new to you, take your time to study them before
jumping into composition directly. Of course, you are free to compose your own piece
with simpler chords and work your way up to these more complicated ones. Remember
that there are no firm rules on how to connect chords to one another!