Large Forms: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Rhythm & Form]] | [[Category:Rhythm, Meter & Form]] | ||
[[Category:Theory 3]] | [[Category:Theory 3]] | ||
[[Category:Twentieth-Century Techniques]] | [[Category:Twentieth-Century Techniques]] | ||
Revision as of 21:44, 20 July 2020
| This lesson is part of the Rhythm, Meter & Form category. |
Objectives
- Students will be able to analyze a composition using formal notation (A, A’, B, etc.).
- Students will be familiar with common forms such as sonata allegro, da capo aria, and popular song form.
Resources
Reading:
- Hutchinson, Music Theory for the 21st-Century Classroom
- Covach, “Form in Rock Music: A Primer”
- Open Music Theory
- Peres, Top 40 Theory
- “Don't Bore Us, but Don't Rush to the Chorus”
- “The Chainsmokers ft. Halsey — ‘Closer’: Crafting the Chorus”
- “Everything You Need to Know About the Postchorus”
- “About that Chorus in Bed Rexha’s ‘I’m a Mess’”
- “A Sonic Twist in the Plot: The Bridge in Modern Pop”
- “The PostChorus-Bridge Switcheroo”
- “Recycling the Chorus in Zedd & Elley Duhé’s ‘Happy Now’”
- “The Internal Sonic Progression in Bebe Rexha’s “I’m a Mess’”
- “Sonic Meta-Progressions in Pop Songs”
Class Activities
- Discussion and definition of the concept of formal analysis, and of common large-scale forms
- Formal analysis of music in different genres and time periods
- Creation of a compositional formal blueprint based around two or three given melodies or motives
Assignments
- Comprehension questions
- Formal analysis of written and recorded music
- Creation of a formal blueprint for a piece to meet given criteria