Master Music Theory for Choir Excellence

Elevate your vocal ministry with comprehensive music theory knowledge designed specifically for Singers and Instrumentalists

What is Music Theory?

Music theory is a practice musicians use to understand and communicate the language of music. Musical theory examines the fundamentals of music. It also provides a system to interpret musical compositions. Music theory is a great tool for electronic and pop musicians to elevate tracks.

For example, basic music theory defines the elements that form harmony, melody, and rhythm. It identifies compositional elements such as song form, tempo, notes, chords, key signatures, intervals, scales, and more. It also recognizes musical qualities such as pitch, tone, timbre, texture, dynamics, and others.

How to Learn Music Theory?

Music theory is a complex and extensive subject. There are several practices, disciplines, and concepts.

Best to learn music fundamentals first before exploring advanced music theory. The building blocks that form musical compositions include:

  • Harmony
  • Melody
  • Rhythm

Solidly understanding these three core elements will help you learn basic music theory.

What Is Harmony in Music?

Harmony is when multiple notes or voices play simultaneously to produce a new sound. The combined sounds in harmonies complement one another and sound pleasing.

Chords and chord progressions are examples of harmony. A chord has three or more notes that play at the same time. The chords and chord progressions in a piece of music support or complement the melody.

Combining vocal parts also creates harmony. The combined voices of a choir are a perfect example. The multiple voices that make up a choir blend to make a harmonious sound.

Dissonant Harmony

Dissonant harmony adds notes that do not sound pleasant when played together. The result adds tension and makes the chord sound unstable. This tension releases by resolving to consonant chords. Dissonant interval examples are seconds, sevenths, and ninths.

Consonant Harmony

Consonant harmony sounds stable and pleasing. All the notes in a consonant chord have intervals that play nicely together. Constant chords also transition smoothly with one another in a progression. Consonant interval examples are unison, thirds, fifths, and octaves.

Musicians combine consonant and dissonant harmonies to make the music more exciting and intriguing.

What Is Melody in Music?

Melody is a succession of notes or voices arranged into a musical phrase. A song's melody is often the most memorable and recognizable part.

Melodies can be created with instruments or vocals. They have two or more notes in a sequence that sound musically pleasing. Most compositions consist of multiple melodies that repeat.

The two primary elements of a melody are:

Pitch

Pitch is the audio vibration produced by an instrument or voice. It's how high or low a note will sound. Arranging these pitches in a series creates a melody.

Rhythm (Duration)

Rhythm or duration is the length each pitch will sound. These durations are divided into beat divisions like whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, triplets, etc.

Types of Melodic Motion:

Conjunct Motion

Conjunct motion is when notes move by whole or half steps. Conjunct is also the most natural and comfortable to play and sing. There are shorter leaps between notes.

Disjunct Motion

Disjunct motion has larger leaps between notes. Large interval leaps between notes can make the melody difficult to play or sing. Disjunct motion is also less memorable and smooth sounding.

Musicians combine conjunct and disjunct motion to give melodies more variation and interest.

What Is Rhythm in Music?

Rhythm is an essential element of music with more than one meaning. For example:

  • Rhythm is a recurring movement of notes and rests (silences) in time. It's the human perception of time.
  • Rhythm also describes a pattern of strong and weak notes or voices that repeat throughout a song. These patterns can be created with drums, percussion, instruments, and vocals.

The basic elements that comprise musical rhythm include:

Beat

A repeating pulse that underlies a musical pattern

Meter

A specific pattern of strong and weak pulses

Time Signature

The number of beats per measure

Tempo (BPM)

Indicates how fast or slow a piece of music plays

Strong and Weak Beats

Strong beats are the downbeats, and weak beats are the offbeats

Syncopation

Rhythms that accent or emphasize the offbeats

Accents

Refers to the intensity or emphases placed on notes

Understanding rhythm will help you create great harmonies and melodies. Also, the rhythm section or pulse propels a piece of music. It acts as the rhythmic backbone for other musical elements.

The Benefits of Music Theory: Why Study Music Theory?

Learning basic music theory is essential for enhancing creativity and developing musical awareness. It's a challenging but rewarding set of skills to learn.

Knowing how music works will make the music production process easier and help you become an effective music producer.

Is learning music theory required? No. However, you can benefit from learning some aspects of music theory.

For example, learning basic music theory will:

Improve your musical development
Help you understand how music works
Help you break through creative blocks
Make it easier to build chord progressions and melodies
Help you make informed composition decisions
Help you achieve expression and evoke emotion
Improve your critical listening skills
Speed up your workflow
Improve your musical form skills
Make it easy to communicate with other musicians
Deepen your appreciation for music
Improve your improvisation skills
Improve your song arrangement skills
Help you discover new creative possibilities

Note: Musical theory is not a set of rules or guidelines you must follow. It's only a tool to help you understand and explain how music works.

The Fundamentals of Music Theory

This basic music theory for beginner's guide examines the core music fundamentals. It also provides insight into the basic building blocks of music that form harmony, melody, and rhythm.

Musical Notes and Intervals

The Music Alphabet

Notes are the building blocks for all music. The musical alphabet consists of seven letters: A, B, C, D, E, F, G. Each note has a unique pitch.

The 12 Keys of Music

There are 12 notes on the piano keyboard: A, A#/B♭, B, C, C#/D♭, D, D#/E♭, E, F, F#/G♭, G, G#/A♭.

The same 12 notes repeat upwards and downwards in octaves.

White Keys

The white keys on a piano play the "natural" notes in a scale: A, B, C, D, E, F, G. Playing only white keys places you in either the key of C major or A minor.

Black Keys

The black keys on a piano play the "flat" and "sharp" notes in a scale: A#/B♭, C#/D♭, D#/E♭, F#/G♭, G#/A♭. Each note has a symbol: ♭ for flat and # for sharp.

Intervals

An interval is a distance between two notes. There are several intervals. Measure these intervals by the number of half steps, whole steps, and their position in the scale.

  • A half step interval is one semitone
  • A whole step interval is two semitones
  • Two half steps make a whole-step

Furthermore, we describe intervals by number (distance) and prefix (quality). The interval number represents the number of half-steps between two notes. These numbers are 1st (unison), 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th (octave).

Lastly, intervals have using a prefix to describe their quality. The five interval qualities are major (M), minor (m), perfect (P), augmented (A), and diminished (d).

Octaves

Octaves are the next highest or lowest pitch of the same note. The interval between a note and a note double its frequency is an octave. For example, an octave up from C1 on a piano is C2. An octave down would be C0.

There are 12 semitones in the octave. These pitches repeat in the same order throughout the range of human hearing.

Music Scales and Modes

Music Scales

A music scale is a set of notes within an octave arranged by their pitch. The ascending or descending interval relationships among the note pitches define each scale. Moreover, the notes from a scale form melodies and harmonies.

Major Scales

There are twelve possible natural major scales. Natural major scales are bright, uplifting, and happy sounding.

The seven notes in all major scales follow the same interval pattern: W-W-H-W-W-W-H (whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half).

Minor Scales

Natural minor scales are dark, sad, and emotional sounding. The seven notes in all minor scales follow the same interval pattern: W-H-W-W-H-W-W (whole-half-whole-whole-half-whole-whole).

There are twelve possible natural minor scales. In addition, there are three variations of the minor scale: natural, harmonic, and melodic.

Scale Degrees

Each note of a scale has a specific name related to its function, called a scale degree. The name is the function, and a number indicates its position on the scale.

1st – Tonic
2nd – Supertonic
3rd – Mediant
4th – Subdominant
5th – Dominant
6th – Submediant
7th – Leading Tone

Music can create and release tension. The function of a scale degree relates to the amount of tension created. It also helps you decide what note(s) should follow to resolve the tension.

Music Modes

Musical modes are scales derived from a parent scale. There are seven music modes.

Each mode is a slight variation of a scale. They use all the same notes and interval patterns as the parent scale. The main difference is the root note used to build the scale.

I – Ionian (major scale)
ii – Dorian (major scale starting on the 2nd degree)
iii – Phrygian (major scale starting on the 3rd degree)
IV – Lydian (major scale starting on the 4th degree)
V – Mixolydian (major scale starting on the 5th degree)
vi – Aeolian (natural minor scale)
vii – Locrian (major scale starting on the 7th degree)

Chords and Chord Extensions

Musical Chords

A chord is a combination of two or more notes played at the same time. They're built off a single starting note called the root.

Major

Has a major third and a perfect fifth above the root

Minor

Has a minor third and a perfect fifth above the root

Diminished

Has a minor third and a diminished fifth above the root

Augmented

Has a major third and an augmented fifth above the root

Chord Progressions

A chord progression or a harmonic progression is an ordered series of chords. Chord progressions support both the melody and the rhythm. They also provide the foundation for creating harmony and melody.

Roman Numeral Analysis

Roman numerals indicate the chords in a progression. They identify the musical key and the root note for each chord. For example, "IV" means the chord is built on the fourth degree of a scale.

Uppercase Roman numerals represent major chords, while lowercase numerals represent minor chords. For example, a chord progression in the key of C major would look like I-vi-IV-V (C-Am-F-G).

Conclusion

Music theory will give you a deeper understanding of music. But it's also essential to remember musical theory is not hard rules. It's a tool to help you create, understand, and communicate music.

There are several ways to practice music theory. Try applying the concepts in this guide to your workflow.

Ready to Apply What You've Learned?

Start incorporating these music theory concepts into your choir practice and watch your musical understanding flourish!