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  • So, we found seven triads that we can derive from the major scale.

  • We're now going to focus on the three major ones.

  • That was the C-Major,

  • [MUSIC]

  • The F-Major,

  • [MUSIC]

  • And the G-Major,.

  • [MUSIC]

  • These ones are important.

  • They've become important through time in a Common Practice classical music,

  • and also in a lot of Jazz and Pop, and Rock.

  • And, Folk music as well in fact.

  • It's sometimes referred to as the Three Chord Trick.

  • I'll start off by giving them their formal name.

  • So the C-Major chord.

  • [MUSIC]

  • Built on the tonic is the Tonic triad.

  • [MUSIC]

  • The G-Major one, built on the fifth degree, is the Dominant.

  • [MUSIC]

  • And that refers to its importance in that name.

  • The F-Major,

  • [MUSIC]

  • Is the Subdominant, one underneath the dominant.

  • And there they are written out for you.

  • And as lead sheet notation.

  • Now, when we're harmonizing a melody, in the kind of music that we're talking about

  • here, it's normal to have the melodic note be a member of a chord that's backing it.

  • Okay?

  • Not so much as we move into Jazz and

  • 19th century classical music, or Rock in the 70s.

  • But on the whole, we can expect to

  • hear a strong melody note existing inside its chord.

  • So, in other words, if I want my melody note to be a C.

  • [MUSIC]

  • In the key of C major then it's a good

  • chance I am going to have a C-Major chord underneath it

  • [MUSIC]

  • Or maybe the F-Major chord

  • [MUSIC]

  • Because that also has a C in it.

  • And so what we are going to do now is we are going to look at the

  • major scale and see how each note can be harmonized by one of these three chords.

  • So again, starting with my opening example C

  • [Plays C]

  • With a C-Major chord or with an F-Major chord

  • [Plays chords]

  • Now we move up to the note D the second note.

  • [Plays D]

  • And the only triad out of our three that has this is the G-Major triad.

  • [Chord]

  • So we're going to harmonize it with the dominant.

  • [Chord]

  • The next one, next note is E, and that exists in the tonic triad, in the C-Major.

  • [Plays E]

  • The next note in the scale is F, and that exists in the F-Major, the sub dominant.

  • [Plays F]

  • When we get back up to the G.

  • Again we can have a G-Major chord with it, the dominant

  • [MUSIC]

  • Or we can have the C-Major called with it,

  • [MUSIC]

  • When we get to the A, this lives inside the F-Major chord,

  • [MUSIC]

  • Up to the B, and the chord that has that inside it is only the G-Major chord, so.

  • [MUSIC].

  • And then when we get back to C again, we can finish on the C tonic.

  • [MUSIC]

  • We could also play the F-Major,.

  • [MUSIC]

  • But I think you'll hear that most likely our piece of music will finish

  • [MUSIC]

  • From the B.

  • [MUSIC]

  • With the G to the C, with the tonic chord.

  • Again, this is really something you just have

  • to sit down and play through for yourself.

  • But you'll see that it totally works.

  • And with those three chords, you could write a hit.

  • Who knows, there's been quite a few like it.

  • Now, - just hearing these three chords in a

  • slightly different context, I could make them sound like this.

  • [Chords sounding Classical]

  • Or, they can sound like this.

  • [Chords sounding Rock 'n Roll]

  • So you can see, and you probably recognize both of those "sounds" that come from that.

  • So that is your three chord trick.

  • Your tonic.

  • Your dominant.

  • Your subdominant.

  • And that's going to become more important in the coming lectures,

  • especially in the later lectures in, series four and five.

  • But for now, I just want to leave you

  • with the fact that with the set of white notes,

  • confining ourselves to just, white notes of the piano and

  • C major scale, we found three different kinds of triads.

  • We found all sorts of internal relationships which

  • already give us the possibility of making music.

  • [BLANK_AUDIO]

So, we found seven triads that we can derive from the major scale.

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講義1.5-プライマリー (Coursera - 音楽理論の基礎6) (Lecture 1.5 - Primary (Coursera - Fundamentals of Music Theory 6))

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    songwen8778 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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