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Copyright Society for Music Theory Mar 2015

Abstract

A number of these offer excellent opportunities for deep and creative engagements with the book's materials; it is typical in later chapters to ask students to improvise new top or inner voices over the bass line of a repertoire example, or to improvise variations in several styles on a given tune (477). The exercises here all require close listening, sometimes with scores, but mostly without.\n Prefacing these exercises, the authors write "[j]ust as there are strong and weak beats in a metric context, certain pitches will seem to have greater weight than the ones around them" (18), but as there are no such exercises in duple or quadruple meters, it will be easy for an observant student to create strong conceptual associations between embellishing melodic function and the weak beat(s) in triple meter.

Details

Title
Review of Evan Jones, Matthew Shaftel, and Juan Chattah, Aural Skills in Context: A Comprehensive Approach to Sight Singing, Ear Training, Harmony, and Improvisation (Oxford, 2014)
Author
Fieldman, Hali A
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Mar 2015
Publisher
Society for Music Theory
e-ISSN
10673040
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1669445574
Copyright
Copyright Society for Music Theory Mar 2015