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1.1: Pitch Introduction

  • Page ID
    325102
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    Learning Outcomes

    By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:

    • Identify pitch classes
    • Describe the difference between "moveable" and "fixed" do
    • Identify common three-note pitch patterns
    • Sing a basic melody with both solfège and scale degree numbers

    Elements of Music

    When we ask the question, "what is music?" we often come back to descriptions of the basic elements of music: sound and silence. Music, in its raw form, is a series of sounds of differing wavelengths and of varying durations. When we study the elements of music in an academic setting, we find that notation is one important way for us to understand what we are hearing.

    Although this process of learning music encompasses reading musical notation and turning it into sound, the strengthening of our musical ear is an important part of the process as a whole. It is a skill that requires intentional practice and will be in a continual state of development for as long as we call ourselves musicians.

    Sound

    Varying amplitudes of a sound waveIf you are technically minded and would like to get into the physics of sound waves and frequencies, I recommend checking out Sound: an Interactive eBook(opens in new window). For those looking for a less technical way of thinking about sound, we measure sound waves in Hertz (Hz) and the different pitches of musical scales are determined by the size and frequency of the wavelengths. Many instruments are tuned to produce a limited number of pitches that are used in the scales developed in the European art music tradition. Other instruments, including the human voice, can produce many different pitches for a wider variety of musical scales.

    Silence

    To make music interesting, pitches and sounds are held for varying lengths of time. In musical terminology, we consider a pattern of sounds and silences to be the rhythm.

    Key Terms

    • Pitch: the element of music that is determined by the size and frequency of sound waves
    • Rhythm: the pattern of sounds and silences
    • Pitch classes: the grouping of all pitches with the same letter name
    • Solfège: a method of attaching syllables to notes
    • Step: the distance from one note to the next closest letter name
    • Skip: the distance from one note to another that skips a letter name
    • Interval: the distance between notes
    • Tonic: the first scale degree
    • Leading tone: the seventh scale degree

    This page titled 1.1: Pitch Introduction is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.

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