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18.5: Purpose of Common Progressions

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    258592
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    How Do I Get Better At Ear Training?

    As with learning any new skill, there is no single path to mastering aural skills and hearing harmonic progressions. However, there are some common themes as we progress through the process of adding new tools to our musical toolbox. One of those themes is the idea of chunking, or grouping information together. This was mentioned with the coverage of cadences. If we can group pieces of information together and recognize them together, it minimizes the amount of information our brain is being asked to process at one time.

    When learning English, we learn about individual sounds and then sounds that are combined. The letter "C" alone makes one sound, but when we combine "C" and "H," we get a new sound. Our brain starts to recognize the combination of those sounds as a common pair and can process them as a group.

    Chordal "Chunks"

    In practicing hearing these common progressions, we can more easily recognize entire groups of information at one time. If I hear three chords that sound like an embellishment of a tonic chord because the bass note (do) stays the same, I can process three different chord qualities and the bass line all at the same time.

    This not only helps us to see the bigger picture of the phrase of music, but also cuts down on the number of times we might need to listen to an example or a song to write it down.

    Listen to this progression and follow along with the music. The "chunks" are broken up for you. The first two overlap. You will hear a pedal 6/4 followed by a passing 6/4. A root position subdominant (IV) connects the progression to the cadential 6/4.

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    Pedal 6/4, passing 6/4, IV chord, and cadential 6/4

    Note

    We could also identify this as a perfect authentic cadence. Combining our knowledge of cadences and these common 6/4 chord progressions, we can determine the bass line for the last three chords (sol-sol-do) and the final two soprano notes (ti-do) along with our Roman numeral analysis.


    This page titled 18.5: Purpose of Common Progressions 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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