Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header about About Home Profiles articles Tools forums inspirational quotes About facebook Twitter YouTube Blog
Share for a Cause











An Overview Of The 7 Elements Of Music

Guest post by: Teresa Rose

Article Overview: Have you heard something about the 7 elements of music in lessons or in class? Don't worry about trying to understand all there is to know about this right now. If you are a beginner in music, only the first few should be your focus. This is just a way of breaking a piece of music into smaller units so that it is easier to learn and understand.

Free Download - An Overview Of The 7 Elements Of Music By Teresa Rose
Name: Email:

An Overview Of The 7 Elements Of Music

Have you heard something about the 7 elements of music in lessons or in class? Don't worry about trying to understand all there is to know about this right now. If you are a beginner in music, only the first few should be your focus. This is just a way of breaking a piece of music into smaller units so that it is easier to learn and understand.

The phrase "elements of music" is language for the different parts that make up music. This is one of the first things you learn in a music introductory course.

There are a total of 7 elements of music to learn according to the National Standards for Arts Education. The goal here is to define these terms for you in simple language that makes it easier to understand.

1. Pitch - the low and high quality of sound. Pitch describes how low or high a sound is.

2. Rhythm - silence and sound organized in time. We can hear short and long durations of silence and sound moving to a steady pulse similar to your heart beat.

3. Harmony - a group of pitches sounding together. What's widely used is a chord to represent harmony. It is 3 or more notes sounding together.

4. Dynamics - how loud or soft music is. There are sometimes markings in music that tell the performer how loud or soft to play certain parts. The music then becomes more interesting to play or listen to.

5. Timbre - distinct sound native to the voice or instrument. Tone color is also what this is sometimes called. This is similar to an artist's palette of color. There are a variety of sounds that can be created from one instrument or voice.

6. Texture - the vertical and horizontal relationships within music. This is something you will discover as you continue learning to read music. There are occasions when a composer creates a simple melody with little harmony. This is an example of a very "thin" texture. In other cases, the composer likes to write using a lot of action in the melody line with heavy chords underneath. A "thick" texture is what this represents. Some music sounds a lot more complicated than others when you listen to it. The texture of the music is what you are hearing.

7. Form - how written music is designed and organized. An academic paper is written similar to how form is used in music. There is usually an introduction, a body, and a conclusion. Music can sometimes be organized in this way also. Sometimes composers write music with a specific form in mind. In other instances, the music is created first and then analyzed to see what happens as a result.

Don't get caught up in trying to understand all of the 7 elements of music right now if you are new to learning music. Be careful not to get paralyzed by this amount of information. It can keep you from moving forward in your learning. For those learning to read music for the first time, you will mainly want to focus on pitch and rhythm.

While it is good to know about the general parts that music is made up of, keep focused on what you are learning right now. All of this will become more understandable in time as you dive deeper into your learning.

Related Articles
  Is Reading Music Really That Important?
  7 Ways to Make Your Home Page a Home Run for Usability
  The First Written Music - An Evolving Process
  The Language Of Music - A Form Of Musical Communication
  Work to the Beat!
  Smart Women Know How to Make Music
  Video Marketing Consistency
  Health Habits: Play That Funky Music!
  EASY STEPS FOR MUSIC DOWNLOAD ON IPHONE
  FRANCHINSING - ARE YOU READY TO GROW - ELEMENT 1
  How Music Affects Employee Performance
  Finding and using your Talent with T.I.M.
  Lesson #4: Live Big, Think Bigger
  Music on Hold - Is your legal?
  Simple Money Making Method Posting Url links
  Becoming An Online Entrepreneur: Adding Musical Layers To Your Marketing
  Perception
  Three Little Birds Tweet by my Window
  How To Get A Canadian Business Loan For Franchise Funding – Solid Franchising Lending Tips
  Why You Want Your Design Layout to Look Like CRAP!

Home > Home-Based-Business > Teresa Rose > An Overview Of The 7 Elements Of Music >
Article Tags: 7 elements of music, elements of music
Referred by: http://www.cyns-home-biz.com

About the Author: Teresa Rose
RSS for Teresa's articles - Visit Teresa's website

Teresa Rose is a private music instructor that holds a B.M. and M.M. in music education, National Certification in Teaching Music, and a K-12 music educators license. She enjoys helping people learn music and especially how to learn to read music. Please visit her website to learn about music on a variety of topics and sign up for her free newsletter.

Click here to visit Teresa's website
Dashed Line

More from Teresa Rose
Is Reading Music Really That Important
The Language Of Music A Form Of Musical Communication
The First Written Music An Evolving Process
An Overview Of The 7 Elements Of Music
Benefits of Learning An Instrument Is It Really Worth My Time


Related Forum Posts
Elements of Style Elements of Style - Can't comment on the two books you listed, but Strunk and White's Elements of Style belong on every writer's shelf.
Elements of Style Elements of Style - [quote="BuzzAroundBooks.com":285x8n54]Thanks for the book recommendation OmnivoreInk! But can I ask if "Elements of Style" provides any tips on writing professional ad or web copy?[/quote:285x8n54] Well... kinda sorta. It is a reference work that you can use to check on proper grammar (the difference between "then" and "than" and "affect" and "effect," for example, whether commas belongs inside or outside quotation marks, stuff like that.
Re: Urban market promotion Re: Urban market promotion - [quote="myownboss":38izvbws]This could be interesting - how can we learn more about your service?[/quote:38izvbws] Depending on what your particular product or service is, there are a number of possible vehicles. At this time, I'm working on an Urban Music related tour across Canada, which would be an interesting opportunity for an entrepreneur, company or business group to align their product or service with this concept. Fire me off an email to discuss this in more detail: info@soundsupremacy.com. Cheers.
You Can Start From Some Where! You Can Start From Some Where! - I have always found stories like these interesting. When you can see and understand that many famous, successful people like these usually start off in places worse than we're at. It think they brings our goals a little closer and makes them more tangible... * Dan Akroyd was a mail sorter for Canada's national postal service. * Jennifer Aniston was both a telemarketer and waitress before hitting it big. * Halle Berry worked at Higbee's Department store in the children's department. * Sandra Bullock worked as a bartender. * Before his big break, country singer Kenny Chesney worked as a valet attendant, telemarketer and mail sorter. * Chubby Checker plucked chickens at a poultry market named Henry Colt's. * Before Nirvana, the late Kurt Cobain worked as a janitor for Lemons Janitorial Service. * Diddy was an intern at Uptown Records where he did grunt work like washing cars & fetching coffee. * Bill Cosby shined shoes and sold produce when he was young. * Simon Cowell started out as a mail room clerk for EMI Music Publishing where his father worked. * Michael Dell washed dishes at a Chinese restaurant for $2.30 per hour. * Danny DeVito was a formally trained hair stylist before his break on Taxi. * Michael Douglas once worked as a gas station attendant. * Tom Hanks once worked as a hotel bellman and carried bags for a number of celebs. Sometimes it can be easy to forget that everyone starts at the bottom... * So what does this have to do with your business? You can add to the list!
Re: Hi From START.ac CrowdFunding Re: Hi From START.ac CrowdFunding - Hi Mal, I would love to explain a little further. START(dot)ac is a new International CrowdFunding website, and we are launching this May 2012. CrowdFunding is when a large number of people each contribute a small amount of money to fund a project. We are forming a website to host these projects on, and building a strong and large community of individuals who are interested in helping the "next big thing" be a success. Imagine if you were there for the beginning of Google or Apple, and your donations of $1 or $500 helped to bring it to life! Along with major bragging rights, if a project is successful, people who funded it get rewards depending on how much money they gave the project. At the summary level - We expands the CrowdFunding market to make a home for startup businesses and technology products. STARTac is the professional CrowdFunding site for startups and tech products. We also accept projects in many other categories (listed at the bottom). We have made nine innovations that improve upon the status quo in CrowdFunding. One is that we have inverted the selection process of projects. Potential projects go into CrowdAudition™, where our members give feedback and advice to improve the projects where relevant. The members' input plays a key role in selection of which projects go to funding. Taking this approach also means that rejected project' drivers know why they were rejected, and can better decide if and how to improve their current project, or start from scratch. We are assembling a bench of Mentors - experienced entrepreneurs and executives who want to help the new guys avoid the mistakes they made. Please let me know what you think. When we launch we will be revealing all of our nine innovative programs to the public. We are also looking for projects to host on our website for when we launch. These projects will get extra media attention and publicity throughout our social media. If you have any other questions, PLEASE feel free to ask! The categories of projects we accept are below: Art Comics Dance Design Do Good (altruistic projects) Fashion Film Food Gadgets Games Invention Kids (Youth-driven projects) Music Photography Products Publishing Small Business Start-Ups Social Enterprise (aka Social Business) Sports Technology Theater Toys Transmedia (anything that doesn’t fit into Art, Film & Video, or Photography) Writing (any writing that is not published as a book) Other


Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.

Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.



Featured Article

Bottom Footer



Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

Work Life Balance: Adding White Space

Living on The Edge of Chaos...

The Death of the Sales Magazine

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.