Introduction to Harmony
Introduction to Harmony
Harmony is one of the three fundamental elements of music, alongside melody and rhythm. While melody is the horizontal aspect of music (notes played one after another), harmony is the vertical aspect (notes played simultaneously).
What is Harmony?
Harmony refers to the combination of notes played together to create chords and chord progressions. It's what gives music its emotional depth and richness.
Key Concepts:
- Chords: Groups of notes played together
- Chord Progressions: Sequences of chords that create harmonic movement
- Tension and Release: How harmony creates emotional impact
- Consonance and Dissonance: Pleasant vs. tense sounding combinations
Basic Chord Types
Triads
The most fundamental chords are triads, consisting of three notes:
- Major Triad: Root, major 3rd, perfect 5th (happy, bright sound)
- Minor Triad: Root, minor 3rd, perfect 5th (sad, mellow sound)
- Diminished Triad: Root, minor 3rd, diminished 5th (tense, unstable sound)
- Augmented Triad: Root, major 3rd, augmented 5th (bright, tense sound)
Seventh Chords
Adding a seventh interval creates seventh chords:
- Major 7th: Major triad + major 7th (jazz-like, sophisticated)
- Minor 7th: Minor triad + minor 7th (bluesy, cool)
- Dominant 7th: Major triad + minor 7th (classic rock, blues)
- Diminished 7th: Diminished triad + diminished 7th (very tense)
Chord Progressions
Chord progressions are sequences of chords that create harmonic movement. Some common progressions include:
I-IV-V Progression
The most common progression in popular music:
- I (tonic) - home base
- IV (subdominant) - creates movement away from tonic
- V (dominant) - creates tension leading back to tonic
ii-V-I Progression
A fundamental jazz progression:
- ii (supertonic) - creates tension
- V (dominant) - increases tension
- I (tonic) - provides resolution
The Circle of Fifths
The circle of fifths is a visual representation of harmonic relationships between keys. It shows:
- How keys are related
- Common chord progressions
- Key signatures
Practical Application
Understanding harmony helps you:
- Compose your own music
- Improvise more effectively
- Analyze songs and understand their emotional impact
- Play with other musicians more cohesively
Next Steps
In future lessons, we'll explore:
- Voice leading principles
- Harmonic analysis techniques
- Advanced chord progressions
- Modal harmony
Remember, harmony is about creating emotional landscapes through the careful arrangement of musical building blocks. Practice listening to different chord combinations and notice how they make you feel.