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With the important elements of harmony in place, it’s time to integrate these
aspects into a complete picture of a track1. Here’s a very brief but pertinent
checklist of various musical features that when taken together can help
further musical understanding and in turn enhance creativity.
These concepts and questions are all worth considering when approaching a
track analysis. In this course we’re looking mainly at the pure harmonic
mechanics, rather than lyrical interpretation and song structure, but we must
remember that the impact of a track is multi-faceted, so understanding these
other important elements will give a more nuanced – and more applicable –
understanding of popular music harmony.
The Basics
1 We’ll use the term ‘track’ to denote any relevant composition be it pop
song, metal instrumental, jazz standard or folk tune. ‘Piece’ or ‘work’ is a tad
pretentious, ‘song’ is an odd term for instrumental music and ‘tune’ is a bit
ambiguous. So, for convenience, ‘track’ it is. We needn’t get distracted
further with semantics, or get overly fussy with terms, so that said, let’s just
get on with it.
©2011 Milton Mermikides Complete Track Analysis 2
Structure
Can the track be divided into logical sections using such terms as
Intro, Verse, Prechorus, Chorus, Instrumental Solo, Bridge or ‘Middle 8’,
Instrumental Interlude and Outro? Can you provide a simple map of the
sections? Can that map be further simplified using repeats, DS, DC, Coda,
Fine etc?
When sections occur more than once, how are they varied, truncated,
extended, reinterpreted, transposed or otherwise reinterpreted?
Do any of the sections share features? For example does the guitar solo have
the same chords as the verse?
Sketch, or write out the basic form. Here’s an example, it doesn’t have to be
exactly like this, any way that communicates the whole structure as simply
and clearly as possible.
©2011 Milton Mermikides Complete Track Analysis 3
Does the chord progressions fit into any of the harmonic devices covered in
this course? (E.g. Diatonicism, parallel major/minor/borrowing, inversions,
secondary dominants, Blues chords, parallelism, pedal tones etc.)
Can the progression be generalized and quickly absorbed using roman
numeral (or similar) analysis (e.g. i – iv – i - V7).
b) All the harmonic concepts presented in the course are only important
because they are used and can be reapplied effectively. Harmonic analysis is
not an intellectual diversion like sudoko, it has direct musical relevance.
Melody
There will be supporting material for the study of melody but here are some
salient points that will help understand how to approach the analysis and
creation of melodies.
Listen (and look) at the entirety of the melody. Can it be broken into logical
phrases? Often this can be done at a few levels:
1) Range and contour. What is the highest and lowest pitches in the
melody (or phrases)? When does the peak occur, what is the overall
shape of the melody, or contours of the phrases? How and where do
any of these contours repeat, perhaps transposed? When a phrase is
repeated closely, look out for any variations – particularly at the end of
phrases. When the melody is played in isolation which phrases feel
unresolved (‘questions’) and which feel like resolutions (‘answers’)?
3) Is the melody (or are the phrases) drawn from a common scale/mode
(is it heptatonic, hexatonic or pentatonic?) Does it does change at any
point and if so, how and when?
4) What intervals does the melody make against the chords? Are they all
chord tones? How are non-chord tones resolved if at all? When
melodic shapes are repeated against different chords, does the
melody stay the same (changing the intervals against the chords) or is
the melody transposed or sequenced (perhaps preserving the same
intervals)?
You should now be able to combine the important aspects from all of the
above into a complete picture. Your final project will include such an analysis
of a complete track and a composition (with commentary) of your own.
This process will help to understand the track in its entirety, improving your
musical perception, appreciation and ability to create your own music, which
in turn will increase your understanding of music. Keeping this positive cycle
of theory-practice active will improve your understanding, communication,
creativity and enjoyment of music.