Kotska's Workbook Chapter 18 No. 2 in Mapping Tonal Harmony Pro, seen diatonically and functionally#tonalharmony #chordprogression #musiced #MusicEducation https://t.co/6NtgaepthJ … pic.twitter.com/UtbqGYRpUv— mDecks Music (@mDecksMusic) May 5, 2018 https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
The best ear training app for pitch recognition. POLITONUS. Here we try 3 notes at the time, key of G, diatonic notes, chordal voicing.
The best ear training app for pitch recognition. POLITONUS.Here we try 3 notes at the time, key of G, diatonic notes, chordal voicing.#Eartraining #MusicEducation #musiced https://t.co/4tAOFkG4mB … pic.twitter.com/8lGe2Rzz4P— mDecks Music (@mDecksMusic) May 5, 2018 https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
Mapping Tonal Harmony in Music Education
Imagine an interactive harmony map that reveals the secrets of tonal harmony, where every harmonic function is placed coherently through-out the map, respecting the rules of tonality in such a way that any tonal song is in front of your eyes. You just need to discover it! "If you study or teach harmony, Mapping Tonal... Continue Reading →
Blame It On My Youth play-along (created using Mapping Tonal Harmony Pro)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiKu3xEzvJc source: http://mdecks.com/mapharmony.phtml This play-along was created using the smart player on Mapping Tonal Harmony Pro 6.7 for iPad & iPad Pro In this video we are showing Chord-Scales with Functional Notation. Do you want to practice “Blame It On My Youth” in all keys at any tempo? What is the harmonic progression in the... Continue Reading →
Just In Time play-along
source: http://mdecks.com/mapharmony.phtml This play-along was created using the smart player on Mapping Tonal Harmony Pro 6.7 for iPad & iPad Pro Do you want to practice “Just In Time” in all keys at any tempo? What is the harmonic progression in the song? Study (or teach) tonal harmony with a map that reveals the secret... Continue Reading →
Why is there an F# on C major?
C major is the key with no sharps or flats.So why is there an f# on almost every piece in C major?Well, the answer is in the piece's harmonic progression.For a piece to be in C major, we need the C major chord to be the I. The I only feel as a I if... Continue Reading →
