Study Music Save

An "awesome music theory" kinda wiki with books, resources and courses for studying everything about music and sound

Project README

Awesome Music Theory Awesome

Where to start

Play

  1. Pentatonic sequencer
  2. Music Mouse 🐭
  3. The Infinite Drum Machine 🥁 or Groove Pizza or Groove Pizzeria
  4. Chord Player (check out "Melody" and "Explore" tabs) or aQWERTYon

Interact

  1. Go through Ableton's guide on music and Ableton's guide on synths
  2. Bartosz Ciechanowski. Sound
  3. Chrome Music Lab
  4. 🤖 AI demos: Magenta, MusicLM, LakhNES, Muzic, Jazz Transformer

Wander around

  1. Explore Hooktheory's TheoryTab: search for your favorite songs and anime openings.
  2. Ishkur's evolution of electronic music
  3. Press Alt+"scan" at Every Noise 🌐
  4. Piano rolls in 12 colors: Famicom/NES 👾, popular music in MIDI
  5. TuttiTempi: Chopin's Funeral March ⚰️
  6. Click "Show Timeline" for patterns similar to octatonic used in jazz solos: upward, downward
  7. See how form can be visualized in MusicPlot

Watch

  1. How a track emerges:
  2. Ravel's Bolero
  3. The Art of Mixing 🎚️
  4. Nopia 🎹 - a chord-based synthesizer
  5. 🍿 Two-chord changes typical for movie soundtracks: LP, H, T6, S, F and N
  6. Watch a gamelan multitrack and try to make sense of it, maybe with a help of a larger multitrack for another piece

Read

  1. 📚 Hooktheory 📚 - interactive books on pop harmony. A must-read for anyone
  2. Music Theory for Musicians and Normal People
  3. Dig into the structure of Beethoven's sonata #5 movement #1, also see what we as a society know about it.
  4. Visualizations: classical, jazz harmony, jazz solos, rock

Sing

  1. Arabic maqamat
  2. Indonesian gamelan

Лекции

Western music languages

Music languages can be divided into a number of families. Historically, the most dominant and influencial one is Western family of languages. Its languages share some common traits:

  • 12-tone temperament
  • major/minor keys
  • homophony: melody over chords, chords give a separate narrative
  • chords as stacked thirds
  • any of the 12 notes can be a tonic

The languages are (roughly speaking):

Somewhat related to that are church chants: Gregorian, Byzantine, Armenian, Znamenny

Non-Western music languages

Non-Western music languages are different families. As they were developed all over the globe, they don't share many common features.

The gradient of families is (roughly speaking):

Broad overview on non-Western languages

Topics

Topics on electronic music

Contacts

I post updates and other rant on music theory on Telegram (in Russian)

Do you know how to enroll in a music theory program (master's/PhD) after a computer science BSc and two years of jazz college (linkedin)? Please, let me know: [email protected], t.me/vitalypavlenko (asking for myself)

I'm always happy to chat about visualisation-aided music education and research popularisation. Also, I constantly feel severely deprived of communication with the real academic theoretic community, so drop me a line ;)

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Study Music" Project. README Source: vpavlenko/study-music