54

Lesson 54 of 84 ยท Harmony Introduction

โญ 30 XP๐ŸŽผ Harmony Hall

Harmonizing a Melody (Part 2)

๐ŸŽตStage Brief #54

The blues uses dominant 7th chords on I, IV, and V.

๐ŸŽฏ Your mission

Stack the sound. Find the sweet spot.

โšก The twist

If your ears think it sounds 'off' โ€” that's the harmony asking to resolve.

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Listen for this

๐ŸŽง Listen for the SECOND voice underneath the main one.

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Artist Spotlight

๐ŸŒŸ The Beatles' three-part harmonies were so tight they sounded like one voice.

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Mind = Blown

๐Ÿคฏ Your brain can hear an out-of-tune note even if you've never had a music lesson.

Learn about harmonizing a melody (part 2): understand voice leading principles

What You'll Learn

The blues uses dominant 7th chords on I, IV, and V. This creates a unique, slightly dissonant harmonic language.

1

Understand voice leading principles

2

Compose a simple chord accompaniment

Check Your Understanding

Question 1 of 3

What does 'consonant' mean in music?

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Where you hear this in real life

The reason songs make you feel things is harmony doing its quiet job underneath.

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Stretch Challenge

Try this in real life this week.

Sing any note. Then sing one that goes WITH it. What does it feel like together?

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For the dinner table

โ€œPlay one song together. Talk about what feeling it gave you and why.โ€

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