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Dr. James Ogburn Wednesday, 11 February 2015
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Thursday, 19 February 15-17:00 Room A212
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Keep the common tone between chords
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Move the shortest distance within individual voices
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Keep the common tone between chords Move the shortest distance within individual voices Preferred doubling: 1) root, 2) fifth, 3) third
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Keep the common tone between chords Move the shortest distance within individual voices Preferred doubling: 1) root, 2) fifth, 3) third Don’t double two different notes of the chord
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Keep the common tone between chords Move the shortest distance within individual voices Preferred doubling: 1) root, 2) fifth, 3) third Don’t double two different notes of the chord Follow leaps larger than a third with stepwise motion in the opposite direction
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Keep the common tone between chords Move the shortest distance within individual voices Preferred doubling: 1) root, 2) fifth, 3) third Don’t double two different notes of the chord Follow leaps larger than a third with stepwise motion in the opposite direction Avoid leaps larger than a perfect fifth
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Resolve the leading tone up by step
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Leading tone may resolve down in an inner part, in the middle of a phrase
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Resolve the leading tone up by step Leading tone may resolve down in an inner part, in the middle of a phrase Resolve chord seventh down by step
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Resolve the leading tone up by step Leading tone may resolve down in an inner part, in the middle of a phrase Resolve chord seventh down by step Avoid dissonant leaps
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Resolve the leading tone up by step Leading tone may resolve down in an inner part, in the middle of a phrase Resolve chord seventh down by step Avoid dissonant leaps Avoid parallel fifths and octaves
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1. Resolve Leading tone 2. Resolve Chord seventh 3. Tripled Root Preferred
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Resolve all voices down (if no V7, keep common tone)
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1. For Root Position 7 th chords in the sequential progression, alternate complete and incomplete (doubled root) chords for the smoothest voice-leading.
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2. Keep the common tone between chords.
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3. Resolve other voices down by step. This will involve the correct resolution of chord sevenths
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1. Resolve the Leading Tone
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2. Resolve other voices down by the shortest distance
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1. Keep the common tone between chords.
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2. Move other voices by the shortest distance.
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Visually check for dissonant leaps, parallelism, doubling problems, large leaps...
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Play it and listen for voice-leading errors...
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