Benward Chapter 3
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Transcript Benward Chapter 3
Chapter Three
Pitch and the Keyboard
Stepwise Motion
movement from one note to the next
adjacent note
The letter name on the note changes.
C to C# is not stepwise motion. C to Db is
stepwise motion.
Half Step
Smallest division in use in most of the music of Western
civilization
Distance between two adjacent keys on the piano
Notes in the interval of a half step can have the same
name or different names
Half Steps will be used to identify other intervals.
Songs to help identify a half step
Ascending: ti-do, Jaws Theme
Descending: Joy to the World, Fur Elise, O Little
Town of Bethlehem
The Interval of an Octave
Twelve Half Steps
Both notes of the interval will have the same name.
Songs to help identify an octave
Ascending: A Christmas Song (Chestnuts…),
Let it Snow, Somewhere Over the
Rainbow, When You Wish Upon a Star,
Bali High, do-do
Descending: do-do
Whole Step
2 half steps
Songs to help identify a whole step
Ascending: Frere Jaques, Doe-a-deer, Happy
Birthday, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,
Silent Night, do-re
Descending: Three Blind Mice, Mary Had a Little
Lamb, Deck the Halls, Away in a Manger, The
First Noel, Whistle While You Work
Accidentals
Accidentals raise and lower pitches.
Always placed in front of the note in printed music
Always placed after the name of the note – example, F#
Sharp
– raises a pitch by a half step
Flat
– lowers a pitch by a half step
Double Flat
– lowers a pitch by two half steps
Double Sharp
– raises a pitch by two half steps
Natural
– cancels the preceding accidental for the
same pitch.
Enharmonic Spellings
The same key on the keyboard can have
different names.
Notes that sound alike but have different
spellings are enharmonic equivalents.
Scale
An orderly sequence of the notes within
an octave.
It summarizes the notes available for use
in a particular context.
Chromatic Scale
All twelve pitches in an octave are
arranged in order
Sharps are used for ascending scales.
Flats are used for descending scales