Posts Tagged ‘symbols’

Consonance and Dissonance (part 4)

This post is continued from “Consonance and Dissonance (Part 3)“ Using Color Music, we can actually see the pattern of consonant and dissonant intervals. And without a doubt, the connection between complementary colors and tritones is awesome. But we can see even more. For example, check out the gradation bar below. It highlights exactly what’s

Posted in Color Music by / September 5th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

Consonance and Dissonance (part 3)

This post is continued from “Consonance and Dissonance (Part 2)“ With Color Music, our spectrum of consonant and dissonant intervals starts to click. In the key of C, for example, we get a much better view of what this pattern is all about. Of course, these colors may seem random at first. But as you

Posted in Color Music by / July 17th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

Shape code

Color Music is sweet because it reveals every note pattern in music. At a glance, each color tells us which note is which … and how they all relate. Like a powerful one-two punch, this color code gives us a big advantage in music. But the colors alone can’t do the job. Which is why

Posted in Color Music by / May 14th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

Color code (part 4)

(… continued from “Color Code, part 3“) Looking at music through the letters and numbers is like wearing a pair of opaque glasses. If you can’t really see through the lenses, then what is the point? Ahhh … but this is where Color Music comes in. Because it finally solves our problem. Like a pair

Posted in Color Music by / April 30th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

What is your language?

So, I’m kind of curious … what is your native language? These days, we have a lot of readers in different countries. Which means I’m guessing some of you speak English … or Spanish … or French … or German, Japanese, Dutch, Polish, Italian … or one of many other languages out there. But the nice thing

Posted in Color Music by / April 17th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

Color code (part 3)

  (… continued from “Color Code, part 2“) When we apply numbers to music, the poor fit becomes obvious. While the musical pattern repeats seamlessly, the number labels look choppy and awkward. And it gets worse because letters have this same problem. Like the number line, the alphabet is also a linear pattern. So when

Posted in Color Music by / April 9th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

Color code (part 2)

(… continued from “Color Code, part 1“) The old, medieval system of notation was sloppy … at best. The reason, my friends, has to do with the difference between linear and cyclical patterns. (Yes, that sounds geeky and technical. But it actually makes a lot of sense.) You see, music is really all about cyclical patterns.

Posted in Color Music by / February 28th, 2011 / 2 Comments » Read More

Color code (part 1)

  !!! Warning: Music nerdery ahead !!! Okay, so I’ve already said that traditional notation is confusing. And that standard music symbols are too complicated. But the truth is, there’s even more to it. Because the letters and numbers musicians use aren’t just inconvenient—they are fundamentally flawed. And that’s why students continue to struggle. In

Posted in Color Music by / January 25th, 2011 / Comments Off Read More

Child’s play

The key to learning music is to understand note patterns first—then the language of a musician. That way, we can truly understand how to make music. No confusion or distractions with strange words or terminology. Just pure immersion into what music is really all about—simple patterns. And what’s nice is these patterns are super simple. So

Posted in This and That by / December 21st, 2010 / Comments Off Read More

Learn the patterns … then the vocabulary

Traditional music methods aren’t all bad. Mainly, because they give us a common vocabulary—a shared language that musicians can use to communicate. Over the centuries, music nerds have created all sorts of handy words to describe sound. So that when we talk about “tonics,” or “sharp-fives,” or “E-flat,” you know what I mean. The trouble is, traditional methods start with

Posted in Color Music by / December 20th, 2010 / Comments Off Read More
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