The notes you have used so far are based on a standard 8 note scale, starting on F, G or A. To designate the key of any piece of music, it is important to include a key signature at the start. The key signature shows which notes are to be made sharp (slightly higher) or flat (slightly lower) to retain the structure of a major scale, depending on the home key (our starting note in these examples). For more information on scales, visit this web page at Musical-Theory.
Without having to launch into the complexities of western scales and harmony, we are going to base this section of composition on the Pentatonic scale - a series of 5 notes. Depending on your choice of starting note, a Pentatonic scale is always made up of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th and 6th note of any scale. In fact, if you look at any keyboard instrument, the black notes are arranged in pentatonic groups! The following are examples of 3 pentatonic scales on F, G and A minor:
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One of the advantages of using pentatonic scales as the basis for a composition is the fact that no accidentals (sharps or flats) are required. Using a mixture of step by step and bigger step movement and one of the pentatonic scales, compose a rhythmic melody. Your melody can start on any note from the scale, but must end with the first note of the scale. Which pentatonic scale is the best for composing your tunes? What does a tune made from the notes of the pentatonic scale of A remind you of? Why do you think this is?
An advanced example
Create a new file
in Notate and create 3 melodic instrument tracks
and a percussion stave. Using one of the pentatonic scales, compose a tune which
lasts for 4 bars for the first melodic instrument. On the second
melodic stave, you are going to write the same tune out again, but this time
using notes which are exactly half the value of the original notes. This means
that where you used a crotchet you will use a quaver, a semiquaver (1/4 of a
beat) instead of a quaver and a crotchet instead of a minim. To show more note and rest values in the toolbar (as well as many more musical elements!), select Choices... from the File menu and choose difficulty Level 2 from the dialogue box.
You should find that you have to write the music twice to make it fit. (You can use the Copy and Paste techniques to copy bars of music by highlighting the music to be copied and selecting Copy from th Edit menu, then select Paste from the Edit menu and click on the score where the music is to be pasted).
The third melodic scale will again contain a copy of the original music, but this time, each note will be written with double note values - a minim instead of a crotchet, a crotchet instead of a quaver and so on. You should find that you can only fit in half of the music. Finally, add a rhythm part on the percussion stave using the patterns which you have previously practiced. Check that you have balanced the music well by using the Mixer, then save the file. What does the music sound like? Do you like it? Would you change any part of it? The music below is one that I have created using the method outlined above. Click on the music to hear it.
In
this piece, the melody was originally written for the second track using
the pentatonic scale on A. The first track uses the same melody with
notes which are half the value of the original, whilst the third track
uses notes which are twice the length of the original. The percussion (set to triangle) track
uses the rhythms Tea-Coffee-Sugar-Milk | Milk-Tea-Coffee-Tea. The top
part would sound better if it was written an octave higher (8 notes up) whilst
the third track may benefit from being an octave lower. How would you do this
in Notate? Can you find out?
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