02596ngm a2200373Ia 4500001001000000003000600010005001700016007001000033008004100043020001500084020001800099028001200117028001200129035001500141040002200156082001800178100003000196245008200226260004200308300005400350490004100404500014400445505026400589505039000853511006001243520076501303538001502068650003302083650001702116650002302133650002102156710002102177830002402198289324550OCoLC20190424112418.0vd cvaizu081222s2007 vau720 vleng d a1598032860 a978159803286440a7561-0140a7561-02 a.b65912962 aOSUcOSUdUtOrBLW aCD 783bG798U1 aGreenberg, Robert,d1954-10aUnderstanding the fundamentals of musich[videorecording] /cRobert Greenberg aChantilly, VA :bTeaching Co.,cc2007 a4 videodiscs (720 min.) :bsd., col. ;c4 3/4 in1 aThe great courses: Fine arts & music aConsists of 16 lectures in two parts. Each part consists of two videodiscs and each videodisc consists of 4 lectures/45 minutes per lecture0 aPt. 1. lecture 1. The language of music -- lecture 2. Timbre, continued -- lecture 3. Timbre, part 3 -- lecture 4. Beat and tempo -- lecture 5. Meter, part 1 -- lecture 6. Meter, part 2 -- lecture 7. Pitch and mode, part 1 -- lecture 8. Pitch and mode, part 20 aPt. 2. lecture 9. Intervals and tunings -- lecture 10. Tonality, key signature, and the circle of fifths -- lecture 11. Intervals revisited and expanded -- lecture 12. Melody -- lecture 13. Melody, continued -- lecture 14. Texture and harmony, part 1 -- lecture 15. Harmony: function, tendency, and dominance, part 2 -- lecture 16. Harmony: progression, cadence, and modulation, part 30 aTaught by: Robert Greenberg, San Francisco Performances aFor anyone wanting to master music's language, being able to read musical notation is a necessity. But this course, as Professor Greenberg notes, is a basic course, designed to introduce you to music's language in a way that is similar to the way you learned your own native language, by "discovering and exploring musical syntax through our ears-- by learning what the parts of musical speech sound like--rather than what they look like on paper." By sidestepping the necessity to read music, these lectures represent an extremely rare opportunity in musical education--an opportunity to experience a solid introduction to music theory's basics in a way that is not technically intimidating, yet provides a substantial grounding in the fundamentals--Publisher aDVD format 0aMusicxInstruction and study 0aMusic theory 0aMusic appreciation 0aMusical analysis2 aTeaching Company 0aGreat courses (DVD)