Favorite Music Theory Book?
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- KVRAF
- 6519 posts since 13 Mar, 2002 from UK
- KVRAF
- 10286 posts since 17 Sep, 2004 from Austin, TX
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- KVRist
- 179 posts since 11 Feb, 2008
The traditional university textbooks are:Sleaze wrote:Hello,
I'm a little rusty on my music theory and looking for suggestions of books/ebooks for music theory in general. What are some of your favorites?
Kostka/Payne "Tonal Harmony"
Aldwell/Schachter - similar title
Walter Piston "Harmony"
Schoenberg - I believe it's just "Theory of Harmony".
Of those, the K/P and A/S are most used in universities (in the US) today, Piston is used a little bit. Schoenberg is kind of a tedious read, and neither of these two (piston and schoenberg) are as "student friendly" as the K/P and A/S. I prefer the K/P.
These though are a little "heavy duty". Believe it or not, the "for Dummies" people have come out with "Music Theory for Dummies" (I think there's the Idiots one too). Actually, you can't make it but so simple, and this is not a bad choice for brushing up (and I don't think you're a dummy
The other thing is, the K/P and such are expensive - the Piston less, and the Schoenberg fairly cheap (you may actually find it on bookstore shelves). The Dummies series is probably realtively cheap and easy to find, so it might be at least worht investigating.
HTH
LSL
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- KVRer
- 6 posts since 17 Dec, 2007 from Poland
http://www.ravenspiral.com/ravenspiralguide.pdf
good for starters and if you're not intending to become a second Mozart

good for starters and if you're not intending to become a second Mozart
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- KVRAF
- 7825 posts since 20 Jan, 2008
Arranging Techniques For Synthesists- Eric Turkel
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- KVRer
- 18 posts since 4 Sep, 2002 from Bergen, Norway
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- KVRAF
- 4071 posts since 4 Mar, 2008 from Near Pittsburgh
Favorite I've ever used is Principles of Orchestration (Rimsky-Korsakov). Probably a bit too specific for what you need right now but keep it in mind for the future.
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- KVRer
- 6 posts since 9 Nov, 2007 from Oman
"Harmonic Experience" by W.A.Mathieu. Recommended by J.Coltrane, P.Seeger, and me.
time enjoyed wasting is not time wasted
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Jazzy.Shredder Jazzy.Shredder https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=180472
- KVRist
- 38 posts since 13 May, 2008 from Between 22 frets
Mark Levine's "The Jazz Theory Book" is pretty much the standard, IMO.
- something special
- 8627 posts since 16 Mar, 2002 from Birmingham, Alabama
The Musician's Guide to Reading and Writing Music
though not near as heavy as the Levin book, enjoyable reading
though not near as heavy as the Levin book, enjoyable reading
