Can anyone recommend some good how to music theory books?

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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I generally don't like books with a lot of who, when, and where filler.

Can anyone recommend some good music theory books that are straight to the point and teach "how to" with exercises and homework? Also I would like to read them on a tablet preferably a lot of authors are moving to digital but some stay 100% paperback.

Thanks in advance!

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If you want anything of a "how-to" nature, then I'd recommend the books published by the Berklee School of Music. They tend to be quite hands-on, filled with plenty of practical advice and exercises. Other theory texts tend to be more encyclopedic/for reference than they are instructional.

You will need a theory text that is more encyclopedic in nature too, though. Many of the Berklee texts assume certain knowledge (although they make it clear what you need to know before using a particular book--so that's where having a reference book will be useful).

On a tablet? I wouldn't recommend it, bluntly. While the Berklee texts often do have a Kindle edition, I have found that tablets tend not to be any good for reading books that use illustrations (like a music theory book). I think you would be significantly better off getting the physical book.

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My personal fav: The Jazz Theory Book, by Mark Levine.

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MadBrain wrote:My personal fav: The Jazz Theory Book, by Mark Levine.
A reviewer said "Want to know why it somehow sounded right when that V chord resolved down a major third instead of a fifth? Read this book." I was just experimenting with that last night on guitar how going from verse to chorus as a major third sounds great sometimes and sometimes not.

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Why not you check some on google books hope you get a pdf music theory book there which you can easily read on tablet and other mobile devices.
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Who, when, and where often make all the difference.

Theory in the abstract is very dry and in/of itself may not lead you to where you want to go. What's more it often can be specific to a genre or person. As an example rubato applied to edm will simply sound like you don't know what you are doing. However rubato applied to ... Bill Evans music has a free floating experience for the listener and the performer.

If you aren't ready or willing to embrace a theorem then you won't learn it. Learning requires understanding the basic nature, hearing it applied, performing it. Performance requires practice. Just as one can't learn jujitsu from reading a book.
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If you're lucky enough to be able to read or decipher french:
Adolphe Danhauser
Théorie de la Musique, 1889

Organized in lessons. Concise, precise, thorough. Requires zero prior knowledge, only some basic acquaintance with music, and by the end, you are able to decipher an orchestral score.
Still one of the best texts (if not the best) as of today. And free. Can't believe it's never been translated into english.

edit: Teaches you how to read music and all its vocabulary, *not* how to write it. For that you need a treatise of harmony (like the ones by written by Arnold Schoenberg (or the Guide to Arnold Schoenberg's Theory, which is an abridged version) or Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, for instance), which already require having mastered Danhauser's book first.

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