Group 3
Welcome to the latest TWO WEEK INTENSIVE on tonebase!
For the next two weeks we will be working through assignments given by Ben Laude to improve your playing and understanding of Schubert!
Pianists of all levels are welcome.
More Detailed instructions coming soon!
- Sign-Up : December 1st - 4th
- Course Period: December 4th -15th
- Class Size: ALL are welcome!
- Optional check-In via Zoom: December 12th at 11am PT
Click here to join the meeting!
Assignment #1
ASSIGNMENT INSTRUCTIONS (WEEK 1)
- Watch the ABOVE video, which will serve as a crash course in chromatic harmony in preparation for your assignment.
- If you have no idea what I’m talking about in the video, check out these materials to get up to speed:
- Pre-requisite/review course:
- Course: Music Theory Basics
- Other helpful tonebase resources:
- Livestream: Harmonic Analysis Crash Course
- Forums thread: Improve Your Harmonic Analysis with Ben Laude
- Pre-requisite/review course:
- If you have no idea what I’m talking about in the video, check out these materials to get up to speed:
- Perform a harmonic analysis on Schubert’s Moment Musical #6 (A Section only; you can stop at the Trio):
- Label chords with roman numerals
- Mark cadences (half cadence: ends on V; authentic cadence: V resolves to I)
- Identify the following chromatic devices:
- Secondary dominant
- Augmented 6th
- Modal mixture
- Chromatic mediant
- Common-tone modulation
- Optional: Perform a harmonic analysis on a Schubert piece of your choice (or target specific passages from pieces you’re curious about)
→ Don’t expect to get everything right! This is an advanced harmonic analysis. The whole point of the TWI is to dive into the deep end of Schubert’s harmony and form…
→ Ask questions in the forum! I will be replying to user questions, and we’ll be going over the whole thing in next week’s Zoom meeting.
→ For more experienced users, I do recommend analyzing the recommended study piece (and helping your fellow TWIs); but you may want to spend your time on another Schubert piece you’re already working on.
Schubert’s piano music
The “easiest” of Schubert’s piano music are probably his collections of Waltzes, Ländler, and other dances. These capture the spirit of Schubert the dancer, although they aren’t representative of his harmonic/compositional exploration, so I don’t recommend them for this TWI. Instead, you should take a look through Schubert's core piano repertoire, most of which is listed here:
Level 6-8
- Moment musicals
- Two Scherzi, D. 593
- Impromptus op 90, op 142
- 3 Klavierstucke
Level 6-10
- Sonatas
Level 11
- Wanderer Fantasy
Feel free to venture beyond the solo piano music!
ZOOM CHECK- IN with Ben!
26 replies
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Can you please check the download link for the piece? It does not work for me. Thanks.
Looking forward to learning more on Schubert music; I don't know much of his pieces other than the impromptus.
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Hi everyone! Excited to explore Schubert with you these next couple weeks. Let me know what questions you have.
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Good evening, I am very excited to explore this topic. I am anxious though that I might have signed up for more than I ought to have! I will try and keep up but will have to refer back a lot in order to understand everything and I am quite busy with my day job (that is an understated English "Quite busy"!)) so may not have the necessary free time to do this. I do not want to drag the group down by inactivity and unavailability so if it makes sense to rearrange me or even postpone my engagement with this activity for the smooth running of everyone's experience then please do. Apologies for any inconvenience caused. I did not appreciate the high quality and level of engagement that it looks like this involves.
best wishes, Simon
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Hi Ben and fellow Group 3 participants! I love theory, but am a bit rusty in some of these concepts, so am looking forward to brushing up on it. Love Schubert.....there's something so blissful about his sound. Looking forward to learning what makes that sound!
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Hello group 3 - first time participating in this intensive course - my theory is incredibly rusty so I am revising all the recommended videos before even attempting anything! Have to juggle kids / day job to get things done however determined to learn. I have never played any Schubert - so this is a great time to explore his music too.
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Hello Group 3! I thought I'd chime in again, since our group doesn't seem to be very active! :-) I live in Sunnyvale, CA. I do teach piano to a few private students as well as a group class of adults. I continue to take lessons myself, as there is just so much amazing piano music out there to learn! I'm thinking of working on the Op. 90 Impromptu No 1 in C minor. I probably won't get very far in two weeks, but can get through at least the first few pages. :-)
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Oh, so we're the neglected group, eh? ;) I've never really liked Schubert, so the reason I signed up is to see if you could convince me to! Not bad so far. I'm pretty OK with theory (thus the user name) but can you point to resources on identifying cadences and what it means to "mark" them?
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Sorry for being so quiet. Been working on the music but I was struggling big time. Finally ‘completed’. Wrote in chord names instead of Roman numerals. Will ‘convert’ them later if necessary. I think better that way.
Thank you.
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Dear Group 3,
I hope you have a good week studying and analyzing Schubert! Welcome to WEEK 2.
First, a reminder about the (optional) Zoom check-in tomorrow (December 12) at 11:00 a.m. US Pacific Time: MEETING LINK
- In the meeting, I will first go over the harmonies in the study piece and segue into the theme of Week 2: interpretation.
- I'll also field as many questions from participants as I can, including about other Schubert pieces you might be studying.
- If you can't make the meeting but have a question you would like me to address, leave it in this forum thread and I'll round them up before hand and do my best to answer in the meeting.
Later today, I will post "Assignment No. 2" in which I speak to the topic of interpreting Schubert's music at the keyboard, flowing out of our study of chromatic harmony.
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Below, I have attached my own harmonic analysis of the recommended study piece (Musical Moment No. 6). Please take a look and compare it to your own effort. Note that I did not label inessential harmonies, nor did I label repeated material where the same analysis applies. I used colors as follows:
- RED: Diatonic harmony (in the key of Ab major)
- ORANGE: Secondary dominants
- PURPLE: Modal borrowing (parallel minor)
- MODULATION: Analysis in a new key (E major)
- GREEN: Augmented 6ths (labeled as "It+6", "Ger+6", and "Fr+6", for the 3 different flavors)
- BLACK: Cadences (HC = Half Cadence, ending on V; PAC = Perfect Authentic Cadence, ending with a strong V-I)
I also marked in yellow certain chromatic events: accented passing tones (APT), chromatic passing tones (CPT), common tones, and common tone modulations (CTM). Also, be on the look out for an extraordinary use of the Neapolitan 6 chord (bII6).
Again, if you have questions about my analysis (or if you think I made any mistakes), please let me know ahead of the meeting as it will help me focus on the kinds of things you all have questions about.
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I understand that for some (most?) of you, chromatic harmony wasn't just the "deep end" of analysis... it was like throwing you into the ocean with no life jacket. Again, the way I chose to structure the course it to teach to the highest standard (roughly equivalent to 2nd-year college music theory), and provide as many resources/life lines for you to try to grasp as much as you can about harmonic analysis in Schubert from wherever you're starting from.
If you feel like you just weren't equipped to grasp any of the chromatic harmonies in Schubert, please let me know where you feel stuck and I will do my best to help pull you up.
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Otherwise, looking forward to finding beauty and meaning in all of this analysis!
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Thank you Ben Laude - personally I am out of my depth with this task, although I have learned quite a bit by watching all all your other recommended courses in preparation for the 2WI. My brain is over loaded with info and requires a lot of practice to solidify my understanding. I am planning on joining the Zoom - could you confirm the duration of this session - as it's early morning my end so that I can manage family expectations: ).