Group 2
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 Iâm 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 Iâm talking about in the video, check out these materials to get up to speed:
- Perform a harmonic analysis on Schubertâs 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 youâre curious about)
â Donât 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 Schubertâs harmony and formâŠ
â Ask questions in the forum! I will be replying to user questions, and weâll be going over the whole thing in next weekâs Zoom meeting.
â 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 youâre already working on.
Schubertâs piano music
The âeasiestâ of Schubertâs piano music are probably his collections of Waltzes, LĂ€ndler, and other dances. These capture the spirit of Schubert the dancer, although they arenât representative of his harmonic/compositional exploration, so I donât 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!
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HI everyone! Thank you for this course. I am excited to be doing this, and learning more about Harmonic analysis. My understanding is very basic for this, so I will be doing a lot of learning . And I'm a bit intimidated by it, but do look forward to being challenged.
One question: When I clicked on what look like a link for Schubert's Moment Musical #6, it says the page is unavailable. I'm wondering if that will be available? I do have a VERY old copy (it says copyright 1897 ), and parts of it are not easily readable. thanks so much!
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Hello, I am a new member and have only recently returned to piano after having laid my major instrument, viola, aside due to torn rotator cuffs. My piano training was quite brief but I have been muddling through the hauntingly beautiful Schubert 960 with the help of two conservatory graduates, my son from the RCM Toronto and the San Francisco CM and my grandson from the RCM (Royal College of Music) and Juilliard.This piece has strong associations for me but as my technical training is weak on piano, I am struggling. I would be interested in references during the course to various approaches with trills, pedalling and repeated notes that tend to become staccato instead of slurred as in measures 165â. The history of this period of Schubertâs life, during which he wrote these great works while wracked with both pain and sorrow, will help me relate to this piece, as the music varies so abruptly between light and darkness. I look forward to your encouraging and enlightening presentations. Thank you.
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Hi Everyone
I am new to tonebase (though I have been Watchung the YouTube videos with great delight for the past few years). I signed up for the trial period and Marina Lomazov's course alone has already sealed for me (IE I am keeping my subscription!) Not to mention the Penelope Roskell videos which are pure gold!
I am a pianist and music theory teacher in Canada, working very hard to attract more students so that I keep at this forever. I will save the long story of my journey, but I am very interested in doing a Schubert deep dive. He has long been a favorite, bur not a composer I had worked on personally very much. That being said, my first pandemic piece (newly started in April 2020) was a Schubert Sonata - the A major D. 664 or op. 120. It has been fascinating working on Schubert because the way he writes is so different from the other great Sonata composers! At any rate, I haven't touched the Sonata in awhile, but I did have the 1st movement at performance level, I have performed the second movement (not to my satisfaction ... but still) and worked on about half of the third movement. I would like to be able to do with Schubert what I am capable of doing with Beethoven - finding the connections and being able to see large and small scale items.
I do teach music theory but mostly at an intermediate level. I would describe my knowledge as Adequate and workable but not all encompassing and some of the items on the list here are areas where I would like to improve (identifying modal mixture, common tone modulation etc). So if you are really stuck on theory basics, I may be of some assistance .
Excited to move forward with this as a side project which will hopefully lead towards me performing the full Sonata with real insight (and learning and performing more of them! Love all the Sonatas that I am familiar with from this one to the final 3).
If you made it this far, thanks for reading. :) Good luck on your exploration!
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Hello everyone,
Looking forward to be part of this TWI. I was just thinking back to the last TWI challenge I participated - coincidentally, on Harmonic Analysis with Ben Laude . It was so fruitful , thank you Ben!! It changed the way I played the Beethoven op110 3rd movement. I could picked it up so much easier again.
Much as I wish I could report that I do harmonic analysis for all the pieces I play since the last challenge, sadly, I confess I'm too lazy. (I tried page one of Debussy Reflets dan l'eau and gave up after a day of pulling hair counting up to 13th, or is it 15th chord).
Anyway, looking forward to another TWI on Schubert, deadlines helps. Very fun to hear Mari Adams discussion on 960. This past year, I studied/memorized and performed D.960 (2nd time studying this sonata). 2nd movement is still unsatisfactory to me. Anyway, I'll try to analyze D960 and hopefully this piece could be kept up more easily.
If I have time, I'll try to look into analyzing Wanderer Fantasy - a dream piece. But I'm nowhere there to play it yet, but hopefully one step closer if I could analyze it.
Good having everyone in this group!
p/s: I'm a total amateur, but lucky enough to be learning piano full time.
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Well, Iâve worked through some key parts of the music theory basics course and watched the video. Iâve started with the first line, I think Iâm getting a little understanding of this now. At first I found it very hard, but it is starting to make sense, Iâll check out the other resources for more learning. What I am seeing is that when I play any piece, I am starting to hear it differently, and going, âOh, thatâs how that is structuredâ. So, I think that is good. To me this seems similar to learning grammar for a foreign language I initially learned by speaking. I have had some basic understanding of the theory, but now I am adding all the grammar rules. Not a perfect analogy, but thatâs what this seems like. I do have questions, and once I figure out how to ask them, I will, haha. Thank you for this challenging course.
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If time allows, Ben, could you go through the impromptu op142 No.3 particularly the last 3 variations 3,4, 5 they are technically demanding for me,how to approach it. No 3 requires a quiet left hand without loosing your position all over the place.I donât have as much trouble with this as 4and 5. I am sorry I am late in my request, I had a very bad fall and is recovering. Also it would be nice if you could go through the 4 hands fantasy in c at another class in the future. Thank you
Priscilla
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Hi Ben,
I am a new member and I am really excited to learn more advanced techniques and expend my repertoires.
analysis is not my favourite subject even though I learned from it long time ago in my university.
I watched your video and try to analyze #6 by Schubert but not enough time to complete the task.I can hear the different colour of the chords but having a difficult time to figure it out.
I will try to summit my analysis later.
thank you.
Gloria