Analyzing Melody and Harmony
Overview
Melody and harmony are the two fundamental pillars of musical structure. While melody provides the horizontal flow of music through time, harmony creates the vertical dimension by combining multiple pitches simultaneously. Understanding how to analyze these elements separately and in relation to each other is crucial for comprehensive music analysis.
Analyzing Melody
What is Melody?
Melody is the succession of pitches that form a coherent musical line. It consists of:
- Pitch content: The specific notes used
- Rhythmic structure: How long each note lasts
- Contour: The overall shape and direction of the melodic line
- Range: The span between the highest and lowest notes
Melodic Analysis Techniques
1. Contour Analysis
Examine the overall shape of the melody:
- Ascending: Generally moving upward
- Descending: Generally moving downward
- Arch-shaped: Rising to a peak then falling
- Wave-like: Alternating rises and falls
- Terraced: Moving in steps with plateaus
2. Interval Analysis
Study the relationships between consecutive pitches:
- Stepwise motion: Movement by seconds (smooth, conjunct)
- Leaps: Movement by thirds or larger (angular, disjunct)
- Direction changes: Points where the melody reverses direction
- Interval patterns: Recurring intervallic relationships
3. Motivic Analysis
Identify recurring melodic fragments:
- Motive: Short musical idea (2-4 notes)
- Figure: Slightly longer motive
- Theme: Complete melodic statement
- Development: How motives are varied and transformed
4. Range and Tessitura
Consider the overall span and comfortable singing range:
- Narrow range: Limited pitch span (good for intimacy)
- Wide range: Broad pitch span (dramatic effect)
- Tessitura: The most frequently used portion of the range
Melodic Devices
Repetition
- Exact repetition: Same pitches and rhythms
- Modified repetition: Variations in rhythm or pitch
- Sequence: Repetition at different pitch levels
Variation
- Rhythmic variation: Same pitches, different rhythms
- Pitch variation: Different pitches, same contour
- Ornamentation: Added notes that embellish the main melody
Development
- Extension: Lengthening of melodic ideas
- Fragmentation: Breaking motives into smaller pieces
- Augmentation: Lengthening note values
- Diminution: Shortening note values
Analyzing Harmony
What is Harmony?
Harmony refers to the simultaneous sounding of multiple pitches and the principles that govern their combination. It includes:
- Chord structure: How individual chords are built
- Progression: How chords move from one to another
- Function: The role each chord plays in the harmonic structure
- Tension and resolution: How chords create and release musical tension
Harmonic Analysis Techniques
1. Chord Identification
Label chords by their root and quality:
- Triads: Three-note chords (major, minor, diminished, augmented)
- Seventh chords: Four-note chords (dominant, major, minor, diminished)
- Extended chords: Chords with additional notes (9th, 11th, 13th)
2. Roman Numeral Analysis
Use Roman numerals to show chord function:
- I: Tonic (home key)
- ii: Supertonic
- iii: Mediant
- IV: Subdominant
- V: Dominant
- vi: Submediant
- vii°: Leading tone (diminished)
3. Functional Analysis
Categorize chords by their harmonic role:
- Tonic function: Provides stability and rest (I, iii, vi)
- Dominant function: Creates tension toward tonic (V, vii°)
- Subdominant function: Moves away from tonic (IV, ii)
4. Voice Leading
Examine how individual voices move between chords:
- Smooth voice leading: Minimize large leaps
- Common tones: Notes that remain the same between chords
- Voice crossing: When voices cross each other inappropriately
- Parallel motion: Voices moving in the same direction
Harmonic Progressions
Common Patterns
- I-IV-V-I: The most basic and common progression
- ii-V-I: Jazz standard progression
- I-vi-IV-V: Pop music staple
- Circle of fifths: V-IV-iii-vi-ii-V-I
Cadences
- Authentic cadence: V-I (strongest resolution)
- Plagal cadence: IV-I ("Amen" cadence)
- Deceptive cadence: V-vi (surprising resolution)
- Half cadence: Any chord to V (incomplete feeling)
Integrating Melody and Harmony
Melodic-Harmonic Relationships
1. Harmonic Rhythm
The rate at which chords change:
- Fast harmonic rhythm: Frequent chord changes
- Slow harmonic rhythm: Chords sustained for longer periods
- Syncopated harmony: Chords changing off the main beat
2. Melodic Embellishment
How melody interacts with underlying harmony:
- Non-chord tones: Notes that don't belong to the current chord
- Passing tones: Connect chord tones stepwise
- Neighbor tones: Decorate a chord tone then return
- Suspensions: Notes held from previous chord before resolving
3. Contrapuntal Techniques
Combination of independent melodic lines:
- Counterpoint: Two or more melodic lines sounding together
- Canon: Strict imitation between voices
- Fugue: Complex contrapuntal form with imitation
Structural Integration
Phrase Structure
How melody and harmony work together to create musical phrases:
- Antecedent phrase: Creates tension (ends on dominant)
- Consequent phrase: Provides resolution (ends on tonic)
- Period: Antecedent + consequent phrase
- Sentence: Different formal structure with presentation and continuation
Thematic Development
How musical ideas evolve through harmonic changes:
- Statement: Initial presentation of theme
- Departure: Movement away from tonic key
- Contrast: Introduction of new material
- Return: Recapitulation in original key
Practical Analysis Steps
Step 1: Separate the Elements
- Listen to melody alone (hum or whistle it)
- Listen to bass line and chord changes
- Identify harmonic rhythm
Step 2: Analyze Each Component
- Melody: Contour, range, motivic content, rhythmic structure
- Harmony: Chord identification, functional analysis, progression patterns
- Rhythm: Meter, tempo, rhythmic motives
Step 3: Examine Relationships
- How does melody relate to underlying harmony?
- Do chord changes align with melodic structure?
- How do melody and harmony create tension and release?
Step 4: Consider Context
- Historical period and style
- Composer's intentions
- Performance considerations
- Emotional impact
Analysis Tools and Notation
Score Analysis
- Lead sheet: Melody with chord symbols
- Full score: Complete notation for all parts
- Piano reduction: Simplified version for keyboard
Analytical Symbols
- Roman numerals: For harmonic analysis
- Letters: For formal analysis (A, B, A')
- Arrows: To show melodic direction
- Brackets: To group structural units
Technology Aids
- Music notation software: For creating analytical scores
- MIDI analysis tools: For examining pitch content
- Spectral analysis: For examining timbre and tone color
Common Analytical Challenges
Complex Textures
- Polyphony: Multiple independent melodic lines
- Homophony: Melody with chordal accompaniment
- Heterophony: Variations of the same melody sounding together
Atonal Music
- Serialism: Organization by pitch classes rather than traditional harmony
- Set theory: Analysis of pitch class sets
- Centricity: Identification of tonal centers in non-tonal music
Electronic and Experimental Music
- Spectral analysis: Examination of frequency content
- Timbral analysis: Study of tone color and texture
- Process analysis: Understanding generative techniques
Applications in Performance
For Singers and Instrumentalists
- Understanding melodic line for expressive phrasing
- Recognizing harmonic implications for intonation
- Identifying structural points for breathing and articulation
For Composers
- Learning from successful melodic-harmonic combinations
- Understanding principles of effective voice leading
- Developing skills in creating coherent musical structures
For Arrangers
- Adapting music for different ensembles
- Creating effective accompaniments
- Balancing melodic and harmonic elements
Practice Exercises
Exercise 1: Melodic Analysis
Choose a simple folk song and analyze:
- Overall contour and range
- Recurring motives
- Relationship between text and melody (if applicable)
Exercise 2: Harmonic Analysis
Analyze the chord progression of a popular song:
- Identify all chords
- Label with Roman numerals
- Identify cadences and functional relationships
Exercise 3: Integrated Analysis
Study a short classical piece:
- Separate melody and accompaniment
- Analyze how they interact
- Identify points of tension and resolution
Next Steps
This lesson provides the foundation for analyzing melody and harmony in combination. The following lessons will explore more advanced analytical techniques and specific musical forms where these elements play crucial roles.
Remember: The most insightful analyses consider melody and harmony not as separate elements, but as interdependent components that work together to create musical meaning and emotional impact.