Is there a website that provides song names as real life examples for each scale and mode? [closed]
I have recently started learning music theory on my own. I have had some previous exposure to Western music theory when I was in primary school (now I'm in college). So, I'm not completely new to the subject. I'm learning about harmony, tonality, scales and modes and it will be a great help to me if I can find real songs written in these scales and modes and stuff like that.
Does there exist a website like this? Something that categorizes songs or classical music based on their musical characteristics? I looked for a similar question on this website, but I didn't find any. So, I decided to ask it by myself. Thanks.
scales harmony modes
closed as off-topic by David Bowling, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking recommendations for specific equipment are off-topic, because they are primarily opinion based. Instead, describe the required function and setting in which the equipment will be used, and ask what you should look for to achieve that." – David Bowling, Todd Wilcox
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
I have recently started learning music theory on my own. I have had some previous exposure to Western music theory when I was in primary school (now I'm in college). So, I'm not completely new to the subject. I'm learning about harmony, tonality, scales and modes and it will be a great help to me if I can find real songs written in these scales and modes and stuff like that.
Does there exist a website like this? Something that categorizes songs or classical music based on their musical characteristics? I looked for a similar question on this website, but I didn't find any. So, I decided to ask it by myself. Thanks.
scales harmony modes
closed as off-topic by David Bowling, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking recommendations for specific equipment are off-topic, because they are primarily opinion based. Instead, describe the required function and setting in which the equipment will be used, and ask what you should look for to achieve that." – David Bowling, Todd Wilcox
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because finding external resources is off-topic.
– Dom♦
Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
add a comment |
I have recently started learning music theory on my own. I have had some previous exposure to Western music theory when I was in primary school (now I'm in college). So, I'm not completely new to the subject. I'm learning about harmony, tonality, scales and modes and it will be a great help to me if I can find real songs written in these scales and modes and stuff like that.
Does there exist a website like this? Something that categorizes songs or classical music based on their musical characteristics? I looked for a similar question on this website, but I didn't find any. So, I decided to ask it by myself. Thanks.
scales harmony modes
I have recently started learning music theory on my own. I have had some previous exposure to Western music theory when I was in primary school (now I'm in college). So, I'm not completely new to the subject. I'm learning about harmony, tonality, scales and modes and it will be a great help to me if I can find real songs written in these scales and modes and stuff like that.
Does there exist a website like this? Something that categorizes songs or classical music based on their musical characteristics? I looked for a similar question on this website, but I didn't find any. So, I decided to ask it by myself. Thanks.
scales harmony modes
scales harmony modes
asked Dec 4 '18 at 20:38
stressed outstressed out
1183
1183
closed as off-topic by David Bowling, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking recommendations for specific equipment are off-topic, because they are primarily opinion based. Instead, describe the required function and setting in which the equipment will be used, and ask what you should look for to achieve that." – David Bowling, Todd Wilcox
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by David Bowling, Todd Wilcox, Dom♦ Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking recommendations for specific equipment are off-topic, because they are primarily opinion based. Instead, describe the required function and setting in which the equipment will be used, and ask what you should look for to achieve that." – David Bowling, Todd Wilcox
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because finding external resources is off-topic.
– Dom♦
Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
add a comment |
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because finding external resources is off-topic.
– Dom♦
Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because finding external resources is off-topic.
– Dom♦
Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because finding external resources is off-topic.
– Dom♦
Dec 5 '18 at 3:35
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
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oldest
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For classical music try this: Yale–Classical Archives Corpus
It's a dataset that must be downloaded an unzipped, but the contents is composer names, work titles, and keys. Read the homepage description for more, but the dataset was built from reading MIDI files at the Classical Archive. Working with a dataset in these days of Google search may seem like a pain in the neck, but over 10,000 works are indexed in the file I opened so I think it's worth the effort to look into this one.
A lot of folk music has been notated using ABC and there are some search engines that allow searching by musical characteristics like key (and I think meter.) Folk Tune Finder is one example.
If you want to keep digging and can get to a large university music library, you can find different reference sources. I remember finding one that indexed all of the beginning tones for Haydn. Just a huge list of sequences like CCEGCEFAC
indexed to the composition. I think the book may have been Melodic Index to Haydn's Instrumental Music.
I don't know of a musical index for pop/rock/jazz, but if I find a good one, I'll update my post.
add a comment |
I heavily recommend hooktheory.com (I'm not affiliated with them, but I've chatted with the owner and he's super nice).
They have a very large list of pop songs, their chord progression and toplines and this can be displayed in sync with youtube videos.
But also, they've done statistics with progressions and you can browse by song, or even enter your own and it'll list the songs that match it, etc..
it's good educational fun.
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
For classical music try this: Yale–Classical Archives Corpus
It's a dataset that must be downloaded an unzipped, but the contents is composer names, work titles, and keys. Read the homepage description for more, but the dataset was built from reading MIDI files at the Classical Archive. Working with a dataset in these days of Google search may seem like a pain in the neck, but over 10,000 works are indexed in the file I opened so I think it's worth the effort to look into this one.
A lot of folk music has been notated using ABC and there are some search engines that allow searching by musical characteristics like key (and I think meter.) Folk Tune Finder is one example.
If you want to keep digging and can get to a large university music library, you can find different reference sources. I remember finding one that indexed all of the beginning tones for Haydn. Just a huge list of sequences like CCEGCEFAC
indexed to the composition. I think the book may have been Melodic Index to Haydn's Instrumental Music.
I don't know of a musical index for pop/rock/jazz, but if I find a good one, I'll update my post.
add a comment |
For classical music try this: Yale–Classical Archives Corpus
It's a dataset that must be downloaded an unzipped, but the contents is composer names, work titles, and keys. Read the homepage description for more, but the dataset was built from reading MIDI files at the Classical Archive. Working with a dataset in these days of Google search may seem like a pain in the neck, but over 10,000 works are indexed in the file I opened so I think it's worth the effort to look into this one.
A lot of folk music has been notated using ABC and there are some search engines that allow searching by musical characteristics like key (and I think meter.) Folk Tune Finder is one example.
If you want to keep digging and can get to a large university music library, you can find different reference sources. I remember finding one that indexed all of the beginning tones for Haydn. Just a huge list of sequences like CCEGCEFAC
indexed to the composition. I think the book may have been Melodic Index to Haydn's Instrumental Music.
I don't know of a musical index for pop/rock/jazz, but if I find a good one, I'll update my post.
add a comment |
For classical music try this: Yale–Classical Archives Corpus
It's a dataset that must be downloaded an unzipped, but the contents is composer names, work titles, and keys. Read the homepage description for more, but the dataset was built from reading MIDI files at the Classical Archive. Working with a dataset in these days of Google search may seem like a pain in the neck, but over 10,000 works are indexed in the file I opened so I think it's worth the effort to look into this one.
A lot of folk music has been notated using ABC and there are some search engines that allow searching by musical characteristics like key (and I think meter.) Folk Tune Finder is one example.
If you want to keep digging and can get to a large university music library, you can find different reference sources. I remember finding one that indexed all of the beginning tones for Haydn. Just a huge list of sequences like CCEGCEFAC
indexed to the composition. I think the book may have been Melodic Index to Haydn's Instrumental Music.
I don't know of a musical index for pop/rock/jazz, but if I find a good one, I'll update my post.
For classical music try this: Yale–Classical Archives Corpus
It's a dataset that must be downloaded an unzipped, but the contents is composer names, work titles, and keys. Read the homepage description for more, but the dataset was built from reading MIDI files at the Classical Archive. Working with a dataset in these days of Google search may seem like a pain in the neck, but over 10,000 works are indexed in the file I opened so I think it's worth the effort to look into this one.
A lot of folk music has been notated using ABC and there are some search engines that allow searching by musical characteristics like key (and I think meter.) Folk Tune Finder is one example.
If you want to keep digging and can get to a large university music library, you can find different reference sources. I remember finding one that indexed all of the beginning tones for Haydn. Just a huge list of sequences like CCEGCEFAC
indexed to the composition. I think the book may have been Melodic Index to Haydn's Instrumental Music.
I don't know of a musical index for pop/rock/jazz, but if I find a good one, I'll update my post.
answered Dec 4 '18 at 21:57
Michael CurtisMichael Curtis
7,121529
7,121529
add a comment |
add a comment |
I heavily recommend hooktheory.com (I'm not affiliated with them, but I've chatted with the owner and he's super nice).
They have a very large list of pop songs, their chord progression and toplines and this can be displayed in sync with youtube videos.
But also, they've done statistics with progressions and you can browse by song, or even enter your own and it'll list the songs that match it, etc..
it's good educational fun.
add a comment |
I heavily recommend hooktheory.com (I'm not affiliated with them, but I've chatted with the owner and he's super nice).
They have a very large list of pop songs, their chord progression and toplines and this can be displayed in sync with youtube videos.
But also, they've done statistics with progressions and you can browse by song, or even enter your own and it'll list the songs that match it, etc..
it's good educational fun.
add a comment |
I heavily recommend hooktheory.com (I'm not affiliated with them, but I've chatted with the owner and he's super nice).
They have a very large list of pop songs, their chord progression and toplines and this can be displayed in sync with youtube videos.
But also, they've done statistics with progressions and you can browse by song, or even enter your own and it'll list the songs that match it, etc..
it's good educational fun.
I heavily recommend hooktheory.com (I'm not affiliated with them, but I've chatted with the owner and he's super nice).
They have a very large list of pop songs, their chord progression and toplines and this can be displayed in sync with youtube videos.
But also, they've done statistics with progressions and you can browse by song, or even enter your own and it'll list the songs that match it, etc..
it's good educational fun.
answered Dec 5 '18 at 0:37
ThomasThomas
21118
21118
add a comment |
add a comment |
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because finding external resources is off-topic.
– Dom♦
Dec 5 '18 at 3:35