Lecture 5. Melody: Notes, Scales, Nuts and Bolts
Listening to Music (MUSI 112) This lecture explores the basic nature of melody. Touching on historical periods ranging from ancient Greece to the present day, Professor Wright draws examples from musical worlds as disparate as nineteenth-century Europe and twentieth-century India, China, and America. Professor Wright puts forth a historical, technical, and holistic approach to understanding the way pitches and scales work in music. He concludes his lecture by bringing pitch and rhythm together in a discussion of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. 00:00 - Chapter 1. The Nature of Melody 02:37 - Chapter 2. The Development of Notes and the Scale 14:43 - Chapter 3. Major, Minor, and Chromatic Scales in World Music 33:03 - Chapter 4. Pitch and Rhythm in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony Complete course materials are available at the Yale Online website: online.yale.edu This course was recorded in Fall 2008.

Lecture 6. Melody: Mozart and Wagner

Lecture 7. Harmony: Chords and How to Build Them

Music Theory and White Supremacy

A Guided Tour of Musical Feeling

Lecture 14. Ostinato Form in the Music of Purcell, Pachelbel, Elton John and Vitamin C

Lecture 4. Rhythm: Jazz, Pop and Classical

Lecture 9. Sonata-Allegro Form: Mozart and Beethoven

Conan O’Brien Delivers the Commencement Address | Harvard Commencement 2026

Lecture 17. Mozart and His Operas

Brian Cox: The quantum roots of reality | Full Interview

Juilliard Pianist Reacts to (and Corrects) Viral Piano Tips

How to Listen to Classical Music: Fugues

Lecture 22. Modernism and Mahler

Lecture 8. Bass Patterns: Blues and Rock

How sampling transformed music | Mark Ronson

1. Introduction

Lecture 18. Piano Music of Mozart and Beethoven

Music Theory in 16 Minutes

