Lecture 3. Rhythm: Fundamentals
Listening to Music (MUSI 112) In this lecture, Professor Wright explains the basic system of Western musical notation, and offers an interpretation of its advantages and disadvantages. He also discusses the fundamental principles of rhythm, elaborating upon such concepts as beat, meter, and discussing in some depth the nature of durational patterns in duple and triple meters. The students are taught to conduct basic patterns in these meters through musical examples drawn from Chuck Mangione, Cole Porter, REM, Chopin, and Ravel. 00:00 - Chapter 1. Advantages and Disadvantages of Musical Notation 14:41 - Chapter 2. Beats and Meters 23:09 - Chapter 3. Exercises Distinguishing Duple and Triple Meters 31:27 - Chapter 4. Conducting Basic Meter Patterns: Exercises with REM, Chopin, and Ravel Complete course materials are available at the Yale Online website: online.yale.edu This course was recorded in Fall 2008.

Lecture 4. Rhythm: Jazz, Pop and Classical

Lecture 5. Melody: Notes, Scales, Nuts and Bolts

Mastering Style: The Learning and Teaching of Writing

Ralph Murphy Lecture - Music Production

How to Speak

Lecture 2. Introduction to Instruments and Musical Genres

Lecture 17. Mozart and His Operas

How to Write a Melody?

Notation Must Die: The Battle For How We Read Music

Music Theory in 16 Minutes

Lecture 6. Melody: Mozart and Wagner

Lecture 13. Fugue: Bach, Bizet and Bernstein

Music Theory and White Supremacy

1. Introduction

Einstein for the Masses

Rhythm in music explained- How to get rhythm

Morning with Bach | Classical Music for Energy and Motivation

Kofi Agawu - Anku’s Theory of African Rhythm

