The Locator -- [(author = "Greenberg Robert 1954-")]

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03077aim a2200469Ii 4500
001 C9A2921C70D211E6B79D7A86DAD10320
003 SILO
005 20161106155724
007 sd fungnnmmneu
007 co bg|---auuuu
008 141205p20152007vaunnnn  r     lz n eng d
020    $a 1490659552
020    $a 9781490659558
028 02 $a 7271 $b The Teaching Company
028 02 $a GC0027 $b Recorded Books
040    $d SILO
050 14 $a MT7 $b .G74 2007b
082 04 $a 781.1 $2 23
100 1  $a Greenberg, Robert, $d 1954- $e author.
245 10 $a Understanding the fundamentals of music / $c Robert Greenberg.
250    $a [PDF workbook version].
264  1 $a Prince Frederick, MD : $b Recorded Books, $c [2015]
300    $a 16 audio discs : $b digital, CD audio ; $c 4 3/4 in. + $e 1 computer optical disc (4 3/4 in.).
490 1  $a The Great courses.
500    $a "The Great courses, Topic: Fine arts & music ; Subtopic: Music appreation"--Cover.
500    $a "Course no. 7261"--Disc labels.
500    $a 16 lectures lasting 45 minutes each.
500    $a Accompanying CD-ROM contains course workbook in PDF format.
505 0  $a Lecture 1. The language of music -- lecture 2. Timbre, continued -- lecture 3. Timbre, part 3 -- lecture 4. Beat and tempo -- lecture 5. Meter, part 1 -- lecture 6. Meter, part 2 -- lecture 7. Pitch and mode, part 1 -- lecture 8. Pitch and mode, part 2 -- lecture 9. Intervals and tunings -- lecture 10. Tonality, key signature, and the circle of fifths -- lecture 11. Intervals revisited and expanded -- lecture 12. Melody -- lecture 13. Melody, continued -- lecture 14. Texture and Harmony, part 1 -- lecture 15. Harmony, part 2 : function, tendency, and dominance -- lecture 16. Harmony, part 3 : progression, cadence, and modulation.
511 0  $a Lecturer: Professor Robert Greenberg, San Francisco Performances.
520    $a For anyone wanting to master music's language, being able to read musical notation is a necessity. But this course, as Professor Greenberg notes, is a basic course, designed to introduce you to music's language in a way that is similar to the way you learned your own native language, by "discovering and exploring musical syntax through our ears-- by learning what the parts of musical speech sound like-- rather than what they look like on paper." By sidestepping the necessity to read music, these lectures represent an extremely rare opportunity in musical education-- an opportunity to experience a solid introduction to music theory's basics in a way that is not technically intimidating, yet provides a substantial grounding in the fundamentals-- $c Publisher.
538    $a Compact disc; PDF requires Adobe Reader or PDF reader.
650  0 $a Music $x Instruction and study.
650  0 $a Music theory.
650  0 $a Music appreciation.
650  0 $a Musical analysis.
710 2  $a Teaching Company.
830  0 $a Great courses.
941    $a 1
945    $a cdab
952    $l CAPH522 $d 20160902012246.0
956    $a http://locator.silo.lib.ia.us/search.cgi?index_0=id&term_0=C9A2921C70D211E6B79D7A86DAD10320

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