Pass the AP Music Theory Exam! Public Class

Tuesday, November 17 2009 | 10:00 AM (PST)

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Price:
Free
Duration:
45 minutes
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About the Class

This class will offer interactive exchange for not only reviewing the material of the AP Music Theory exam, but also testing to the attendees. An invaluable study resource presented by a professional composer with a Master of Composition.
A major component of any college curriculum in music is a course introducing the first-year student to music theory, a subject that comprises the musical materials and procedures of the Common Practice period. Such a course may bear a variety of titles (Basic Musicianship, Elementary Theory, Harmony and Dictation, Structure of Music, etc). It may emphasize one aspect of music, such as harmony; more often, however, it integrates aspects of melody, harmony, texture, rhythm, form, musical analysis, elementary composition, and to some extent, history and style. Musicianship skills such as dictation and other listening skills, sight-singing, and keyboard harmony are considered an important part of the theory course, although they may be taught as separate classes.
The student''s ability to read and write musical notation is fundamental to such a course. It is also assumed that the student has acquired (or is acquiring) at least basic performance skills in voice or on an instrument.
The ultimate goal of an AP Music Theory course is to develop a student''s ability to recognize, understand, and describe the basic materials and processes of music that are heard or presented in a score. The achievement of these goals may best be approached by initially addressing fundamental aural, analytical, and compositional skills using both listening and written exercises. Building on this foundation, the course should progress to include more creative tasks, such as the harmonization of a melody by selecting appropriate chords, composing a musical bass line to provide two-voice counterpoint, or the realization of figured-bass notation.

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Keywords: music, 9th-10th grade: music, 11th-12th grade: music, career & vocational: digital music, career & vocational: music, ap theory, music theory, composition, composer, music composer, film composer

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About Daniel Leo Simpson
(Teacher)

  • Daniel Leo Simpson
    Daniel Leo Simpson
  • 45 Followers
  • 21 Members recommend
  • 38 Classes conducted
  • 2 Tests created
  • 14 Tutorials added

Profile Summary

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Daniel Léo Simpson, an award-winning American Composer with a flair for creating "contagious" and engaging music, specializes in unusual, interesting and dynamic works of every genre. He holds a Masters degree in Theory and Composition. In Los Angeles where he studied and wrote for motion pictures under the tutelage of Henry Mancini, Bill Conti, Joe Harnel and Allyn Ferguson at the Grove School of Music.
His “Nocturne for Orchestra” was selected as a winning composition from over 500 entries to be and will be recorded by the Grammy Award-Winning Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra followed by released with worldwide distribution through Naxos record label. His “Soliloquy” for Violin & Orchestra was chosen from over 600 submissions , recorded in 2010 by the Millennium Symphony Orchestra for worldwide CD distribution. He won First prize in the First Annual International Schillinger Composition Contest for his composition "The Art of Schillinger", composed wholly using Schillinger techniques and sponsored by The Schillinger School of Music in conjunction with the University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.

His entry “Tuscaloosa Tango”, has been selected as the winner of the 2010 Alabama Orchestra Association Composition Competition which includes an all-expense paid invitation as composer in residence to attend the 2010 All-State Festival on February 11th-14th in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, participate in the Meet the Composer aspect of the Festival, and work closely with the conductor and ensemble that is premiering his work.
Most recently, Mr. Simpson’s music was chosen from over 650 entries for an opportunity to score the 1904 Thomas Edison silent film classic, “Maniac Chase” for DVD the following year. Daniel Léo Simpson is highly esteemed composer and educator.