Developing Your Musicianship

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Coursera course from Berklee College of Music.

Offered by Berklee College of Music. Learn the basic concepts and approaches needed to understand, create, and perform contemporary music. ... Enroll for free.

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Taught by
George W. Russell, Jr.
Chair
and 13 more instructors

Offered by
Berklee College of Music

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 19 mentions • top 11 shown below

r/piano • post
41 points • Joename
Ever get frustrated that you're just moving from piece to piece without developing a better understanding of the underlying music? I've compiled some great Coursera resources that are helping me quite a bit.

While learning piano as an adult has been an enormously enriching part of my life, I have been frustrated that occasionally it felt like my teacher and I were just moving from piece to piece without developing a greater understanding of what I was playing, how I can replicate it, how to sit down and just play, practical theory, etc. Half an hour just isn't enough time for a lot of the stuff I wanted to know. I felt like I was learning pieces, but not necessarily the ability to really understand the music.

Over the last two months I put together and have been going through a curriculum of freely available resources that I think can be helpful for other folks in the same predicament as me. So here is what I've put together. Note: All of these items are free (except for one that I'll discuss later). Just select the Audit Course option.

Getting Started With Music Theory (Coursera): This has been a great foundational course that was somewhat remedial in places but helped me to gain a better understanding of a few things I had been lacking: Particularly: Key signatures, the structure of major and minor chords and how they're related to each other, and the quality of intervals. This was stuff that scared me before (oh no, a piece with 4 sharps!) but it really demystifies that whole process by explaining that the underlying structure of the music is identical between keys. Just because you're pressing different buttons doesn't mean the music is inherently more complicated. Occasionally, there are some confusing explanations of terms and such, and the quizzes are structured oddly. But outside of those very minor hiccups, I highly recommend it.

Developing Your Musicianship (Coursera): Incredible course, and the first in a series that you can pursue as a specialization. This does cover some of the same ground as the previous one, but a) it's good to reinforce your knowledge in a new context and b) it is heavily focused on practicalities. It's developed by the Berkeley School of Music which, as far as I know, is well known for its focus on careers in playing music that go beyond the one person in a million who actually performs piano following their degree in piano performance. So, this course and its sequels are heavy on ear training, hearing majors and minors, knowing what intervals sound like, and what you can do on the piano to replicate these sounds in the context of writing your own piece. I highly recommend this course and the ones that follow it. You'll be a much better amateur musician when it's done.

Write Like Mozart: An Introduction to Classical Composition (Coursera): Classical music, particularly from the galant and classical eras, sounds a certain way and you probably can't put your finger on why. Well, it turns out, most of the composers from that era were all operating from a more or less standard series of rules which gives the music its distinct sound and structure. If you're studying with a teacher, I'd bet you're learning the standard classical repertoire which is primarily from this era. This is an excellent but demanding course that may be best taken after some months of piano practice, or after the theory course/with a slightly more than basic-level understanding of theory. You do NOT need to be at an intermediate or high level to benefit from this course. You'll learn about voice leading, texture, inversions, melody-writing, and a whole bunch more. This course will give you a far far better understanding of why the stuff you are playing sounds the way it does, AND will give you the tools to compose something similar-sounding yourself. It's awesome.

Exploring Beethoven's Piano Sonatas (Coursera): I have not taken this course yet, but I think the grounding of the previously mentioned course will be extremely helpful here. Listening to piano music is a huge benefit to playing, and understanding what you are hearing enriches the listening part and the playing part. There are part two and part three sequel courses to this. I'm excited to get going

Classical Piano Improvisation (Patreon, $1 a month): This course, which is really an ongoing series of monthly lessons and guides, is possibly best for those who have been playing for a couple of years and have a grounding in the first three courses I listed here. But I think it also works beautifully as a sequel to the Write Like Mozart course. The teacher is renowned piano pedagogist and professor of piano at Cedarville University, Dr. John Mortensen. He's trying to revive classical improvisation among both teachers (so they can can teach it to their students) and directly to amateur and higher level students. This course is is also focused on the standardized rules of Baroque, Galant, and classical music, and actively teaches you how to improvise within the boundaries of those rules. This is an excellent course for better understanding why the music you're playing sounds the way it does, and in teaching you how to sit at a piano with a set of chord progressions and just play something that sounds great in the classical style. It's $1 a month, so not free, but just about as close as you can get. The 2 videos a month and the assignments give you more than enough to study and practice.

Ok, that's about all I can think of. I hope this is as helpful for others as it is for me.

r/guitarlessons • comment
1 points • LadyCrawley

I think the term you're wanting to describe all the notes (accidentals and naturals) is the chromatic scale.

I strongly recommend the Coursera course "Developing Your Musicianship" from the Berklee College. You can audit the class for free although you won't be able to submit assignments.

r/musictheory • comment
1 points • codemasonry

Developing Your Musicianship is a free online course by Berklee College of Music.

r/musictheory • comment
3 points • WoJiaoMax

Here is the video that helped find the key (the tonal center) of a progression or a song: https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=57GihkLbSHI&list=RDAMVM57GihkLbSHI

This is from a Berklee College of Music online course. I just watched the above video and then I practiced it for a while, and it became clear and second nature to my ears.

I also did the whole course offered by that professor online: https://www.coursera.org/learn/develop-your-musicianship

That guy was awesome at opening my ears

r/LetsTalkMusic • comment
1 points • sammysendit

I was in a similar place as you a couple of years ago. Played guitar on and off for over 10 years, and got decent at it but mainly limited to teaching myself from chords or tabs online without having any real idea why or how they were written. Started wanting to write my own songs but didn't really know where to start.

There's plenty of good free resources online, sites like musictheory.net, and various people on youtube. Personally I find it easier to learn if I have a consistent course to go step by step with, rather than just looking up random topics. Justinguitar touches on some various theory topics based around guitar (obviously).

But for me the best primer was a course I took through Berklee on Coursera called I believe "Developing Your Musicianship". It cost something like $50 at the time but it was worth it. It was taught based around the piano keyboard, so having a keyboard is handy but there are free online versions you could use. The course touched on the basic structure of how chords are built, major, minor, 7ths. Basic scales like the major, minor and pentatonic. And some simple song structure, like the classic blues progression. Probably more, but that's mostly what I remember.

Having it explained on keys made waaay more sense to me than on guitar. Because the keyboard is set up in a linear way, it makes visualizing the notes, scales and chord structure much simpler, as opposed to the way a guitar is tuned.

Recently I've been working on my singing, along with moving back to the guitar mainly and that basic knowledge has helped me teach myself a lot and piece things together. Rather than seeing an open C chord as "first finger on this string, this fret... second finger that finger that fret..." I'm seeing it as a C, E, G, another C, another E. And so on.

Longwinded post, but I'd recommend finding a short structured course to get the basics down. From there it's way easier to expand your knowledge and apply it to different aspects of music. I'll link that Berklee course if I can find it, but I'm sure there's several out there that would cover the same bases.

EDIT: Found the course. Side note, try to learn all the notes on the E and A string by heart. It'll help massively as far as playing different types of bar chords and melodies.

r/musicproduction • comment
1 points • metinota

You should check out LMMS. It's free and open-source, and I've really enjoyed using it for beat making. It has tons of samples, plugins, virtual synths---enough to get you pretty far.

A MIDI keyboard (or controller with a keyboard) is handy, especially if you're wanting to learn keys, but you can get by in LMMS without one.

As for learning to play keyboard myself, I've started to take this free course: Developing your Musicianship. And the learning just grows from there.

Good luck, and make sure you have fun!

r/musictheory • comment
1 points • gnatok

I finish this one https://www.coursera.org/learn/develop-your-musicianship and a bunch of other ones from Berklee.

Very recommend this one.

r/Guitar • comment
1 points • Boxcar_Overkill

https://www.coursera.org/learn/develop-your-musicianship?action=enroll

Free Coursera course from Berklee College of Music. I haven't taken it, but I've heard good things. It's mostly based on the piano, but it is much easier to understand theory on a piano anyway. Later you can apply it to the guitar.

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" The course will teach you the major scale and minor pentatonic scale, and how they are constructed. You will learn what intervals are, how to sing them, and how to find them in music. The course explores tonal centers and how to find the key a song is in, in addition to common time signatures such as 4/4 and 3/4. You will learn how to build chords—major and minor triads, and major and dominant seventh chords—and how to build a common chord progression—the I IV V. You will also learn how to recognize the blues and AABA song forms, and write a basic chord sheet to express your song ideas. "

​

Good place to start.

r/LofiHipHop • comment
1 points • Mioche_1

Some courses from coursera: https://www.coursera.org/learn/develop-your-musicianship https://www.coursera.org/course/musictheory https://www.coursera.org/learn/classical-composition

r/pianolearning • comment
1 points • ElectronicProgram

First off, www.musictheory.net is a great resource - make sure you know the stuff from the lessons there.

This course may also help you (I think you can audit for free, or support the site and go for a certificate): https://www.coursera.org/learn/develop-your-musicianship

Harmonies can be tougher. For rock and pop music most chords tend to be diatonic (only using notes in the scale of the key of the song, i.e. if the song is in C major, the 3 note diatonic chords would be the following:

C, Dmin, Emin, F, G, Amin, Bdim (only using the white keys).

I am no expert on transcribing these, so I don't have as many practical tips, however, my experience comes from taking chord charts on the internet and arranging my own pop songs, which lead really well into trying to figure out melody lines by ear.

r/piano • comment
1 points • bluedunnock

I need some tips to find a teacher who will help me get better, I am a motivated Adult learner and I need a teacher who can give me specific inputs. My goal is to be able to play what I hear and play what I conceive in my mind.

I can read sheet music and I understand a good amount of music theory. Thanks to Dave Conservatoire https://www.daveconservatoire.org/ and berklee's course in coursera which one can audit for free (https://www.coursera.org/learn/develop-your-musicianship)

I have a good Keyboard (casio CTX9000in) and I have worked through my Bastien Piano level 1 exercises.

I use musescore for practicing my ear and notation. This also helps me to mentally play the tune seeing the notation.

Most of teachers I tried so far focus on a very structured format, play the same piece until you play it 100%. This format doesn't work for me, I want more of mentor who can coach me and help me identify my mistakes and correct them. Would it be possible to find one such teacher? Appreciate any tips/suggestions. Thanks in Advance.