What we cover in this book
0.1. What we cover in this book
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
This book teaches the fundamentals of music theory—primarily stave notation, scale, key, harmony, and metre—while acknowledging that this system represents a particular European-oriented way of knowing music, not a universal or scientific account of all musical practice.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What "music theory" means here: not a scientific theory, but a particular academic discipline and way of talking/thinking about music using stave notation.
- What "fundamentals" means: not elementary or simple; it requires sophisticated thinking and a combination of practical and conceptual skills.
- Common confusion: "music theory" sounds universal, but the system taught here is oriented to white European discourse from the past 150 colonial and post-colonial years—human musical imagination goes far beyond these classroom conventions.
- Where concepts come from: musical concepts originate in physical, human, cultural contexts of performance and perception; notation is a technology that visualizes and shapes our thinking.
- Why this system dominates: stave notation has become a widespread, globalized, influential technology, especially institutionalized in the UK.
🎯 What this book teaches (and what it doesn't)
🎯 The scope: literacy in stave notation
- The focus is mainly on literacy—learning to write down a musical language.
- Core topics covered:
- Building blocks of stave notation
- Scale and key
- Harmony and metre
❌ What "music theory" is NOT
Music theory in this context: not a scientific theory that can account for features of the natural world; rather, it is a particular way of knowing, connected to how you can talk and think about music.
- Don't confuse: "theory" here does not mean a testable scientific hypothesis.
- "Fundamentals" does not mean elementary—it requires sophisticated thinking.
- "Music" in "music theory" does not give the full picture of human musical creativity; it signifies an orientation to white European discourse about music.
🌍 The limits of this system
- The scope of human musical imagination and creativity goes way past the classroom conventions of music theory.
- This dominant knowledge system is profoundly oriented to European notions of music born of the past 150 colonial and post-colonial years.
- Example: Many musical traditions and practices exist outside stave notation and European harmonic concepts.
🧠 Where musical concepts come from
🧠 Concepts originate in human experience
- Musical concepts come from people in the world—they start in the physical, human, cultural context of performance and imagination.
- Bodies perceive the physical vibrations of materials and make sense and patterns out of these experiences.
- Musical concepts don't start as symbols on paper; they emerge from embodied, cultural practice.
🛠️ Notation as technology
Musical notation, in its long and varied history, is a technology.
- Through notation we:
- Write down concepts
- Visualize them
- Learn them
- Imagine and create with them
- Every successful human technology integrates with our lives and shapes our thinking and imagination.
- Stave notation, as a form of literacy, has become a widespread, globalized, influential technology.
🔄 How notation shapes thought
- Notation is not neutral—it is a tool that influences how we conceptualize music.
- Example: Learning stave notation trains you to think in terms of pitches on a staff, bar lines, and harmonic progressions; other musical traditions may conceptualize sound differently (e.g., timbre, gesture, oral transmission).
🏛️ The institutional context
🏛️ Stave notation in the UK
- In the UK, the five-line stave is a dominant and thoroughly institutionalized language.
- Learning music theory generally means learning to read and write music notation.
- Many learners take it for granted that "music theory" and "reading/writing notation" come together.
- This assumption is more likely if you are already embedded in this institutional context.
⚠️ Why this matters
- Recognizing the European, colonial origins of this system helps learners understand:
- Why certain concepts are emphasized (e.g., major/minor scales, functional harmony)
- Why other musical traditions may not fit neatly into this framework
- That fluency in this language is valuable but not exhaustive of musical knowledge
📚 How to use this book
📚 Structure and navigation
- The book is organized into topics.
- Each topic includes:
- Video lecture links
- Explanatory content (text and figures)
- Suggestions for further reading
- Transcripts at the end of each section
- Topic 0 (this introduction) is delivered independently of other topics.
- You can go straight to Topic 1 (the rudiments of music theory and notation) and return to Topic 0 when ready.
🗺️ Cross-references
- Because the videos originated from an openly shared course, presenters may cross-refer to lectures, topics, chapters, or "weeks."
- When this happens, return to the layout and organization of this resource to navigate as you wish.