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Common practice

Classical music has three very broad periods:

  • pre-1650 (early music), a counterpoint was the most prominent then
  • 1650..1900, so called "common practice period", which is the focus of most traditional manuals on classical music
  • 20th and 21st century, which has a huge variety of new techniques and approaches, so that sometimes pieces are idiosyncratic and don't share many language traits with some larger class of pieces

Common practice music has several periods (having different language traits):

  • Baroque (a mixture of polyphony and homophony), including Galant (schemata)
  • Classical (decline of polyphony)
  • Romantic (more chromaticism, prevalence of minor mode)

The books below mostly focus on classical and romantic periods. They give an intro into music notation and are good for a beginner, although they ultimately go pretty far into things like voice-leading in four-part writing, diatonic and chromatic harmony (from Roman numerals to Neapolitan sixth and augmented sixth chords) and overview of forms (sentence, period, binary form, sonata form). They will probably take a good year or two to study. Their core topics are the same, so the difference is primarily in the choice of examples, notation, terms, exercises and appendices.

Also, there are advanced materials

Also, let's see what we have for a specific example: Beethoven op. 10 no. 1 mov. 1

Free online books with audio examples

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Printed books

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(Comparison of books is taken from a review by Brad Osborn)

Video courses

Harmonic analysis

On the openness of harmonic analysis

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Form

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