Music Theory Vol.I : Basic Terminology
Understanding the Basics
Description
Do you want to start playing a musical instrument?
Do you want to get familiar with the basic terminology from scratch?
Maybe you are already studying by your own or you are a self-taught person. Perhaps you are curious person and you want to understand music language better. If this is your case, this course is for you.
In this course you will understand the basic elements of music language. Music as a language has its own symbols and writing rules (grammar, a way of saying), sometimes we think that is not necessary or too difficult but it is not!
This course will guide you in the process.
This course has more than 5200 students enrolled and it has 4.1 stars from 5 possible on Udemy, this is what some students are saying about this course on their reviews:
"A good course for a beginner" (5 stars)
"Excellent instruction. Covers material taught very well" (5 stars)
"The instructor starts at the very beginning and thoroughly explains each topic in an-easy to understand method" (5 stars)
Some of the terminology that you will learn in this course is:
Notes
Staff
Clef
Grand Staff
Rhythmical Figures
Time Signature
Tempo Markings
Dynamics
Major Scale
Through very easy to follow lectures you will understand all this concepts and you will have a chance to prove yourself with the exercises that this course includes.
Enroll in this course and start learning music theory from scratch today!
What You Will Learn!
- Learn the basic music terminology in order to understand music language.
- Get the knowledge to start reading music.
- Keep learning music theory and playing an instrument understanding music better.
- Understand what you already play if you pay by ear.
Who Should Attend!
- Any person that is interested in understanding what music terminology is about.
- If you are planning to start playing any instrument, this course is for you.
- If you are already studying music but you have some doubts maybe because you are a self-taught student.
- Professional musicians and students that know the basics about music theory will find this course too elemental.