What is a melody and how do we describe it?
Melody in music is simply the main tune that we can hear. Questions on melody might ask you to complete the missing pitches in a short melody, identify an interval, describe the shape of a melody or name an ornament or a particular melodic device.
Don’t forget to describe the obvious – the first three of these are easy to hear and will usually get you marks. Only then move onto the more complicated, technical terms.
Direction: is the melody rising or falling? Describe what happens in detail, e.g. “At first it rises then it falls” or “the melody keeps falling and rising in a repeated pattern”
Type of movement: is the melody leaping (e.g. arpeggios) or moving by step (scales). If it is leaping, are the gaps small (e.g. thirds) or large (e.g. sevenths)
Range: Does the melody use only a small range (a fourth or a fifth) or does it cover a much wider range? Is the range of the melody generally high or low? As with all elements it is worth listening to see if it changes (“e.g. at first the range is quite low but it slowly gets higher”)
Scales: Is the melody based on a particular scale? The most common scales are listed below
Major
Minor
Pentatonic
Blues
Chromatic (either part of whole of chromatics scales – only using semitones)
The following melodic devices might be used in a melody line or may be used to develop a melody:
Ornaments are extra notes that are added to decorate a melody:
An interval is the distance between two notes. Intervals are always counted from the lower note to the higher one, with the lower note being counted as one. Intervals come in different qualities and size. If the notes are sounded successively, it is a melodic interval. If sounded simultaneously, then it is a harmonic interval.
The smallest interval used in Western music is the semitone (half step). A visual representation of a half step would be the distance between a consecutive white and black note on the piano. There are two exceptions to this rule, as two natural half steps occur between the notes E and F, and B and C.
A tone (whole step) is the distance between two consecutive white or black keys. It is made up of two half steps.
Intervals can be described as Major (M), Minor (m), Perfect (P), Augmented (A), and Diminished (d).
Intervals come in various sizes: Unisons, Seconds, Thirds, Fourths, Fifths, Sixths, and Sevenths.
2nds, 3rds, 6ths, and 7ths can be found as Major and Minor.
Unisons, 4ths, 5ths, and Octaves are Perfect.
Questions to help describe melody
Does the melody use step-wise movement, and/or move by leaps?
Does the melody descend, ascend, arc or stay in the same place?
Does the melody have a large or small range?
Can you hear any melodic devices?