Thinking Music

Notes on partimenti, musical creativity, improvisation, and learning to think in music.

These essays explore historical traditions of musical training, practical tools for improvisation and composition, and reflections on how musicians learn to create.

How Tones Fit Together, Partimento Ian Campbell How Tones Fit Together, Partimento Ian Campbell

How Tones Fit Together: Why Partimento?

If harmony is simply how tones fit together, where does partimento fit? This essay argues that partimento’s uniqueness lies not in the harmonic language it teaches—which is familiar to anyone who has studied common-practice theory—but in how it teaches. By learning through playing, singing, improvising, and composing, musicians develop an understanding they can carry in their ears, fingers, and imagination, preparing them to engage with music far beyond the eighteenth century.

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How Tones Fit Together — Part One

What if harmony is too small a word? This summer I’m beginning a new series called How Tones Fit Together, exploring one of music’s oldest questions in the broadest possible sense. From the harmonic series and the quadrivium to Bach, the blues, Taylor Swift, and musical traditions from around the world, we’ll explore how human beings have organized sound—and why melody, relationship, and listening may be the real foundations of music.

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