Raise the Fifth! Listening for Augmented Triads

Looking for a harmonically ambiguous chord to add a little mystery to your band’s latest hit single? Or maybe you are listening to a favorite tune and are jarred by a pretty bizarre harmony starring an augmented fifth? Look no further than the rarely used and incredibly underappreciated augmented chord.

From David Bowie to the Beatles, and even a little Broadway, the augmented triad is like that one wacky cousin that no one talks about, but you can’t help liking once you get to know him!

C augmented chord

Hearing Augmented

This interesting chord built on two major triads provides a very unique sound that does not occur naturally in the diatonic scale. This triad is often used to create ambiguity and atonality in a work by functioning as a substitute dominant, or is found in the harmonic minor scale as the chord built on the third degree of the scale. Since many of our favorite tunes stubbornly and consistently stay harmonically simple by sticking to four basic chords, adding in the augmented triad brings a bit of interesting flavor to a song.

The Beatles, well known for their harmonic experimentation, have a few tunes that delve into the augmented realm. “All My Loving” is an excellent example, with augmented chords in the chorus (first time at [0:54]):

However, most contemporary popular songs use the augmented chord sparingly, if at all. You will find these more complex harmonies in the rock songs of earlier years and peppered throughout jazz and blues.

In Leslie Gore’s “It’s My Party”, the augmented triad is featured prominently under “cry if I want to” in the chorus. The “+” means “augmented” and is used interchangeably with “aug”. Both will be used in this article, and you will see both in lead sheets. Listen for the augmented chords at [0:08] and all the other choruses:

A
It’s my party and I’ll
A+
Cry if I want to, Cry
D
If I want to cry
Dm
If I want to

You can hear this augmented chord progression here:

chord progression for "it's my party"

Building the Augmented Triad

How do you create the augmented triad? Is it crazy difficult?

No, for all its atonal ambiguity, the augmented triad is simple.

Start with a major third:

major third interval

Once you have your major third, build another major third on top:

c augmented chord

The result is two major thirds stacked on top of each other, and an augmented fifth interval between the bottom and the top notes.

Need more help learning how to build an augmented chord? Then check out this quick and easy tutorial by PianoGuyTV. Watch as he plays augmented chords on the piano. As you watch, listen for the very distinct augmented sound.

Now listen to the augmented triad a few times:

What makes this unique sound? This sound differs from the familiar sounds of a major triad and a minor triad. Listen to the augmented triad compared to the major and minor triads:

major vs minor vs augmented

Typically, when we are listening to the chord progressions of our favorite Top 40 tunes, the chords contain either a perfect fifth interval (as in major and minor chords), or occasionally a diminished fifth interval (as in diminished chords). This helps the chord progression move forward, notably in familiar chord progressions like I-IV-V-I or I-V-vi-I.

However, the augmented triad has an augmented, or raised, fifth:

augmented fifth interval

The raised fifth gives the song a definite harmonically-ambiguous, almost “spacey” type of sound.

Augmented Singing Practice

In this simple exercise, you will practice singing the augmented triad and use your ear training skills.

1. Listen to the augmented triad example below a few times:

G augmented chord

2. Listen to the augmented fifth:

augmented fifth interval

3. Sing the augmented fifth with the practice track:

4. Listen to the arpeggiated augmented triad:

arpeggiated g augmented chord

5. Sing with the arpeggiated example (notice that it goes for two octaves)

Learn How to Pick out the Augmented Triad

In our previous article about diminished triads, we touched upon three different ways to hear the diminished chord in a chord progression:

  1. Learning by rote
  2. Learning by arpeggiation and audiation
  3. Listening to chord quality

Depending on your instrument or voice type and musical training, you may find one way easier than another. Most musicians find that the third way, learning a chord through sounds associated with a specific chord quality, is the quickest and easiest way to learn a chord, especially a chord as distinct as the augmented triad. But we’ll chat about all three methods here.

1. Learning By Rote

Learning how to distinguish between chords by rote is very easy for musicians that play harmonic instruments like keyboards or piano, mallet instruments, and guitar. Because they play chords on a regular basis, many times the unique sound of a chord is easily memorized. Jazz players have the biggest advantage when it comes to recognizing augmented triads since the jazz and blues often delve much deeper into complex harmonic vocabulary than most pop music styles.

For instrumentalists like drummers, trumpet or saxophone players, or even singers, because they focus primarily on rhythm or melody when they play, being able to recognize a chord on the first listen by ear can be very difficult. In fact, it’s very well-known that while percussionists have an almost insane and uncanny ability to quickly repeat numerous dizzying difficult polyrhythms, they often struggle with harmony.

Singers or melodic instrumentalists might also struggle with listening for unusual chords, although harmonic ear training exercises are often part of their musical training.

To learn the augmented triad by rote, you would listen and play the augmented triad on a regular basis, internalizing the sound.

 →Learn more about triads and chord progressions.

Augmented Triad Practice

  1. Listen to the augmented triad
  2. Play the chord on a keyboard instrument or guitar
  3. Practice the chord within a chord progression
  4. Repeat practice on a daily basis

G augmented chord progression

If you would like to learn more about how an augmented chord works in a standard chord progression, check out this easy piano tutorial with Piano Lesson with Warren. Practice along and learn how the augmented chord functions as a passing tone and more. This piano tutorial also discusses using diminished chords.

2. Learning By Arpeggiation

Learning a chord through arpeggiation usually involves some training in singing, like using solfege. Many singers are very familiar with using solfege (a system of assigning syllables to specific notes) when they learn music theory and ear training skills.

If you’re already familiar with solfege, you can use this when learning how to sing and recognize an augmented chord. If you are unfamiliar with singing solfege, simply sing on “La”.

  1. Listen to the chord and arpeggio
  2. Sing along with the arpeggiated chord
  3. Practice singing the chord without the audio
  4. Transpose to other keys

arpeggiated g augmented chord

While this method of learning a chord via arpeggiation is helpful in more advanced ear training, most of the time a musician may be trying to simply figure out the chord progressions to their favorite songs. In that case, this is not the most helpful method.

3. Learning by Chord Quality

What is chord quality? Specifically, it is identifying a chord based on whether it is major, minor, augmented, diminished, etc. Musicians often attribute a specific “sound” related to color, timbre, or even feeling, to each chord. While this is not the most scientific way of identifying a chord, it is often the simplest.

In David Bowie’s “Life on Mars?”, the use of the augmented chord adds a sinister oddness to the song in the pre-chorus ([0:37] and [0:45]) and chorus ([0:58], [1:14], and [1:26]):

Ab          E+
But the film is a saddening bore
G#7
For she’s lived it ten times or more
C#              A+
She could spit in the eyes of fools

If you have played music for any length of time, you are probably aware that most pop songs sound “happy” because they stay in the major scale. On a very elemental level, we have attributed feelings to specific scales, chords, and intervals in western harmony. Interestingly enough, these societal emotional attributions to pitch do not necessarily translate well to other cultures, but they work well for our purposes here.

For example, listen to the major chord compared to the augmented chord below:

c major chord vs c augmented chord

Ask yourself the following questions:

  1. How did the major chord sound compare to the augmented chord?
  2. What timbres, tone qualities, or even feelings did you feel when listening to the major chord? The augmented chord?
  3. Which chord would be considered “happy”?
  4. Which chord do you hear most often?
  5. Which chord seems more harmonically ambiguous? Why?

Now compare the augmented chord to the minor chord:

c minor chord vs c augmented chord

Ask yourself:

  1. How did the minor chord sound compare to the augmented chord?
  2. What timbres, tone qualities, or even feelings did you feel when listening to the minor chord? The augmented chord?
  3. What feelings would you assign the minor chord? The augmented chord? Why?
  4. Which chord do you hear most often in popular music or even film music?

Learning how to compare different types of chords in relation to each other is one way to identify which chord is the augmented chord in a progression.

In Cabaret’s “Maybe this Time”, you can hear how the augmented chords are used to transition stepwise and build into the lines “I’ll be lucky” [0:15] and “For the first time” [0:27]:

This popular Broadway song demonstrates just one way that you might use the augmented triad. Because the song has very distinct jazz flavor, there is a rich harmonic palette for the listener to enjoy.

The Beatles once again master the augmented chord on their song “From Me to You”. Notice how the song harmonically builds starting on “I got arms that long to hold you”, culminating with characteristic Beatles harmony on the augmented chord on “satisfied” [0:47]:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvJbfM304o0

A Little Bit of Listening Practice

Check out the example below. You want to practice listening for the augmented chord sound. These examples are based on popular musical examples that we have listened to already.

For each of the musical examples:

  1. Listen to the chord progression a few times
  2. After you listen to the chord progression, try to identify which chords are augmented
  3. Check your answers below

Example 1:

Show answer

C – F – D7 – G – G+
The Beatles augmented chords

Example 2:

Show answer

Bb – Gm – G+ – Eb- G7
Life on mars david bowie augmented chords

Click here to learn more

How did you do? Were you able to identify the augmented triad in the chord progression?

If not, don’t worry. Developing an ear for chords takes practice. Keep listening to the examples above, play along with your instrument, and start adding in augmented triads when you jam with your friends. Because the augmented chord can substitute easily for a dominant chord, you might find that it is actually fun to change up your sound with a little raised fifth.

Enhance Through Augmentation!

While you probably won’t encounter the augmented triad too often in the Top 40 hits on the radio, you can learn how to use augmented chords in your playing to great effect.

Take a cue from David Bowie and experiment with placing augmented chords strategically to give your chord progressions that spacey, almost supernatural feel, or make like the Beatles and use the augmented chord for harmonic experimentation.

Practice the ear training method that works best for you to learn how to listen for augmented triads in music. Practice makes perfect (or at least a little better) so enjoy the singular strangeness of the augmented triad and rock on!

The post Raise the Fifth! Listening for Augmented Triads appeared first on Musical U.

All Things Vocal with Judy Rodman

New musicality video:

Today we’re speaking with Judy Rodman of judyrodman.com and the All Things Vocal blog. Judy went from being a professional jingle singer in the 70s to getting a recording contract as a singer and having a Billboard #1 song, to writing songs and having one of them become a #1 hit for Leann Rimes, to now being an in-demand vocal coach in Nashville and the creator of the All Things Vocal blog and podcast. http://musicalitypodcast.com/44

In this conversation we talk about:

– What it was that let her succeed again and again as she pivoted her music career through the years

– The two areas she recommends beginning singers to focus on and specific exercises to help with both

– The number one most important thing to focus on as a singer if you want to improve and have a good-sounding voice

– How studio singing differs from singing on stage

– A clever device that can help you past that feeling of thinking you sound odd or bad when you hear yourself on a recording

There is a ton packed into this conversation and whether you’ve never sung before, you sing and want to get better, or you’re already performing on stage and in the studio, there is going to be something valuable for you to take away, and we know you’re going to want to immerse yourself more in everything Judy offers to help singers.

Listen to the episode:

http://musicalitypodcast.com/44

Links and Resources

Judy Rodman’s website: http://judyrodman.com/

All Things Vocal blog and podcast: http://blog.judyrodman.com/

Power, Path & Performance course: http://www.judyrodman.com/power-path-performance

Singing in the Studio course: http://judyrodman.com/sis.htm

Hearfones as a singing tool: http://www.judyrodman.com/hearfones.htm

Here We Are, Judy’s album with her husband: http://www.johnandjudyrodman.com/music.html

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

===============================================

Learn more about Musical U!

Website:
https://www.musical-u.com/

Podcast:
http://musicalitypodcast.com

Tone Deaf Test:
http://tonedeaftest.com/

Musicality Checklist:
https://www.musical-u.com/mcl-musicality-checklist

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/MusicalU

Twitter:

YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/c/MusicalU

Subscribe for more videos from Musical U!

All Things Vocal with Judy Rodman

Who wouldn’t prefer a robot to a live drummer? After all,…

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/human-drummers-drum-machines/
Who wouldn’t prefer a robot to a live drummer? After all, computers have the ability to create flawless, technically-perfect rhythms. As it turns out, people are actually attracted to songs created by humans because of the minuscule flaws they contain. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/human-drummers-drum-machines/

Steve Nixon from FreeJazzLessons.com has already toured t…

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/free-jazz-lessons-with-steve-nixon/
Steve Nixon from FreeJazzLessons.com has already toured the world with legends like B.B. King and Buddy Guy. Not to be content, he set his sights on YouTube and wound up with 65,000 students per month watching his videos. Sit down with Steve and learn more about how he developed as a musician in this interview. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/free-jazz-lessons-with-steve-nixon/

What is the one skill that guitarist should develop more …

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/5-things-guitarists-dont-hold-back/
What is the one skill that guitarist should develop more than anything? Guitar Domination discusses how nothing is more important your musical growth than aural skills. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/5-things-guitarists-dont-hold-back/

Playing music isn’t just fun, but it can have fantastic b…

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/9-ways-learning-an-instrument-strengthens-your-brain/
Playing music isn’t just fun, but it can have fantastic benefits to your brain. Learn more in this exploration from the Musical U team. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/9-ways-learning-an-instrument-strengthens-your-brain/

What is the Circle of Fifths? While this magical musical …

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/how-to-use-circle-fifths/
What is the Circle of Fifths? While this magical musical master tool is a mystery to many, you won’t believe how much learning this simple concept will improve your understanding of music. Get started today! https://www.musical-u.com/learn/how-to-use-circle-fifths/

A Chain of Chords, All Things Vocal, Teaching Music the Right Way, and Listening to Yourself Sing

To make musical progress, what are the most important tools to have in your kit?

The answer will vary from musician to musician, but at the top of many lists will be expert advice and feedback, an ability to self-critique, and an understanding of how music is written.

This week on Musical U, we’re giving you a little bit of each. Vocal coach Judy Rodman offers valuable advice to singers, music teacher Cristian Contreras explores what is means to teach effectively, and the Musicality Podcast delves into the often-intimidating practice of recording your own singing voice and listening back.

But first, we have a master guide on the backbone that your favourite hit songs are built on: chord progressions!

A Chain of Chords

Behind almost every unforgettable tune is an unforgettable chord progression.

However, chords aren’t just strung together in any order – there are underlying secrets that make certain combinations and series sound incredible, while others fall flat.

Understanding chord progressionsIn Musical U’s Introduction to Chord Progressions, we’re giving you a crash course in chords and how they’re put together to form the songs you love. Songwriters, this guide is for you, too – we have seven simple tips to get you writing progressions with punch in no time.

When understanding and writing progressions, there are so many chords and keys to remember. If only there was a shortcut to help put it all together! Fortunately, we have a way of organizing chords in the same scale together into a chord family. Chelsea from The Chord Reserve explores chord families and the benefits of grouping chords this way.

A fantastic chord progression can take you to a new world, a place where you can experience all the emotions that our favorite music brings out in us. For your listening pleasure, Marco Cirillo has recorded six chord progressions that will take your breath away. We hope that this inspires you to dive deeper into progressions and the power that they can bring to any piece of music.

One last note: let’s refer back to one of our favorite subjects: the magical circle of fifths. This musical tool will unlock countless mysteries of music and allow you to express yourself with ease. Consonus Music explores how one teacher uses the circle of fifths to teach composition.

All Things Vocal

Judy Rodman has seen every angle of the world of singing: starting off as a professional jingle singer, she proceeded to land a recording contract, get herself into the Billboard #1 spot, write a hit for LeAnn Rimes, and become one of Nashville’s most sought-after vocal coaches.

In All Things Vocal, with Judy Rodman, she gives a fascinating account of her rich career, how she honed the skills needed to thrive in the industry and expert advice for everyone from beginning singers to seasoned chanteuses.

Vocal coaching with Judy RodmanJudy’s fascinating musical journey all started with a gig singing jingles. While we often think of jingles as something trivial in our current world, the practice is still very much alive. Are you interested in trying your hand at becoming a jingle singer? Voice Council gives five tips for becoming successful in the field.

Judy has been a star on both sides of the microphone in the musical capital of Nashville, Tennessee. While making it big in this famed city isn’t as easy as the famous television show makes it appear, you can give yourself a leg up with these helpful suggestions from Trip Savvy.

Judy had a turning point in her career when she began to coach other vocalists. We talk a lot about music teachers on this site, but we don’t regularly talk about the difference between a teacher and a coach. Vocal Process discusses the difference between the two, and how you can make the best decision for yourself no matter where you are in your musical journey.

Teaching Music the Right Way

Being a good music teacher doesn’t happen by accident – it requires constant self-education and self-critique.

In 5 Habits of Effective Music Teachers, Cristian Contreras explores what it means to be an exceptional and inspiring teacher. Some of these may surprise you; good teaching does not mean having all the answers, or sticking with tried-and-true repertoire. What it does mean is an adaptive, dynamic approach to the profession.

How to teach effectivelyBeing a music teacher is not an easy vocation, and we are fortunate to have so many wonderful music teachers amongst us. Like all musicians, music teachers have their insecurities about their musical abilities and are always in pursuit of excellence on their instrument. Teaching With Orff discusses “The Imposter Syndrome”, and how you can gain confidence as a music teacher.

Part of being an effective teacher is keeping up with the latest in technological innovations that upgrade the way that we teach. One of the most popular creations in the last couple of years has been Google Docs, a cloud-based way of utilizing basic office apps. But that couldn’t have any application in music, could it? 88 Piano Keys developed a method to organize lesson notes within Google Docs that may change your mind.

Changing times have also changed the way that many people learn, and it is imperative to change with them if you want to make the biggest difference. Teachers Magazine explores two different students’ learning journeys, and gives some valuable information to make sure that you are helping your student.

Listening to Yourself Sing

Recording your own singing voice can be a surreal experience – chances are, what you’ll hear back on the recording is quite different from what you hear inside your own head.

So why this drastic difference in sound, and what can you do to get yourself used to listening to recordings of your singing?

Recording and listening to your singing voiceIn About Your Voice Sounding Weird, we explore the physics behind this phenomenon, a tool that can help you hear a great approximation of what other people hear when you sing, and how to objectively judge your singing voice.

If you have ever sung into a recording device, you have experienced the phenomenon of hearing your own voice for the first time. Inspired to Sing dives a bit further into this subject, with recommendations on how to get over your uneasiness.

No matter how much you don’t like listening to a recording of yourself, there are many benefits to taking this deliberate step in your musical journey. You will learn a great deal about how you perform, and this will help you improve the next time you go into the practice room. Audrey Hunt explains what you should do after hearing a recording of your voice.

While many of us cringe at the thought of hearing our recorded singing voice, can you imagine not being able to listen to your own voice? Recently, America’s Got Talent featured an inspiring young woman who sings with the voice of an angel, despite being totally deaf. We hope that the story of Mandy Harvey inspires you to gain the confidence to sing!

New Paths in Your Musical Journey

In his tips for effective teaching, Cristian Contreras discussed the importance of continuous practice, self-critique, and improvement. This applies equally to teachers and students, and we hope that this week’s offerings have inspired you to explore new avenues in your musical journey, be it recording your voice or writing your own chord progressions.

Want to go even further and train your ears to be the best they can be? Join Musical U to gain access to modules that will enable you to play by ear, sight-sing, and identify intervals and chord progressions.

The post A Chain of Chords, All Things Vocal, Teaching Music the Right Way, and Listening to Yourself Sing appeared first on Musical U.

Piano players are special breed of musician. Have some fu…

https://www.musical-u.com/learn/10-things-piano-players-do-differently/
Piano players are special breed of musician. Have some fun and explore that 10 things that piano players do differently in this special tribute to these musicians. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/10-things-piano-players-do-differently/