this post was submitted on 14 Jul 2023
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Music Theory

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A community to discuss the technical workings of music.


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How did you self-teach? (self.musictheory)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Xenoceratops to c/musictheory
 

What are your experiences with self-teaching music theory? You don't have to be a 100% autodidact to answer this question; you probably have had times when you read a book or watched a video to learn some specific idea or technique. Ideally, I'd like to compile some guides for readers who don't have a teacher.

Personally, I prefer close reading of books and articles, but I know that's hardly a universal approach.

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[–] mEaynon 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Self-teaching since 2/3 years, with composition as main goal. First I spent some time identifying the main topics (music theory, counterpoint, form, orchestration, jazz, 20th century techniques, post-tonal theory, DAW, etc...) and finding appropriate books (r/musictheory and r/composer where great sources for that). Then, studying these books by taking notes and practicing (listening, composing, studying scores). These notes represent today ~20 PDFs and ~1300 pages.

Younger, I also studied piano and bit of music theory at school.

I must admit I spent more time studying theory rather than actually practicing. I'm currently working to revert that trend ^^