Film Harmony – Film Music Notes https://filmmusicnotes.com Understanding the Art of Film Music Tue, 09 Dec 2025 13:47:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://filmmusicnotes.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/cropped-Site-icon-2d-32x32.png Film Harmony – Film Music Notes https://filmmusicnotes.com 32 32 Bridging the Tonal / Atonal Gap https://filmmusicnotes.com/bridging-the-tonal-atonal-gap/ https://filmmusicnotes.com/bridging-the-tonal-atonal-gap/#respond Tue, 09 Dec 2025 00:47:41 +0000 https://filmmusicnotes.com/?p=17446

When I first studied harmony, I was surprised that there weren’t standard courses or books that covered music that was between tonal and atonal. And even today, in academic studies of traditional harmony, you essentially have the diatonic/chromatic system and atonal set theory. But the gap between the two is where plenty of great film music draws from. Think of the opening chord to E.T., or the roof fight cue from the 1989 Batman film, or the strange music in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. I wanted to bring you a solid understanding of cool harmonic effects like these. So I created the Extended Tonal and Atonal Harmony course to focus on three main areas of harmony: non-diatonic scales, common extended tonal and atonal chords, and advanced atonal techniques.

Non-Diatonic Scales

I felt that some of film music’s most common non-diatonic scales – pentatonic, whole tone, and phrygian dominant – require a good amount of detail on how to get film-like harmonies from them, and what associations they usually have (because they are strongly associative!).

Take the whole tone scale, for example, which usually depicts a threatening feeling of mystery in film music.

This scale can quickly become predictable sounding because every interval and chord can be built on every note of the scale. If the scale continues for some time, film composers tend to use several different harmonic materials in the same passage, like:

a solid triad

a solid tetrad

a broken tetrad

and the odd flourish.

This helps to keep things sounding fresh without having to change the scale. Here’s a passage I wrote that demonstrates the idea:

Extended Tonal and Atonal Chords

Another important idea is a collection of common film-music chords that are either extended tonal or atonal. One of the extended-tonal chords is what I call the dissonant-bass chord. All that means is a major or minor triad with a non-chord note against it in the bass.

It’s not a resolving kind of dissonance, but one that is there to create a certain sound. The more dissonance between the bass and triad above it, the higher the tension in the scene tends to be. So imagine a scene where something heroic occurs in the midst of an ongoing battle – so a high-tension situation. Here’s an excerpt I wrote with dissonant-bass chords to convey the idea:

Advanced Atonal Techniques

We do, of course, get to set theory as well, and we talk about the most common atonal chords in film, what they tend to mean, and even how you can work them into a twelve-tone row to create longer stretches of atonal music. But we also talk about those more “avant-garde” techniques like writing with clusters, slow glissandos, quarter-tone wavering, and the like that can create some truly chilling sounds. Here’s a passage of mine that demonstrates these concepts:

So in covering concepts like non-diatonic scales, common extended-tonal or atonal chords, and avant-garde techniques, I feel that this new course bridges that gap I always felt between tonal and atonal harmony studies, and gives those interested in music for media a solid grounding for knowing not just how and when to best apply these harmonies but, most importantly, what it is they usually mean.

Extended Tonal and Atonal Harmony in Film is at 20% off until the next course release, and all general harmony courses are in a bundle for 20% off (with Fundamentals for free). See here for details.

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New Course – Associations of Harmony in Film Themes https://filmmusicnotes.com/new-course-associations-of-harmony/ https://filmmusicnotes.com/new-course-associations-of-harmony/#respond Mon, 13 Dec 2021 13:54:26 +0000 https://filmmusicnotes.com/?p=10325

Film Music Notes is happy to announce the launch of a new course, Associations of Harmony in Film Themes at the super-sale price of $89 with the use of this coupon code: LEQ2F271SS. After Dec. 27, the price will go to the launch price of $99 (full regular price is $109).

By studying many of the greatest themes to come out of Hollywood, this three-lesson course will teach you the most common harmonic progressions in Hollywood film music and the emotional and musical associations they tend to have. Learn how to use harmony to evoke the perfect emotions in your themes!

Watch a preview of the course right here:

Find out more on the course page, where you can see the course contents, and enroll in the course.

But hurry, the super sale ends Dec. 27!

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