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Hello everyone,
Just a quick question: is anyone familiar with an anthology for music analysis that uses popular music examples (let's say, anything that's not in the western classical canon). I suspect that copyright clearance might prohibit a publisher from exploring this, but I at least wanted to see if I've missed such a collection.
Also it might be interesting to just start an online compilation of music theory topics and pop songs where the topics can be illustrated, without actually including the notation...
Happy Holidays!
George
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George Lam
Assistant Professor of Music
York College CUNY
www.gtlam.com
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George Lam
Associate Professor
Department of Music
Hong Kong Baptist University
www.gtlam.com
SMT Discuss Manager: smtdiscuss@societymusictheory.org
Comments
The Pop Music Interest Group maintains an examples database available here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1A0D64QstWef5LXhqiejkrdeBMcgdtgR2rOyw9rmtqJU/edit?usp=sharing
Megan L. Lavengood | Assistant Professor, George Mason University
This is not really an answer to the question, or only marginally so. I wanted nevertheless to mention that Yizhak Sadaï's treatise of harmony, Harmony in its systemic and phenomenological aspects, Jerusalem, Yanetz, 1980, included an unusually large number of examples of what you call "popular music", which probably made it quite enjoyable for younger students.
The book is out of print and may not be easily found today, but it would be worth a new edition. Sadaï's conception of tonal harmony is close to that in Schoenberg's Harmonielehre, but with quite a few original views. And it is utterly readable.
Thanks for the suggestions!
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George Lam
Associate Professor
Department of Music
Hong Kong Baptist University
www.gtlam.com