A Taxonomy For Teaching Music Theory
A Taxonomy For Teaching Music Theory
A Taxonomy For Teaching Music Theory
Sarah Marlowe
I would like to thank Christina Fuhrmann, Philip Stoecker, and the anonymous
reviewers, for their thoughtful comments and suggestions.
1
See, for example, Stephen Roe, “Sons, Family and Pupils,” in The Routledge
Companion to Johann Sebastian Bach, ed. Robin A. Leaver (New York: Routledge, 2017),
458–63; and Robin A. Leaver and Derek Remeš, “J. S. Bach’s Chorale-Based Pedagogy:
Origins and Continuity,” BACH: Journal of the Riemenschneider Bach Institute 48, no. 2
and 49, no. 1 (2018): 116–50. For more general accounts of Bach as teacher, see The New
Bach Reader, ed. Hans T. David and Arthur Mendel, revised and expanded by Christoph
Wolff (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1998); and Christoph Wolff, Johann
Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2013).
2
“Bach did not believe in teaching isolated elements or fragments of music.
He avoided using ‘species’ in teaching counterpoint. He never wrote an exercise in
composition or velocity that was not a fully rounded composition. Even where he set out
to demonstrate a specific technical feature, he was never only a teacher.” New Bach Reader,
22. On current trends in music theory pedagogy, see Elizabeth West Marvin, “The Core
Curricula in Music Theory: Developments and Pedagogical Trends,” Journal of Music
Theory Pedagogy 26 (2012): 255–64.
3
C. P. E. Bach’s well-known account of his father’s teaching methods, summarized
in a letter to Johann Nikolaus Forkel, suggests a thoughtful progression of materials that
gradually increases in difficulty: “His pupils had to begin their studies by learning pure
four-part thorough bass. From this he went to chorales; first he added the basses to them
himself, and they had to invent the alto and tenor. Then he taught them to devise the
basses themselves. … In teaching fugues, he began with two-part ones, and so on.” New
Bach Reader, 399.
366 Bach
lessons and what modern-day instructors can achieve with large groups of
students. Nevertheless, attempts to emulate Bach’s pedagogical practices
can certainly yield fruitful results in the twenty-first-century classroom.
Recent studies that take a historically informed approach toward
music theory pedagogy, those that reconstruct Bach’s practices for
teaching specific topics, are convincing and appealing in their own right.4
In contrast to these studies, however, I propose organizing lessons and
activities around a modified version of Benjamin S. Bloom’s Taxonomy
of Educational Objectives.5 This approach offers greater flexibility for
music instructors since it can be applied to any topic. Part 1 of this
essay draws inspiration from Bach’s systematic method of instruction,
and introduces a revised taxonomy for teaching written theory. Part 2 is
similarly influenced by Bach’s preference for teaching from real musical
compositions. To demonstrate a concrete application of the taxonomy,
I provide a series of activities designed to teach the topic of invertible
counterpoint. Each stage of the taxonomy is accompanied by one or more
examples from either Bach’s two-part inventions or the Well-Tempered
Clavier.
4
See Austin Gross, “The Improvisation of Figuration Preludes and the Enduring
Value of Bach Family Pedagogy,” Journal of Music Theory Pedagogy 27 (2013): 19–46;
Vasili Byros, “Prelude on a Partimento: Invention in the Compositional Pedagogy of the
German States in the Time of J. S. Bach,” Music Theory Online 21, no. 3 (2015); Derek
Remeš, “J. S. Bach’s Chorales: Reconstructing Eighteenth-Century German Figured-Bass
Pedagogy in Light of a New Source,” Theory and Practice 42 (2017): 29–54; Remeš,
“Chorales in J. S. Bach’s Pedagogy: A Method for Teaching Undergraduate Music Theory
Inspired by a New Source,” Journal of Music Theory Pedagogy 31 (2018): 65–92; and
Remeš and Leaver, “J. S. Bach’s Chorale-Based Pedagogy.”
5
Benjamin S. Bloom, ed., Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: The Classification of
Educational Goals, 1st ed. (New York: Longmans, Green, 1956).
6
Lorin Anderson and David R. Krathwohl, eds., A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching,
and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (New York:
Longman, 2001). A useful summary of Bloom’s Taxonomy and subsequent developments
can be found in Patricia Armstrong, “Bloom’s Taxonomy,” Vanderbilt University Center
for Teaching, https://cft.vanderbilt.edu/guides-sub-pages/blooms-taxonomy.
Marlowe 367
education, the categories are flexible and recent scholarship has adapted
the model to various musical contexts.7 Of these, the study by Deborah
Rifkin and Philip Stoecker is most relevant to the present discussion: the
authors thoroughly examine the taxonomy categories as they relate to
teaching undergraduate aural skills, then present a series of lesson plans
to demonstrate how they apply their revised taxonomy in their courses.
The taxonomy categories and their subsequent revisions are summarized
in figure 1.8 The processes are arranged in ascending order, where the lowest
row reflects the simplest cognitive process and progresses to the highest row,
which reflects the most complex process in the taxonomy. Arrows indicate
where each subsequent study has reordered various stages of the process.
Figure 1. Comparison of learning taxonomies
Bloom Anderson and Rifkin and Marlowe
1956 Krathwohl Stoecker 2018
2001 2011
Evaluation Create Evaluate Create
Synthesis Evaluate Improvise Evaluate
Analysis Analyze Apply Apply
Application Apply Conceptualize Conceptualize
Comprehension Understand Imitate Imitate
Knowledge Remember Recognize Recognize
10
Rifkin and Stoecker, “A Revised Taxonomy for Music Learning,” 161.
11
Rifkin and Stoecker, “A Revised Taxonomy for Music Learning,” 162.
12
Anderson and Krathwohl, Taxonomy, 85; Rifkin and Stoecker, “A Revised
Taxonomy for Music Learning,” 166.
13
“[Bach’s pupils’] sense of purity, order, and connection in the parts must first
have been sharpened on the inventions of others, and have become in a manner habitual
to them before [Bach] thought them capable of giving these qualities to their own
inventions.” New Bach Reader, 454.
14
“Copying music was then considered the main way of learning to compose, and
Marlowe 369
for this the Inventions and The Well-tempered Clavier were the core works, judging by
the number of student copies.” David Ledbetter, Bach’s Well-tempered Clavier: The 48
Preludes and Fugues (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000), 138.
15
“It was Carl Philipp Emanuel, too, who reported to Forkel that when Father Bach
had heard the beginning of a fugue he would at once state ‘what contrapuntal devices it
would be possible to apply, and which of them the composer by rights ought to apply.’”
New Bach Reader, 20.
16
On Bach’s compositional process, see Wolff, Johann Sebastian Bach, 382–89.
370 Bach
17
Roe, “Sons, Family and Pupils,” 444. We also know that Bach arranged his
two-part inventions in a systematic order for instructional purposes. See, for example,
Courtney S. Adams, “Organization in the Two-Part Inventions of Johann Sebastian
Bach, Part I,” BACH: Journal of the Riemenschneider Bach Institute 13, no. 2 (1982):
6–16; Adams, “Organization in the Two-Part Inventions of Johann Sebastian Bach, Part
II,” BACH: Journal of the Riemenschneider Bach Institute 13, no. 3 (1982): 12–19; and
Ellwood Derr, “The Two-Part Inventions: Bach’s Composers’ Vademecum,” Music Theory
Spectrum 3 (1981): 26–48.
18
“What I Know Now: Reflections on Music Theory Pedagogy,” in The Norton
Guide to Teaching Music Theory, ed. Rachel Lumsden and Jeffrey Swinkin (New York: W.
W. Norton and Company, 2018), 372.
Marlowe 371
Recognize (Remember)19
The initial stage of the taxonomy requires that students be able
first to define and then to recognize invertible counterpoint in a real
musical texture. To accomplish this task, they must remember specific
contrapuntal combinations and identify where they return later in a
composition. The most logical starting point, then, is a composition
where the repetition occurs as early as possible and the pitch content
remains invariant. Bach’s Invention No. 6 in E Major BWV 777 (exs. 1a–
d) contains two clearly identifiable instances of invertible counterpoint
at the octave (IC8).20 I ask the students to analyze mm. 1–9 first and
provide a rhythmic normalization below the score so they can analyze
the intervallic content more easily (exs. 1a-b).21 Because invertible
counterpoint occurs immediately before the piece modulates, the pitches
remain invariant and students are able to identify the inverted lines easily.
19
In the following discussion, I include the taxonomy terms outlined by Anderson
and Krathwohl in parentheses. Using terms universally applied across disciplines will
prove advantageous for instructors needing to explain how music theory instruction
aligns with assessment criteria endorsed by their respective institutions.
20
I use the abbreviation IC for invertible counterpoint followed by 8, 10, or 12 to
represent invertible counterpoint at the octave (IC8), tenth (IC10), or twelfth (IC12).
21
I do not require that my students distinguish between compound and simple
intervals in this type of activity.
372 Bach
Example 1 (con.)
Imitate (Understand)
Rifkin and Stoecker explain that aural skills students must “recall and
repeat previous music events,” or imitate what was previously heard.22 For
written theory, students complete written exercises to recreate something
observed in a prior example. Invertible counterpoint (IC8) will occur in the
same key (exs. 1a–b), or it can appear in a different key later in a composition
(exs. 1c–d). The next two written activities reinforce this observation.
I present the excerpt in examples 1c-d as a worksheet. I provide
the score for mm. 21–24 of the E-major invention, and ask students to
generate IC8 for mm. 25–29 (they may not choose the same registers as
Bach, but should be able to transpose each line up and down by an octave).
Next, I provide the full score and, asking them to compare the excerpts
from examples 1a and 1c, we begin discussing the concept in more general
terms. I challenge them to think about the process more deeply and ask
them to consider the usefulness for learning invertible counterpoint.
Peter Schubert writes, “[k]nowing how composers thought about their
music is essential to understanding it, and counterpoint provided many
of the basic structures for all their music.”23 For performers, the ability to
22
Rifkin and Stoecker, “A Revised Taxonomy for Music Learning,” 160.
23
Peter Schubert, “Teaching Historical Counterpoint,” in The Norton Guide to
Teaching Music Theory, ed. Rachel Lumsden and Jeffrey Swinkin (New York: W. W.
Norton and Company, 2018), 23.
Marlowe 373
a. mm. 1-4
b. mm. 6-9
374 Bach
Conceptualize (Analyze)
In Teaching Approaches in Music Theory: An Overview of Pedagogical
Philosophies, Michael Rogers writes, “music reading and meaningful
learning are totally dependent on the ability to conceptualize what is
heard.”24 Rifkin and Stoecker explain that, in aural skills, students must
first develop a “conceptual map” before applying a new concept to new
situations. The same is true in written theory, and an added benefit of
renaming this category Conceptualize is that it cannot be confused with
the task of music analysis. Rather, the focus of this stage of the taxonomy
is to explore a particular concept or technique and later Apply it to a real
musical context.
Invertible counterpoint typically occurs at three transposition levels
in tonal music: invertible counterpoint at the octave (IC8), the tenth
(IC10), and the twelfth (IC12). The process is the same for each of these,
but different contrapuntal combinations result. Example 3 is a worksheet
I use for in-class examination of IC8, IC10, and IC12.25 The activity is
designed to reinforce the process for generating invertible counterpoint,
this time at three different transposition levels, and encourages students
to explore how each of these transpositions impacts the counterpoint.
24
2nd ed. (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1984), 33.
25
Although I encourage my students to think about the properties of IC10 and IC12
during class, I do not require them to compose with IC10 or IC12. Their culminating
project requires only IC8.
Marlowe 375
Example 3 (con.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13
27
Anderson and Krathwohl, Taxonomy, 79.
28
Rifkin and Stoecker, “A Revised Taxonomy for Music Learning,” 161.
29
Robert Gauldin, A Practical Approach to Eighteenth-Century Counterpoint, rev. ed.
(Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, 2013), 114–15. See also Peter Schubert and Christoph
Neidhöfer, Baroque Counterpoint (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2006),
131; and Douglass Green and Evan Jones, The Principles and Practice of Tonal Counterpoint
(New York: Routledge, 2016), 70.
Marlowe 377
Apply
Examples 4 and 5 encourage students to apply the interval charts (fig.
2) in analysis. Anderson and Krathwohl break the Apply process down into
two subcategories: “executing—when the task is an exercise (familiar)—
and implementing—when the task is a problem (unfamiliar).”30 Examples
4a-b provide the more familiar task of analyzing IC8 and help students
solidify their understanding of how to apply the interval charts in analysis.
Examples 5a-e contain invertible counterpoint at multiple transposition
levels, and will require more careful application of the technique.
To begin, I distribute the full score for Bach’s C-major Invention,
and ask the students to identify where invertible counterpoint occurs.
Since they have already been exposed to the topic for three prior
lessons, the new challenge is locating the technique within a complete
composition, which can be quite difficult. Students are usually quick
to identify IC8 in mm. 1 and 7, but the technique also appears in
the excerpts shown in examples 4a-b. The latter relationship is often
overlooked because, unlike the previous examples, it occurs after the
start of a new section and does not involve direct statements of the
opening motives. Once they have identified this instance of invertible
counterpoint, the students label the keys for each passage (C major
modulating to G major; D minor modulating to A minor) and sing
each line on solfège. They confirm that both passages utilize the same
melodic material in spite of the key change, and therefore feature IC8.31
a. mm. 3–5
30
Anderson and Krathwohl, Taxonomy, 77.
31
Singing with moveable-do solfège will necessitate changes to some syllables (mi
to me, for instance) since one passage is in major and the other is in minor. Nevertheless,
both excerpts present the same scale-degree functions.
378 Bach
Example 4 (con.)
b. mm. 11–13
32
For a more detailed discussion of invertible counterpoint in this fugue, see Sarah
Marlowe, “Fugue in Context: A Schenkerian Approach to Select Works by J. S. Bach and
Dmitri Shostakovich” (PhD diss., Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester,
2013), 81–100.
Marlowe 379
a. mm. 5–9
b. mm. 13–17
c. mm. 28–32
d. mm. 36–40
e. mm. 59–63
Evaluate
In part 1 of this essay, I explained my reasons for reversing the final
two stages of Rifkin and Stoecker’s taxonomy. In written theory, it is
important for students to learn how to evaluate a composition against the
rules and procedures they have learned. They must first think critically
about existing works, so they can effectively critique their own work in
the culminating stage of the process. With a firm understanding of how
to generate and identify invertible counterpoint, students are ready for
the more sophisticated task of defending why a composer might diverge
from an expected outcome. Examples 6 and 7 present cases where Bach
does not simply transpose lines to create invertible counterpoint; he also
makes modifications to the lines, and the students must offer plausible
reasons for his decisions.
In example 6, lines a and b (mm. 1–4) are imitated almost exactly
when they are inverted in mm. 5–8.33 Line b is slightly modified on
the downbeat of m. 5, however, and I ask students to suggest why this
^
modification is necessary. Line a begins on 5, so m. 5 would begin with
a dissonant perfect fourth if everything was transposed exactly. In two-
voice counterpoint, a perfect fourth implies a ₄⁶ chord, which should be
avoided in this style. Then I ask students to consider other ways this could
be avoided and to supply reasons why Bach decided to alter line b instead
of line a. Since the opening of this invention is sequential, changing
line a would necessitate a change in m. 6 as well; the contour of line
b is otherwise unaffected by the modification in m. 5, so perhaps Bach
chose to preserve as much of the original melodic content as possible.
33
A detailed analysis of the F-minor invention is provided in Green and Jones, The
Principles and Practice of Tonal Counterpoint, 87–91; see also Schubert and Neidhöfer,
Baroque Counterpoint, 209–10.
Marlowe 381
a
Example 7 (con.)
Create
I reposition Create as the final stage of the taxonomy, since the
culminating task for written theory is often a model composition or
analysis paper. Both activities demand that students combine several
concepts and techniques to form an original product. Anderson and
Krathwohl break this cognitive process down into three tasks: Generate,
a divergent phase where students are encouraged to brainstorm and
develop multiple ideas; Plan, a convergent phase where students select
and organize the best options; and Produce, where students combine their
ideas and construct a complete and original work.35 The culminating
experience for my counterpoint course is a model composition of a
two-part invention for keyboard, which requires the successful use of
IC8 as well as several other contrapuntal techniques discussed in class.
Example 8 presents how I teach my students to Generate ideas, Plan ways
to incorporate the required components, and then Produce a complete
composition. This process reactivates the Evaluate stage, but students are
now asked to think critically about their own work.
The most challenging aspect of composing a two-part invention (or
any imitative work) is writing a suitable motive or theme. Bach’s themes
feature slow, simple harmonic rhythm and are typically no longer than
two measures. If a student composes a theme that is too complex, it
will make the remainder of the assignment unnecessarily challenging.
I offer two solutions to this problem. First, I work through the process
of composing a theme with my students during class, which will be
discussed below. Second, for the purposes of the project, I provide a list
of precomposed themes that students are allowed to borrow if they have
difficulty getting started.36
Example 8 is the product of an in-class discussion I had with my
counterpoint students. Using Bach’s C-major invention as a model, we
34
Anderson and Krathwohl, Taxonomy, 84. Italics in original.
35
Anderson and Krathwohl, Taxonomy, 85–86.
36
For a useful list of sample themes, see Schubert and Neidhöfer, Baroque
Counterpoint, 89.
384 Bach
37
New Bach Reader, 455.
Marlowe 385
Example 8 (con.)
e. complete outline
38
Linear frameworks for baroque melodies are also discussed in Gauldin, 18th-
Century Counterpoint, 27ff. My approach is modeled after Gauldin, but my example
provides a demonstration more accessible for students with little or no compositional
background.
39
For a detailed discussion of specific linear frameworks that occur in Bach’s fugue
subjects, see William Renwick, Analyzing Fugue: A Schenkerian Approach (Stuyvesant,
NY: Pendragon Press, 1995).
386 Bach
imitation at the octave and simple counterpoint featuring thirds and sixths
(ideal intervals to emphasize when composing with IC8). Unfortunately,
the downbeat of m. 3 implies a tonic harmony and prevents immediate
repetition of the contrapuntal combinations in the key of the dominant
(like Bach does in his C-major invention). Of course, one could delay
the next thematic statement, but I challenge the class to find a solution
where an immediate restatement of the theme is possible. I point out
that Bach’s C-major invention begins with a sixteenth rest, and this
slight alteration offers greater harmonic flexibility in an imitative texture.
Simply removing the first sixteenth note, however, will not always be
the best solution. Returning to the Generate phase, example 8d proposes
three options for modifying the beginning of the theme. Option 1 simply
removes the first note. There is nothing inherently wrong with this, but I
recommend experimenting with many ideas. Additionally, some students
feel that F major is no longer emphasized strongly enough. Option 2
removes the fourth sixteenth note, but the upper-neighbor figure causes
the melody to lose its forward momentum. For these reasons, we decide
that option 3 would work best.40 There is a key-confirming leap from F
to C, and the passing motion, C–B–A, creates a nicer line.
Example 8e shows how the revised theme allows for a quick transition
from tonic to dominant in m. 3. The transition to C major feels quite
abrupt, so a passing tone (B) is added in the left-hand part in m. 3 as
well. Having properly outlined imitation and IC8, example 8e continues
toward a cadential goal. Bach’s first section of the C-major invention
modulates to G major (V), so this is the tonal goal in example 8 as well.
We include a descending-fifths sequence to make a smoother transition
between the onset of C major (m. 3) and the key-confirming cadence
(m. 5). Having devised a clear Plan, I then encourage small groups to
experiment with the Produce phase by expanding the harmonies, adding
more embellishments to the texture, and so on. The exercise outlined
in examples 8a-e thus presents a concrete procedure that students can
follow when drafting their own compositions.
Conclusion
Bach’s renown as a music teacher is well documented, and much of
what we know about his pedagogical methods remains relevant today.
In this essay, I draw inspiration from Bach’s method of instruction and,
40
There are certainly more than three possible options. The class generated these
options with the goal of minimizing the number of modifications to the original ideas.
Marlowe 387
Abstract
Many aspects of J. S. Bach’s pedagogical tradition remain relevant
to current thinking in undergraduate music theory instruction. This
essay draws inspiration from Bach as a teacher, particularly his systematic
presentation of ideas and his preference for teaching from compositions
rather than abstract exercises. Part 1 explores the potential for applying
Bloom’s Taxonomy to music theory instruction. Building on recent
applications of the taxonomy to music education, particularly work by
Deborah Rifkin and Philip Stoecker, I propose a revised taxonomy for
teaching undergraduate written theory. This approach provides a great
deal of flexibility in the classroom since it can be applied to any theory
topic. To demonstrate its effectiveness, Part 2 presents a series of detailed
activities for teaching invertible counterpoint following the six categories
of the taxonomy. Each activity includes excerpts either from Bach’s Well-
Tempered Clavier or two-part inventions.
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