How To Write A Melody, Part 1: Basic Melodic Structure?

A melody is like a fun song that makes your brain go bop-bop-bop when you hear it.

Imagine you're playing with building blocks, each block is a note, and when you stack them together, you create a melody. Just like how stacking different colored blocks can make a tower look cool, putting different notes in order makes a melody sound cool.

How Melodies Start and End

Most melodies have a beginning and an end, just like a story! The first part is called the start, and it's where you introduce your favorite block (or note). The last part is called the end, and it’s where you say goodbye to that block, maybe by letting it fall gently.

Making Melodies Sound Good

Melodies often have a middle, this is like the fun part of the story. You can mix up your blocks or use bigger ones to make things more exciting. Sometimes, melodies even repeat parts, just like when you tell a joke and say it again for laughs.

So next time you hear a song, imagine it's made of building blocks, each one is a note, and together they're a melody!

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Examples

  1. A child sings a simple tune using only five notes, repeating the same pattern each time.
  2. A person hums a song they heard on the radio, following along with the rhythm.
  3. A beginner composer creates a short melody by adding one note at a time.

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Categories: Science · music· melody· composition