I think you could solve the whole problem just by learning improvisation and composition. You can't do that by rote - you *have* to understand music to be able to do it.From what I've read it seems that these two disciplines were an essential part of a piano lesson up until the early 20th century, where for some unfathomable reason they died out.As has been said elsewhere, you can learn to recite a poem perfectly in French, but unless you can actually understand French it's all rather pointless!
notes that are in harmony one with each other because there's a relationship based on the overtones
With the harsh language you're using you probably won't get too many answers.
Basically I think the same way, though. As a child I had instrumental lessons and theory lessons separately once a week and I just can't understand how people get by without this. Harmony reveals at least half of the composer's intentions to you. I have no idea how music sounds to people who don't know the rules by which it was written.
Just to comment on this - overtones are a myth, or better a theoretic approach. The possibility to express frequencies as ratios of small whole numbers is the foundation of harmony. The frequency of a tone corresponds to the 0th overtone. This one is real, because it can be seen on the screen of a oscilloscope. Higher orders don't exist physically. Every function, periodic or not, can be expressed by a complete system of orthogonal functions. Trigonometric functions can make such a system, and this is the foundation of the myth of overtones. There are other systems made of Legendre polynoms or Bessel functions. The sole reason why trigonometric functions are used often is the fact that they can be handled easily when expanded to complex numbers. Especially on the piano the higher orders of "overtones" are heavily off the target, i.e. they are not harmonic, and they even change with time. For swinging membranes of drums a system of Bessel functions is even more suitable, though kettle drums give the impression of a well defined tone, which again is the 0th order of a system of trigonometric functions aka Fourier series.
preludium, i beg to differ. why then do we have sopranos and basses who can switch into falsetto? this is a form of overtone. why do we have instruments - when pressing similar keys can blow differently and obtain overtones?
harmony is not just human made but based on natural relations of the overtones and that certain relations (like the fifth) are found in every musical system known
6) The foundation of a four part piece for voices is the bass7) It's not about treble cleff or bass cleff (this nonsense should be ignored) it's about starting from the harmonic foundation and going up from there. Cleffs are just a synbolic practical labelling of the parts/voices of the piano we're playing but they don't explain anything at all.
On the benefits of thinking "harmonically" about the piano Harmony and music theory has been created by music theorists and not composers. Music theorists created music theory to understand and make sense of music, and so that we can understand music better ( thats what i was tought) When a Dr of music told me this i was vey happy, since my first composed sonata, etude and prelude (i composed) , i had no knowledge of music theory. So basically a composer does not decide to compose in D minor harmonic scale, but simply compose. As pianist i agree that knowledge of music theory is essential in learning a piece of music on an intellectual level, however as i have recently discoverd (thankfully). human-beings have a sixths sense, through which we can understand music on a higher level ALL MUSIC LOVERS HAVE THIS.
It makes sense to remember how the piano is a ramification of this universal concept how it belongs to a musical context as old as time and it's not just a "tool" coming from nowhere and contextless which tends to make the whole concept of piano playing very abstract in a kind of robot-like manner (you don't understand, you don't see the context .... you just follow instructions)
But my point was specifically about "knowing your instrument"
so why call your thread On the benefits of thinking "harmonically" about the piano
perhaps we should not limit our thinking according to age so much? sometimes the guidelines and 'prescriptions' for what a child of a certain age is able to do - might not be true for every child. say you have a three year old that has gone past the idea of melody alone - and actually sings harmony on purpose. that child, imo, understands the concept. normally - this doesn't happen (does it) until a much older age 7-8. kodaly has some interesting concepts - but they stick mostly with melodies at young ages, i think. somehow the child's brain is able to start with that the best (intervals and melodies) BUT don't you think some children with the aptitude and talent - if give the opportunity (jamming and jazz and improv) would learn very very quickly at much younger ages. they just need the time and place to do it every week.