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Lesson 18:Octave Transposition

To transpose music means to change the pitch of each note without changing the relationships between the notes. This usually means changing the key. However, in this lesson, we will study transposition by one octave. Transposing a melody up or down by one octave will not change the key. (Key transposition will be studied in a later lesson.) Look at the following melody:

   

The first note of this melody is 'F'. If we count upward eight notes (one octave), we reach 'F' again.

Because you studied Lesson 16 (Key Identification), you know that this excerpt is in F-major. When transposing a melody up one octave, the key stays the same (in this example, F-major).

All of the note names stay the same, but they are now an octave higher. Therefore, all of the pitch relationships stay the same: the highest note in this melody is 'G' (the supertonic note); the lowest note is 'C' (the dominant note), etc.

Here is the same melody transposed down one octave:

As you can see, it doesn't fit on the treble clef too well: it is now too low. The performer would be required to read several leger lines. Although this is allowable, it is better to change to the bass clef:

Now it fits on the staff better. It's at the same starting pitch as the previous example:

When asked to transpose music up or down by one octave, there are some things you will want to keep in mind:

  • Make sure to check the stem direction: unbeamed notes above the middle line have stems down, unbeamed notes below the middle line have stems up. For beamed notes, find the note in the beamed group that is the furthest away from the middle line; the stems should go in the direction appropriate for that note.
  • If you know the instrument that the transposed melody will be played on, make certain to use the proper clef, and ensure that the notes are within the range of that instrument. (This is beyond the scope of music theory, but it is an issue for music composers and arrangers.)


Here are some melodies and their octave transpositions. Study them carefully:

i) G-minor, treble clef.      Transposed up one octave:  

 

ii) A-major, treble clef.      Transposed down one octave:  

 

iii) D-major, bass clef:        Transposed up one octave into the treble clef:  

 

iv) B-flat major, treble clef:       Transposed down into the bass clef:  

 


Quiz

To take the quiz, click "Quiz" above, then print the resulting page and complete it.

-Back to index-

Lesson 1
Grand Staff
Lesson 5
Durations, Pt.2
Lesson 9
Key Signatures
Lesson 12b
Minor Scales
Lesson 16
Key Identification
Lesson 20
Key Transposition
Lesson 24
Other Clefs
Lesson 2
Notes
Lesson 6
Measures
Lesson 10
Intervals
Lesson 13
Time Signatures
Lesson 17
Triads
Lesson 21
Triad Inversions
Lesson 25
Score Formats
Lesson 3
Keyboard
Lesson 7
Small Intervals
Lesson 11
Interval Inversions
Lesson 14
Measure Completion
Lesson 18
Octave Transposition
Lesson 22
Cadences
Lesson 26
Secondary Dominant Triads
Lesson 4
Durations, Pt.1
Lesson 8
Major Scales
Lesson 12a
Dbl Sharps- Dbl Flats
Lesson 15
Tonic & Dominant Triads
Lesson 19
Triplets & Other "Tuplets"
Lesson 23
Modes



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