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FIVE RULES FOR CREATING THREE-PART HARMONIES

 * May 3, 2021
 * admin

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Let’s go on a sentimental journey …


Three-part vocal harmonies – http://www.howtosingsmarter.com/three-part-harmony/

Thanks to howtosingsmarter.com for a fine example of three-part harmony singing.

We get to hear two-part harmony in most music, typically a second voice or
instrument a third (two notes in the scale) above the melody. It might only
appear in a chorus, or perhaps with backing vocals or horn parts but it will be
there somewhere. A two-part harmony is not difficult to write and can often be
worked out by trial and error.

When we extend the harmony to three parts, it gets trickier to organise. When
you sing or play any three notes in harmony you obtain a chord and yet your
melody and two harmony lines will usually sit over an existing chord
progression. You need to organise your harmonies so they don’t obfuscate the
melody, are singable/playable and don’t clash with the underlying chords in any
unpleasant way. That takes some thought.

MY FIVE RULES

 1. Position the two harmony parts appropriately: Normally one will go above and
    one below the melody. If the melody is low, you might position both above.
    If the melody is high, you might position both below. Of course, you may be
    constrained by the vocal ranges of the singers. Normally you’ll keep the
    three parts tightly together with no more than an octave from top to bottom.
 2. Don’t swamp the melody: The melody should have the greatest
    intensity/volume/presence of the three parts. Generally, higher notes stand
    out more, so if you have a high harmony that is too prominent, bring it down
    in the mix and/or drop it back with reverb/echo. You’re also likely to have
    the main melody in the centre of the stereo spread, with the two harmonies
    positioned on either side.
 3. Follow the pattern of the melody: Typically, your harmony parts will move up
    or down with the melody along the same scale but this won’t always be
    possible because of point 4 below.
 4. Hit the notes of the underlying chords: On the strong beats, when chords are
    likely to change or be re-emphasised, have the harmony parts stick to notes
    from the chord. Sometimes this might mean that one of the parts can’t follow
    the pattern of the melody exactly – maybe staying on the same note.
 5. Don’t overdo it: Three-part harmony has a dramatic impact. If you were
    writing for a band that specialises in harmonies, or perhaps a choir or
    barbershop quartet, then OK, go for it. But most music needs variation in
    texture and intensity, so I’d keep three parts for the chorus or a special
    interlude (think Bohemian Rhapsody!).

Here’s a simple example of three-part harmony on the chorus of a song. The first
harmony sits a third above the melody and the second a third below. With a
simple, repeated, chord progression of G D A7 D, none of the three vocal parts
needs to leave the D major scale:

Excerpt from Ship of Fortune – Edson Berger

Here’s how that looks in notation:

Ship of Fortune – extract from harmony parts for the chorus

Next, here’s a quick example of how multi-layered voices can be used to create
an interesting bridge in what is otherwise a song with no harmonies. The voices
play the notes of D major and E major chords over a sustained E bass:

Excerpt from Hardly Noticed – Quelque Chose

Guitars can do three-part harmony too. In the following short excerpt from a
prog-rock piece called Goodbye Heart, the acoustic guitar opens playing a riff
over the chords Em C B D B7 Em. Then an electric guitar comes in playing the
same melody, followed by two more electric guitars in harmony with this:

Excerpt from Goodbye Heart – Maynstreet

Getting the harmonies right can be a tussle. Here’s a track, called Just
Drifting which, in the chorus, employs a three-part harmony across multiple
instruments. An electric guitar plays the main melody; the trumpet plays a third
above that (but dropped an octave) and the trombone a third below the guitar,
again dropped an octave. The chords in the chorus are rich, with multiple
modulations (temporary key shifts from the home key of G major):

Fmaj7 Abmaj7 / Cmaj7 C11 / Fmaj7 Abmaj7 / D D11 / G13 G

The harmony lines had to be finely judged to fit with the chords and some chords
were extended to 11ths and 13ths because the harmony sounded right that way and
that’s what really matters:

In case you’re interested, here’s the notation:

Just Drifting – harmony parts for the chorus

Of course, it’s now possible to use plug-ins to automatically create harmony
parts for a melody line. As long as you are happy with all the parts coming from
the same singer, this would work well with the Ship of Fortune example above,
but couldn’t cope with the complex chord structure of Just Drifting. In the end,
nothing beats knowing how to work it out for yourself.

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