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Music Theory is Just a Useful Tool

Metadata

title
Music Theory is Just a Useful Tool
description
Would a builder build a house without a hammer? A tattooer do a tattoo without a needle? Would a politician act without a businessman? Of course not! Every job has the tools that the pro needs to succeed. Music theory is one of ours. Neglect at your own peril. Use the right tools to build cool stuff! Ignore them when you don't need them! (But 80% of the time, you'll need them! Especially if you want to do this every day.)
status
complete
date
2025-09-09
kind
solo
guestSlugs
listenUrl
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lovemusicmore/episodes/Music-Theory-is-Just-a-Useful-Tool-e37u8b0
appleUrl
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/music-theory-is-just-a-useful-tool/id1567355195?i=1000725666873&uo=4
spotifyUrl
https://open.spotify.com/episode/4OXUMWMTiAPZIlhGG3bHKv
topicsDiscussed
  • Music theory
  • Creativity
  • Songwriting
  • Personal anecdotes in music
  • Industry jargon in music
  • Creative vs. theoretical approaches
  • Crafting pop music with theory
  • Role of tension in music
  • Understanding chords and melodies
  • Jargon as a shortcut in music
hostNote
"By knowing the name of the chord, it's a lot easier to transmit your idea to others." Theory isn't about memorizing rules, it's a shared vocabulary, and without it you're trying to build a house while describing every piece of lumber by feel. I get into how 80–90% of working musicians use theory daily, why the jargon feels exclusive at first but becomes essential shorthand fast, and the thing theory is actually *for*: managing tension and resolution, not just naming chords. Most people stop at basic harmony: but the real craft starts where the normal stuff ends. You come away understanding theory as grammar rather than a straitjacket, something that frees you to communicate an idea precisely and then break the rule on purpose.
selectedMoments
  • label
    Introduction to music theory
    startSec
    96
    note
    Jokingly calling it 'rocket science' and addressing common misconceptions about theory.
  • label
    Personal reflections on jargon
    startSec
    135
    note
    Industry jargon and its implications for inclusivity in music.
  • label
    Vibe coding analogy
    startSec
    182
    note
    How coding connects to music theory, knowing the language lets you transmit ideas.
  • label
    Validation of music theory
    startSec
    273
    note
    Why knowing chord names makes collaboration dramatically easier.
  • label
    Tendencies vs. rules in music
    startSec
    362
    note
    Musical tendencies vs. strict rules, theory is grammar, not a straitjacket.
  • label
    Tension and resolution in music
    startSec
    541
    note
    What music theory is really for: managing tension and resolution, not just basic chords.
excerptQuotes
  • text
    For 90, maybe 80% of working musicians, they know music theory. And I want to dig into my own personal life story.
    startSec
    97
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    By knowing the name of the chord, it's a lot easier to transmit your idea to others by speaking the same language.
    startSec
    276
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    What I'm saying is not that you have to know the name of the chord. I'm just saying that by knowing the name of the chord, it's a lot easier to transmit your idea to others.
    startSec
    316
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    A lot of what music theory actually is is how to deal with tension. It's not about how to deal with the normal basic stuff.
    startSec
    539
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Music theory helps you with both, but mostly what it does is it's the craft.
    startSec
    677
    reviewed
    true
faq
  • question
    Why is music theory important?
    answer
    Music theory is important because it provides musicians with the tools they need to communicate musical ideas effectively and enhances their creativity.
  • question
    How does music theory help musicians?
    answer
    It helps musicians understand chord progressions and melodies, enabling them to craft better songs and collaborate successfully with others.
  • question
    What is the difference between music theory and music practice?
    answer
    Music theory involves the understanding of musical elements and structures, while music practice focuses on the practical application of those principles in performance and composition.
transcriptPublished
false
draft
false

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