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When analyzing music it is important to build a mental image of the piece to be analyzed. It's not necessary to do this immediately and exclusively with theoretical terms.

A good start is listening to the progress and segmentation of the piece. We can ask ourselves questions like:

We musicians often make use of analogies ans associations. It can be helpful to incorporate those in our analytic approach.

Possible analogies and associations are:

  1. visual (high, low, bright, dark, ...)
  2. (physical) feeling (warm, sharp, rough, round, ...)
  3. motoric (walking, running, standing, floating, soaring, ...)
  4. psychological (emotional) (happy, sad, melancholic, creepy, ...)

To acquire a global "overview" of the piece a program like Audacity can be very helpful. You open a sound file in Audacity and you can add so-called label tracks, in which you can annotate at any given moment what you hear in the music. You can do this while listening with the shortkey combination Ctrl-dot [.] or Cmd-dot [.] Of course you can add as many label tracks as you want, for example harmony (tonality, keys and chords), dynamics, texture, and so on. 

The result could look like this:

 

Audacity screenshot 1