Music Theory for Musicians
Clear, practical guides on scales, chords, modes, and notation. No academic jargon — just the theory you need to play better, write songs, and communicate with other musicians.
The Guides
Five articles that cover the fundamentals, in a logical order. Each one builds on the last.
Suggested Learning Path
Theory builds on itself. Here's a logical order that makes each new topic easier because of what you learned before.
Why Learn Music Theory?
Play with other musicians
When someone says 'Let’s do it in G' or 'Try a ii-V-I,' you’ll know exactly what they mean. Theory is the shared language of musicians.
Learn songs faster
Once you understand chord patterns and scale relationships, new songs stop being mysterious. You start recognizing familiar structures everywhere.
Write your own music
Theory doesn’t replace creativity — it gives you tools. Knowing which notes work together means fewer dead ends and more intentional choices.
Print Your Study Materials
Theory sticks better when you have reference sheets on your music stand instead of a phone screen. These tools generate printable PDFs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to learn music theory to play an instrument?
Where should I start with music theory?
Is music theory the same for every instrument?
How long does it take to learn music theory?
Ready to put theory into practice?
Print scale references, chord diagrams, and blank manuscript paper to study with. Or collect your sheet music into a printed songbook.
