1. Conjunct motion. A nice melody
usually moves mostly by step (adjacent or nearly adjacent keys on the piano,
for instance), and more rarely by leap.
2. Avoid stuttering. There often is a more
elegant solution than repeating the same note or wiggling back and forth
among the same two or three notes.
3. Phrase shape. Many folks prefer phrases
that have a definite beginning, climax, and end. The climax is usually
the highest note of the phrase, but sometimes the lowest note. Climaxes
are usually more convincing if, within a phrase, they're unique: the melody
reaches the extreme only once. Phrases are often grouped together
into larger units with their own beginning, climax, and end, and again,
the climax is a unique one of the phrases.
4. If you've already got a series of chords, an
easy way to sketch the backbone of a melody would be to choose notes from
the chords.
If you're making classical counterpoint, your series of
chords will be a bit more specific in voicing, and you'll want to make
sure your melody lines don't introduce things that classical counterpoint
shuns, like parallel fifths, ugly doubling, etc..
5. The backbone can generally be decorated in the
following 3 ways:
a) Arpeggiation. A chord tone can
he replaced with a series of notes within the chord.
b) Ornaments. A melodic tone can be replaced
with a more-or-less conjunct wiggle containing and emphasizing the melodic
tone, e.g. beginning and ending on it.
c) Passing motion. Two melodic tones separated
by a leap can be replaced by a scale beginning on the first note and ending
on the second.
These three expansion rules can be applied recursively to
the notes of an already ornamented melody. Classical style would
require, once more, that the added notes never introduce anything that
classical counterpoint shuns.
Classical musicians further subdivide the world of ornaments
into a number of different categories. Some theoreticians (notably
Koch and Schenker) feel that a listener can and should be able to sense
the hierarchy of ornaments recursively applied, and that creative use of
these structures can in itself be expressive.
Non-classical musicians usually use some but not all of
these ideas. For instance, what classical musicians call "stuttering",
chanting repeatedly on one note, is an important core of reggae, an opportunity
to highlight vocal rhythm.