Chord progressions
Terminology
Bridge
Cadence
Changes
Constant
structure
Double
tonic
Notation
(Roman-numeral)
Rewrite
rules
Turnaround
A
Concise Glossary Report (≈ 500 words)
Understanding
how harmonic events are named and organized is essential for composers,
improvisers, and analysts alike. Below is a focused survey of eight frequently
encountered terms—drawn mainly from classical and jazz theory—that describe
relationships among chords and large‑scale form.
Bridge
In
popular‑song and jazz forms (AABA, ABAC, 32‑bar standards), the bridge—also
called the middle eight—provides contrast to the primary “A” section. It often modulates,
introduces new melodic material, or changes the rhythmic density before
returning to the refrain. Because the ear resets
its sense of tonic during the bridge, the eventual reprise of the original key
feels refreshed.
Cadence
A
cadence is the musical punctuation that ends a phrase, period, or movement. Classical theory
distinguishes types by harmonic motion and voice‑leading: authentic (V–I), half
(ends on V), plagal (IV–I), and deceptive (V–vi). In jazz, a ii–V–I progression is
functionally cadential. Cadences balance
expectation and closure; altering them is a primary way to create tension or
extend form.
Changes
“Changes”
is musicians’ shorthand for a tune’s chord progression, especially in jazz. Knowing the changes lets
improvisers outline harmony in real time. Classic examples include the twelve‑bar blues, “Rhythm changes” (derived from Gershwin’s I Got Rhythm), and the
Coltrane cycle. Players often substitute
or reharmonize changes to add color while preserving structural landmarks.
Constant
Structure
A
constant structure progression keeps the chord quality identical (all major‑7ths,
all dominant‑7ths, etc.) while moving the root by varying intervals. Because functional cues
are minimized, the ear latches onto the uniform sonority itself. Wayne Shorter’s “E.S.P.” strings together major‑7
chords a third apart; Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage” does the same with
suspended dominants. The technique creates
harmonic ambiguity yet clear color consistency.
Double
Tonic
A
double‑tonic system alternates between two tonal centers—often a whole tone or
minor third apart—so frequently that each feels like “home.” Scottish and Appalachian
folk songs, for instance, rock between G and F major, never settling. In classical repertoire,
Schubert’s “Der Doppelgänger” juxtaposes B minor and
its lowered second, while Debussy’s “La cathédrale engloutie” shifts between C‑major
and B‑minor triads. The listener experiences
perpetual departure and return without a single, fixed tonic.
Notation
(Roman‑Numeral)
Roman‑numeral
notation abstracts harmony by labeling chords according to scale degree and
quality (I, ii°, V7, etc.). Upper‑case denotes major; lower‑case, minor; added figures
show sevenths, inversions, or alterations. Because the symbols are key‑agnostic, they expose
functional relationships: V7–I is identical in C major (G7→C) and E‑flat major (B♭7→E♭). Jazz educators often
combine Roman numerals with chord symbols to teach substitution principles.
Rewrite
Rules
Borrowed
from linguistics and computer science, rewrite rules in music describe how one
structure can be systematically transformed into another. In Schenkerian analysis,
for example, a middleground passing progression may be “rewritten” as an embellished I–V–I framework. Generative theories
(Lerdahl & Jackendoff, Temperley)
use formal rules to derive surface chords from deep‑structure prototypes,
offering algorithmic explanations for why certain progressions sound “grammatical.”
Turnaround
A
turnaround is a short cadential passage—usually two to four measures—that leads
from the end of a section back to the beginning or to a new section. The archetypal jazz
turnaround is I–vi–ii–V (or its tritone‑sub variant I–♭III7–♭VI7–♭II7)
resolving to I. Blues musicians use V–IV–I–V at the end of each
chorus. Turnarounds create
forward momentum, set up solos, and offer fertile ground for reharmonization.
Interconnectedness
These terms are not isolated: a bridge often contains a double‑tonic scheme,
cadences punctuate changes, and a constant‑structure vamp may precede a
turnaround. Roman‑numeral notation
and rewrite rules supply the analytical language that reveals these links. Mastering the vocabulary
therefore equips musicians to compose, analyze, and improvise with greater
intentionality.
Would
you like annotated score examples that illustrate any of these concepts in
practice?
By
number of chords
Three
I–IV–V–Iii–V–I
turnaround
V–IV–I
turnaround
♭VII–V7 cadence
Backdoor
progression
Eight-bar
blues
Twelve-bar
blues ("Bird" changes)
Sixteen-bar
blues
Passamezzo
moderno
A
Compact Harmonic Survey (≈ 500 words)
I–IV–V–iii–V–I
Turnaround
This
six‑chord loop embellishes the classic I–vi–ii–V jazz turnaround by swapping vi
for its relative major (IV) and inserting a tonicized iii. In C major the sequence
is C maj7 – F maj7 – G7 – E min7 – G7 – C maj7. Because IV precedes V,
the ear momentarily hears a plagal gesture before the dominant, while iii
functions as a bright, leading‑tone‑inflected substitute for vi. The double appearance of
V heightens expectancy, making this turnaround ideal for tag endings and
vamping into solos.
V–IV–I
Turnaround
Common
in country, gospel, and early rock, the descending‑fifths expectation (V→I) is
delayed by a retrograde step to IV. In G major: D7 – C – G. IV acts as a “subdominant cushion,” softening the dominant’s pull and producing a
satisfying Amen‑style resolution. Players often decorate the move with secondary
dominants (D7–C7–G) or bass walks, giving the simple schema great stylistic
flexibility.
♭VII–V⁷
Cadence
Borrowed
from Mixolydian modality and the blues, this cadence substitutes the diatonic
V–I with a plagal‑flavored ♭VII–V7 that still resolves to
I. In A major the pattern is
G – E7 → A. Because ♭VII
shares two tones with V/V, it supplies a fresh but familiar pre‑dominant
sonority. Rock staples such as “Sweet Home Alabama” exploit the move (D–C–G in G) to evoke rootsy
color while retaining forward motion.
Backdoor
Progression
The
“backdoor” approaches tonic from its subdominant side: ii – ♭VII⁷ – I (or simply ♭VII⁷ – I). In C: D min7 – B♭7 – C maj7. B♭7
is the tritone substitute of V7 (it shares the same tritone E–B♭
as G7) but resolves downward by a whole step rather than up a fourth, giving a
smoky, jazz‑soul flavor. Tunes like “Someday My Prince Will
Come” and Steely Dan’s “Josie” feature the progression
to sidestep the obvious ii–V–I.
Eight‑Bar
Blues
A
compressed form of the 12‑bar blues, often structured I – I – IV – IV | I – V – I – V. Examples include Willie
Dixon’s “Key to the Highway” and many early gospel
shouts. The shorter span
intensifies lyrical delivery and suits faster tempos, while leaving room for
turnaround embellishments (e.g., I–vi–ii–V) in the final two bars.
Twelve‑Bar
Blues (“Bird” Changes)
Charlie
Parker reharmonized the standard I–IV–V 12‑bar grid with rapid ii–V cycles and
chromatic approach chords, yielding the bebop “Bird” changes. In B‑flat:
1‑2 B♭7 | E♭7
3‑4 B♭7 | Bdim7
5‑6 Fmin7 – B♭7
| E♭7 – E°7
7‑8 B♭7 | G7
9‑10 Cmin7 – F7 |
11‑12 B♭7 – F7 ||
The substitutions add functional density and chromatic voice‑leading,
challenging improvisers with swift key‑center shifts while preserving the
chorus‑based form of the blues.
Sixteen‑Bar
Blues
Expanding
the frame to four four‑bar phrases, the 16‑bar blues often follows I – I – I – I | IV – IV – I – I | V – IV – I – V. Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill” and many New Orleans
R&B tunes use this layout, allowing more melodic development and lyrical
storytelling without sacrificing the blues’ call‑and‑response
essence.
Passamezzo
Moderno
A
Renaissance ground bass, the passamezzo moderno cycles I – IV – I–V | I – IV – I–V (with variants adding
vi or ii). In G: G – C – G – D | G – C – G – D. Popular across 16th‑century
Europe for dances and vocal settings, it anticipates later pop progressions
like I–V–vi–IV by anchoring melody over a repeating harmonic ostinato. Modern folk revivals
sometimes recast the pattern, proving its enduring appeal.
Interrelations
Whether medieval dance bass or bebop cadence, each scheme manipulates
expectation through dominant delay, chromatic color, or cyclic repetition. Mastering these templates
equips musicians to reharmonize standards, craft fresh turnarounds, and trace
the lineage connecting blues, jazz, rock, and even Renaissance dance music.
Four
'50s
progression
Andalusian
cadence
Folía
vi–ii–V–I
Montgomery-Ward
bridge
Passamezzo
anticoI–V–vi–IV (list)
IV△7–V7–iii7–vi
Romanesca
Tadd
Dameron turnaround
A
Short Guide to Ten Recurrent Harmonic Schemes (≈ 500 words)
’50s
progression (I–vi–IV–V)
Doo‑wop ballads such as “Earth Angel” and “Stand by Me” circulate through
tonic, its relative minor, subdominant, and dominant in four equal bars. Because the bass outlines
a descending third (I→vi) followed by an ascending fourth (IV→V), the loop feels
simultaneously circular and goal‑directed, giving singers space for lyrical
melisma.
Andalusian
cadence (i–♭VII–♭VI–V)
Rooted in flamenco’s Phrygian mode, this descending tetrachord (e.g., Am–G–F–E)
supplies dramatic tension by reserving the only leading tone for the final
dominant. Classical composers—from Ravel’s Boléro to Bizet’s Carmen—appropriate
the pattern to evoke “Spanish” color, while rock acts like the Animals (“House
of the Rising Sun”) adapt it to minor‑key blues.
Folía
A late‑Renaissance/Baroque ground bass whose 16‑bar template alternates tonic
and dominant over a stepwise descending upper line (Dm–A7–Dm–C–F–C–Dm–A7). Composers from Corelli to
Liszt spin variations above its inexorable march, making the Folía an early showcase of
theme‑and‑variation technique and a direct ancestor of the modern passacaglia.
vi–ii–V–I
This “minor up‑by‑fourths” turnaround starts on the tonic’s relative minor,
then follows the circle of fifths back home. In C major: Am7–Dm7–G7–Cmaj7. Jazz players like the
progression because it disguises the cadence’s arrival: the initial
minor chord sounds consonant, yet the ear is already two steps into functional
motion.
Montgomery‑Ward
bridge
Named after the mail‑order catalog whose jingle used it, this eight‑bar bridge
cycles dominants by descending fifths: III7–VI7–II7–V7 (each for two bars). Inserted between two A
sections of a 32‑bar tune, it momentarily tonicizes the relative minor (III)
before the circle pulls the harmony inexorably back to the original key—think “Honeysuckle Rose” or “Satin Doll.”
Passamezzo
antico
A 16th‑century Italian dance ground: I–♭VII–I–V | I–♭VII–I–V. Its modal flavor comes
from the ♭VII, while the repeated tonic–dominant axis invites
improvisatory diminution. Lute books spread the
scheme across Europe, where it blended with local folk strains and eventually
informed early American fiddle tunes.
I–V–vi–IV
(Axis progression)
The pop cousin of the passamezzo antico replaces ♭VII with the diatonic V
and inserts vi for bittersweet color. From “Let It Be” and “No Woman, No Cry” to “Someone Like You,” hundreds of hits recycle
the four‑chord loop, proving its uncanny ability to undergird both jubilant
anthems and introspective laments.
IV△7–V7–iii7–vi
A sleek, jazz‑inflected variant of the descending‑thirds sequence: in G major,
Cmaj7–D7–Bm7–Em7. IV△7
acts as a predominant with Lydian brightness; V7 supplies dominant pull; iii7
and vi minor prolong tonic function while nudging the bass downward by thirds. The chain is a favorite
for pre‑choruses and modulating vamps in R&B and city‑pop.
Romanesca
Closely related to the passamezzo antico but compressed to four chords: I–♭VII–I–V (often with an added
6/4 embellishment). Its hallmark is a melodic
descent 6‑5‑4‑3 over the bass 1‑7‑1‑5, creating bittersweet suspensions. The romanesca underpins
Monteverdi madrigals, Purcell grounds, and even the Beatles’ “Dear Prudence.”
Tadd Dameron turnaround
Bebop arranger Tadd Dameron’s signature tag (Cmaj7–E♭maj7–A♭maj7–D♭maj7
| Dm7–G7–Cmaj7) approaches tonic “through the back door” by moving in major‑thirds,
then snaps into a conventional ii–V–I. The chromatic mediant
chain adds lush color while preserving voice‑leading economy, and has become a
staple reharmonization device for jazz standards like “Lady Bird” and “Half Nelson.”
Across
five centuries, these progressions illustrate how composers balance repetition
and surprise—whether in a Renaissance dance, a doo‑wop ballad, or a bebop tag,
familiar patterns keep listeners oriented while fresh twists keep the story
moving.
By
name
50s
Andalusian
cadence
Backdoor
"Bird"
changes
Borrowed
(contrafact)
Circle
Coltrane
changes
Omnibus
Passamezzo
antico
Passamezzo
moderno
Ragtime
Royal
road progression
"Rhythm"
changes
Stomp
Tadd-Dameron
Montgomery
Ward
bridge
A
Compact Glossary of Recurrent Progressions and Devices (≈ 500 words)
’50s
progression – The doo‑wop loop I–vi–IV–V (e.g., C–Am–F–G) underpins countless
1950s ballads. The descending third then ascending fourth bass motion feels
simultaneously circular and goal‑directed, giving singers an endlessly
repeatable harmonic canvas.
Andalusian
cadence – A Phrygian‑flavored minor descent i–♭VII–♭VI–V (Am–G–F–E) common to
flamenco, Baroque ostinati, and rock. By withholding the leading tone until the
final dominant, it generates heightened tension and “Spanish” color.
Backdoor
progression – Jazz device approaching tonic from the subdominant side: ii – ♭VII⁷ – I (or simply ♭VII⁷ – I). In C, Dm7–B♭7–Cmaj7 substitutes B♭7
for G7, using the same tritone to create a soulful, downward whole‑step
resolution.
“Bird”
changes – Charlie Parker’s bebop reharmonization
of the twelve‑bar blues, saturated with ii–V chains, diminished
passing chords, and secondary dominants. The density challenges improvisers
while retaining the blues’ chorus structure.
Borrowed
(contrafact) – A contrafact is a new melody composed over the chord changes of
an existing tune, “borrowing” harmony while avoiding copyright issues. Bebop
classics such as “Ornithology” (over “How High the Moon”) exemplify the
practice.
Circle
(of fifths) progression – Any sequence that moves roots by descending fifths or
ascending fourths, e.g., vi–ii–V–I or extended chains like III7–VI7–II7–V7. The
pattern maximizes voice‑leading smoothness and functional momentum.
Coltrane
changes – John Coltrane’s harmonic lattice of key
centers a major third apart (e.g., B–G–E♭)
linked by dominant chords, famously heard in “Giant Steps.” Rapid tonal shifts
create virtuosic improvisational demands and a sense of perpetual modulation.
Omnibus
progression – A 19th‑century chromatic sequence in which soprano and bass lines
move contrary‑wise through all twelve semitones while inner voices cycle
dominant sevenths. It functions more as display than functional cadence, later
inspiring film‑score chromaticism.
Passamezzo
antico – Renaissance ground bass I–♭VII–I–V | I–♭VII–I–V, modal in flavor and
favored for dances and improvisatory diminutions. Its tonic‑dominant axis and
lowered seventh foreshadow folk and rock progressions.
Passamezzo
moderno – The “modern” 16th‑century counterpart: I–IV–I–V | I–IV–I–V. Replacing
♭VII with IV yields a more diatonic, major‑mode
feel and anticipates countless pop loops based on I–IV–V motion.
Ragtime
progression – Classic ragtime strains often rest on I–vi–ii–V (or extended
circle‑of‑fifths chains) in sixteen‑bar phrases. The jaunty syncopation rides
atop functional harmony borrowed from late‑19th‑century marches.
Royal‑road
progression – A J‑pop staple: IV△7–V/vi–iii7–vi (in C:
Fmaj7–G/B–Em7–Am7). Descending thirds in the bass and Lydian brightness on IV
create an anthemic, bittersweet sweep ideal for soaring choruses.
“Rhythm”
changes – The 32‑bar AABA form derived from Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm.” A
section: | B♭maj7 G7 | Cm7 F7 | etc.; bridge: a dominant cycle
III7–VI7–II7–V7. Jazz musicians treat it as a harmonic playground for
contrafacts and substitutions.
Stomp
progression – Named after Jelly Roll Morton’s “King Porter Stomp,” this eight‑bar
strain descends in thirds (I–VI7–II7–V7) before cadencing, combining blues
coloration with ragtime stride energy.
Tadd‑Dameron
turnaround – Signature tag of arranger Tadd Dameron: major‑third cycle I–♭III△7–♭VI△7–♭II△7
| ii–V–I (C–E♭–A♭–D♭ | Dm7–G7–C). Chromatic mediants
add lush color before the conventional ii–V–I resolution.
Montgomery‑Ward
bridge – An eight‑bar bridge (III7–VI7–II7–V7, two bars each) named after a
mail‑order jingle. It tonicizes the relative minor (III) then rides the circle
of fifths back to the home key, supplying bright, forward motion between A
sections.
Together
these patterns trace a lineage from Renaissance dance basses to bebop
virtuosity and modern pop hooks. Mastering their voice‑leading logic equips
musicians to recognize, reharmonize, and creatively extend the harmonic
vocabulary across styles and centuries.
Related
Aeolian
harmony
Chaconne
Ground
bass (Pachelbel's Canon)
Irregular
resolution
Galant
Schemata
A
500‑Word Primer on Five Harmonic Concepts
Aeolian
harmony
When composers center their progressions on the natural‑minor (Aeolian) mode
rather than the major/relative minor pair, they create Aeolian harmony.
Characteristic chords are i, ♭VII, VI, and iv—none of which contain a
raised leading tone. A typical pop loop like Am–G–F–E (i–♭VII–VI–V) illustrates the sound:
dark yet driving, with the dominant’s pull weakened because
scale degree ♯7 is absent. Film scorers
exploit Aeolian harmony to evoke brooding landscapes (“Game of Thrones” main title), while
Renaissance and folk traditions use it to preserve modal color before common‑practice
tonality fully codified V–i relationships.
Chaconne
Originating in 17‑century Spain and spreading through France and Italy, the chaconne
is a set of continuous variations over a repeating harmonic pattern, usually in
slow triple meter. Unlike its cousin the passacaglia (which emphasizes a fixed
bass line), a chaconne may vary the bass but retains a stable harmonic
skeleton—often a descending tetrachord. J. S. Bach’s monumental solo‑violin Chaconne
in D minor (from BWV 1004) exemplifies the
form: 64 variations spin out above a four‑measure loop that outlines i–V–i–V, enriching it with
contrapuntal and registral fireworks while the ground anchors the listener’s sense of inevitability.
Ground
bass (Pachelbel’s Canon)
A ground bass is any short, repeating bass line that supports a series of upper‑voice
variations. Johann Pachelbel’s Canon in D popularized perhaps the most famous
ground: D–A–B–F♯–G–D–G–A (I–V–vi–iii–IV–I–IV–V). Over 28 statements of
this eight‑bar ostinato, three violins engage in strict canon, creating a
tapestry of suspensions and sequential figures while the basso continuo quietly
reiterates its pattern. The progression’s smooth step‑wise bass
and functional clarity have made it a template for modern pop ballads (“Let It Be,” “Basket Case”) and a classroom
exemplar of how a simple ground can sustain extended variation.
Irregular
resolution
In common‑practice harmony, certain resolutions are “regular”: V → I, vii° → I, IV → I, and so forth. Irregular
resolution describes any departure from these expectations—either by moving to
an unexpected chord or by altering voice‑leading norms. Examples include the deceptive
cadence (V → vi), the resolution of a
secondary dominant to a chord other than its tonicized goal, or a German
augmented‑sixth moving directly to I. Romantic composers prized such surprises
for expressive effect: Wagner often resolves dominant sevenths downward by
third, and jazz writers routinely let tritone‑substitute dominants slide by
half‑step to unrelated targets. Understanding irregular resolutions helps
analysts trace tension and release in music that stretches, but does not break,
tonal grammar.
Galant
schemata
The mid‑18th‑century galant style—embraced by composers like J. C. Bach and early Haydn—employed stock melodic‑harmonic
patterns called schemata. Musicologists Gjerdingen and others have catalogued
dozens: the Prinner (IV–I⁶–V–I with soprano 6–5–4–3), the Romanesca (I–♭VII–I–V with upper‑voice 6–5–4–3), and the Fonte
(sequence of falling fifths with soprano 3–2–1–7). These schemata functioned
like rhetorical figures, instantly recognizable to 18‑century listeners and
easy for apprentices to combine into longer phrases. Today they provide
analysts and performers with a toolkit for understanding phrase rhetoric,
improvising in historical styles, and explaining why Classical‑era melodies
sound simultaneously fresh and familiar.
Interconnections
All five concepts revolve around the play between repetition and deviation.
Aeolian harmony and irregular resolutions color the basic major‑minor system;
chaconnes and ground basses rely on relentless repetition to frame invention;
galant schemata codify the era’s preferred mini‑progressions. Together they
illustrate how Western composers balance predictability and surprise, grounding
listeners in familiar patterns while inviting them into new expressive
territories.
List
of chord progressions
Degrees
and functions of the diatonic scale
I
/ i
(Major/Minor) ii / iio iii
/ III IV / iv V / v vi / VI viio / VII
Tonic
Supertonic
- Sp
Mediant
- Dp, Tkp, tP, [D](Sp)
Subdominant
Dominant
Submediant
-
Tp,
sP, tCp
Leading
tone - D̸7
Subtonic
- dP
A
500‑Word Guide to the Seven Diatonic Scale‑Degree Functions and Their
Riemannian Labels
Western
tonal music names each scale degree for its melodic position (tonic,
supertonic, etc.) and for its harmonic role inside the key. German theorist Hugo Riemann (late‑19th c.) captured these
harmonic roles with a compact set of functional abbreviations. Capital letters mark the
three pillars—T (tonic), S (subdominant), D (dominant)—while suffixes p
(Parallel) and kp (Counter‑parallel) point to closely related chords a third
away. Lower‑case letters flag
minor quality. The chart below links the
familiar scale‑degree names to their Riemannian nicknames and explains the most
common chords that realize each function.
1. Tonic (T)
Scale‑degree 1 is the tonal center; it
provides rest and closure.
Harmonies:
major or minor I, tonic 6/4 pedal, tonic 7th.
In
Riemann’s system T has no suffix because it is the reference point; its
relatives (Tp, Tkp) appear on other
degrees.
2. Supertonic (Sp)
Scale‑degree 2 lies above the tonic
(“super‑”) and usually supports the ii or iiø7 chord.
Riemann
calls it Sp (Subdominant‑parallel): in C major, D‑minor is a minor triad a
third below S (F‑major).
Function:
predominant—it prepares the dominant through circle‑of‑fifths motion or
stepwise voice‑leading.
3. Mediant (Dp, Tkp, tP, D)
Scale‑degree 3 is midway (“mediant”)
between tonic and dominant.
In
major keys the iii chord (E‑minor in C) is Riemann’s Dp (Dominant‑parallel)
because it shares two tones with the dominant G‑major.
When
the mediant is major (e.g., E‑major in C minor, or III in Aeolian modal
borrowing) it brightens the tonic and can serve as Tkp (Tonic counter‑parallel).
In
minor keys, tP marks the relative major (III) as the tonic’s parallel.
First‑inversion
iii6 can act like a passing dominant to IV; Riemann notes this as D—a dominant sonority en route to the
subdominant.
4. Subdominant (S)
Scale‑degree 4 underpins the IV or ii6
chord.
Function:
a predominant that moves outward (IV → V) or inward (IV → I, “plagal” cadence).
Because
S sits a perfect fifth below the tonic, it balances the dominant’s pull from
above.
5. Dominant (D)
Scale‑degree 5 generates the primary
tension‑chord V(7) or its substitutes.
It
contains the leading tone and scale‑degree 2, whose half‑step and whole‑step resolve
respectively to 1 and 3.
All
other dominant‑family symbols (Dp, D̸7) derive from or point toward this fulcrum.
6. Submediant (Tp, sP, tCp)
Scale‑degree 6 is a third below tonic;
the diatonic vi (or VI in minor) is the Tp (Tonic‑parallel), sharing two common
tones with I.
When
VI moves to IV it can behave as sP (Subdominant‑parallel); when it brightens to
major in a minor key it may be labeled tCp (Tonic counter‑parallel in minor).
Functionally,
the submediant can prolong tonic, substitute for subdominant, or launch
deceptive cadences (V → vi).
7. Leading Tone (D̸7)
Scale‑degree 7 lies a half‑step below
tonic and “leads” upward.
The
fully diminished vii°7 chord is a rootless dominant: Riemann writes D̸7 (“Dominant without its
root”) to stress its interchangeable role with V7.
Because
every note of vii°7 needs resolution, it is the most unstable diatonic harmony.
8. Subtonic (dP)
In
modal or minor contexts where the seventh degree is lowered (♭7),
the resulting ♭VII chord no longer leads to tonic but often
slides down a whole step.
Riemann
tags it dP (minor Dominant‑parallel): it parallels V but with lowered leading
tone, yielding Mixolydian and blues colors.
Common
in rock progressions (e.g., G–F–C in C major) and in the Andalusian cadence.
Takeaway
Traditional scale‑degree names locate a note within the ladder; Riemannian
labels reveal how the chord built on that note behaves inside the key. Together they let
analysts describe both the geography and the grammar of tonal harmony in a
single, economical code.
Music
theory lists
Chords
Progressions
Compositions
Atonal
featuring
Andalusian cadences
Homotonal
Major/minor
Just
Polytonal
Quarter
tone
Twelve-tone
and serial
Whole
tone scale
Genres
Intervals
5-limit justMeantone
Jazz
contrafacts
Turkish
Makams
Set
classes
Scales
and modes
Teachers
Theorists
Tone
rows and series
A
500‑Word Survey of Diverse Concepts in Music Theory and Practice
Chord Progressions – Repeating
successions of chords create harmonic momentum and signal form. From the
classical I–IV–V–I to jazz’s ii–V–I and pop’s I–V–vi–IV, progressions provide
the framework on which melodies, grooves, and improvisations ride.
Compositions Atonal featuring Andalusian cadences – Although the
Andalusian cadence (i–♭VII–♭VI–V) is rooted in tonal
Phrygian minor, modern composers occasionally quote it in otherwise atonal
textures to evoke flamenco color before dissolving back into pitch‑class free
writing. Works by Mauricio Kagel and Paco de Lucía’s collaborators show how a
modal cliché can punctuate an atonal environment without re‑establishing
functional tonality.
Homotonal
– A multi‑movement piece is homotonal when every movement shares the same tonic
(e.g., Haydn’s Op. 33 No. 2 in E‑flat). The device
promotes unity without thematic repetition.
Major/Minor
– The major scale (ionian) and its relative natural, harmonic, and melodic
minors anchor Western common‑practice harmony, defining relationships such as
dominant (V) and subdominant (IV) and shaping expectations of resolution.
Just
– Just intonation tunes intervals to whole‑number frequency ratios (e.g., 3:2
for a pure fifth), maximizing consonance but limiting modulation. Renaissance
vocal music and contemporary microtonalists exploit its beat‑less sonorities.
Polytonal
– Simultaneous use of two or more keys, as in Milhaud’s Saudades do Brasil or
Stravinsky’s Petrushka. Polytonality layers distinct tonal centers to create
kaleidoscopic clashes and expanded harmonic palettes.
Quarter Tone – Dividing the
octave into 24 equal parts yields quarter‑tone intervals (50 ¢ each). Composers such as
Alois Hába and jazz trumpeter Ibrahim Maalouf use them for subtle
inflections and new harmonic resources.
Twelve‑Tone and Serial – Arnold
Schoenberg’s twelve‑tone method orders all twelve chromatic notes into a tone
row that governs pitch organization through permutations (prime, inversion,
retrograde). Later serialists extended ordered sets to rhythm, dynamics, and
timbre, seeking structural coherence in post‑tonal music.
Whole‑Tone Scale – Six equally
spaced tones (C–D–E–F♯–G♯–A♯) erase leading‑tone gravity, yielding dreamy
ambiguity. Debussy’s “Voiles” and Thelonious Monk’s “Four in One” showcase its floating
quality.
Genres
– Stylistic categories such as baroque chaconne, bebop, EDM, or Turkish fasil
shape expectations of form, timbre, and performance practice, influencing how
theoretical devices are deployed.
Intervals,
5‑Limit Just, Meantone – In 5‑limit
tuning, only the prime factors 2, 3, 5 define ratios (e.g., 5:4 major third). Meantone
tempers fifths slightly narrow so that thirds become purer, the backbone of
Renaissance keyboard temperament.
Jazz Contrafacts – New
melodies written over pre‑existing chord progressions, e.g., Charlie Parker’s
“Donna Lee” (over “Indiana”). Contrafacts let improvisers explore fresh themes
atop familiar harmonic maps.
Turkish Makams – Modal systems
combining specific scalar segments (cins) and characteristic melodic pathways (seyir).
Makam theory integrates microtonal intervals and emotional affect; for
instance, Hicaz features a neutral second and distinctive descending phrases.
Set Classes – In pitch‑class
set theory, unordered collections (e.g., {0,1,4}) abstract intervals and
facilitate analysis of atonal music. Allen Forte’s catalogue numbers sets by
intervallic content, revealing structural kinships.
Scales and Modes – Ordered pitch
collections—from church modes to raga thāts—supply melodic vocabulary and
govern permissible cadences, ornaments, and expressive nuances.
Teachers
– Pedagogues such as Nadia Boulanger, Heinrich Schenker, and Barry Harris
transmit theoretical frameworks and shape generations of composers and
performers.
Theorists
– Scholars like Rameau, Helmholtz, Schoenberg, and Ligeti formalize, critique,
and expand our understanding of musical structure, acoustics, and perception.
Tone Rows and Series – Ordered
sequences of elements (pitch, rhythm, dynamics) serve as generative material in
serial and post‑serial composition, ensuring unity while permitting manifold
surface variation.
Together,
these concepts illustrate the breadth of music theory—from the bedrock of
major/minor tonality and just intonation to the adventurous realms of
microtonality, serialism, and non‑Western modal systems—showing how composers
and analysts continually reimagine the possibilities of organized sound.
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