Tagg's Harmony Hand Out
Tagg's Harmony Hand Out
Tagg's Harmony Hand Out
This handout consists mainly of texts submitted as headword entries to the Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World.
Contents
Terminology 2
Polyphony 2
Chord 3
Homophony 3
Counterpoint 5
Heterophony 6
Harmony 7
Classical harmony 7
Triads and tertial harmony 7
History 8
Structural traits 8
Syntax, narrative, function 8
Voice leading, ionian mode and modulation 9
Dissolution of classical harmony 10
Non-classical harmony 13
Non-directional tertial harmony 13
Ionian mode and barr 13
Quartal harmony 17
Structural definition 17
History and usage 18
Chords (2) 22
Tertial chords 22
Tertial triads 22
Roman numerals 23
Inversions 23
Recognition of tertial chords 24
Lead sheet 26
Omitted notes 31
Added ninths and sixths 32
Suspended fourths and ninths 32
Inversions 32
Anomalies 33
Flat, sharp, plus and minus 33
Enharmonic spelling 33
Non-tertial chords 33
Turnaround 34
Circle of fifths 36
Bibliography 40
Musical references 41
Polyphony 2
Terminology
Harmony is today virtually synonymous with tonal polyphony (see p.2 ff.). In ancient Greece, however, where the term originates, rmona (harmona) literally
meant combination or union. Applied to music in Hellenic times, the word referred
to the joining together of sounds into concords or sequences, not just the simultaneous combination of notes. Classical Latins harmonia also meant an agreement of
sounds, concord or melody. In medieval Europe, harmony initially meant the simultaneous sounding of two notes only (dyads), in much the same way as a backing vocalist in popular music may be described as singing harmonies, even though
harmony, in the general sense of the term, is more likely to be provided by accompanying instruments. European theorists of the Renaissance extended the notion
of harmony to the simultaneous sounding of three notes, thus accommodating the
common triad, with its third as well as the fifth.
Since the seventeenth century harmony has, in its musical sense, largely been associated with the chordal practices of music in the Central European art music tradition and with styles of popular music relating to that tradition. More recently, the
notion of harmony has been popularly applied to any music which sounds in any
way chordal to the Western ear, even, for example, to the vocal polyphony of certain
African and Eastern European traditions, or to the polyphonic instrumental practices of some Central and South-East Asian music cultures. In short, whereas popular English-language parlance may qualify as harmony such phenomena as a
melody plus drone or two voices singing in parallel homophony see (p.3 ff.), conventional musicology would tend to reserve the term for chordal practices relating to
the Central European classical tradition of tertial harmony. However, since popular music encompasses a wider range of tonal polyphonic practices than those conventionally covered by musicology, it is appropriate to qualify any type of tonal
polyphony as harmony. This wider meaning of the term makes it possible to speak
of a variety of harmonic practices and thus to treat harmonic idiom as one important set of traits distinguishing one style of music from another.
Polyphony
Polyphony, from Greek poly [pol] (= many) and fone [fvn] (=sound), denotes:
1. music in which at least two sounds of clearly differing pitch, timbre or mode of
articulation occur at the same time (general definition); 2. music in which at least
two sounds of clearly differing fundamental pitch occur simultaneously (tonal definition); 3. a particular type of contrapuntal tonal polyphony used by certain European composers between c.1400 and c.1600. This latter usage of the term,
widespread in historical musicology, is incongruous since the polyphony alluded to
is contrasted with homophony, itself another type of polyphony. Most popular music is, however, polyphonic according to definitions 1 and 2.
According to the first definition it is possible to qualify as polyphonic music which
features the simultaneous occurrence of sounds for which no fundamental pitch is
discernible, especially when such unpitched sounds are produced by different instruments or voices articulating different rhythmic patterns. The notion of a polyphonic synthesiser rhymes well with this general definition since such instruments
Chord 3
Chord 1
A chord is the simultaneous sounding of two or more different pitched notes by any
polyphonic instrument or by any combination of instrument(s) and/or voice(s). The
simultaneous sounding of notes of the same name, i.e. pitches separated by octave
intervals, does not qualify as a chord. Chord derives from Greeks chorde [xord],
via Latins chorda and simply meant the string of musical instrument. In sixteenthcentury Europe chord came to denote the sounding together of different notes
played on several instruments of the same family, especially strings. Since then the
word gradually acquired its current meaning.
Chords need not be heard as such by members of a musical tradition whose polyphony emphasises the interplay of independent melodic lines much more strongly
than music in the Western post-Renaissance tradition of melody and accompaniment. In most types of popular music chords are generally regarded as belonging to
the accompaniment part of that dualism.
Homophony
Homophony, from Greek homfonos [omfvnow] (= sounding in unison or at the
same time) denotes the type of polyphony in which the various instruments and/or
voices move in the same rhythm at the same time, i.e. the polyphonic antithesis of
1.
Homophony 4
counterpoint. In historical musicology, homophony is sometimes opposed to polyphony, the latter in the restricted sense of imitative contrapuntal polyphony, and can
also therefore denote music in which one voice or instrumental part leads melodically while others provide chordal accompaniment. However, since chordal accompaniment in many influential types of popular music is characterised by riffs (bass,
lead guitar, backing vocals, etc.) and thereby to a significant extent contrapuntal,
it is misleading to call such music homophonic.
Music can be considered homophonic (or contrapuntal) only in relative terms. For
example, although example 1, taken from one of the most popular hymn tunes in
nonconformist Christianity, fulfils all the criteria of homophony, it is less homophonic than example 2 because: (i) each voice has a clearly melodic character, sometimes proceeding in contrary motion to the tune (soprano); (ii) the excerpt ends with
a small contrapuntal intervention in the alto and bass parts.
Ex. 1
Ex. 2
Counterpoint 5
Counterpoint
Counterpoint comes from the Latin contrapunctus, an abbreviation of punctus contra punctum, meaning note against note. It refers to polyphony whose instrumental
or vocal lines clearly differ in melodic profile.
Counterpoint is often understood as the horizontal aspect of polyphony, harmony
as its vertical aspect. The problem with this popular distinction is that since chords,
the building blocks of harmony, are usually sounded in sequence and since each
constituent note of each chord can often be heard as horizontally related to a note
in the next one, harmony frequently gives rise to internal melodies, some of which
may clearly differ in melodic profile and thereby have a contrapuntal character.
Conversely, the simultaneous sounding of lines with differing melodic profile (counterpoint) entails by definition consideration of the musics vertical aspect, i.e. its
harmony. Therefore, since melodic profile is as much a matter of distinct rhythm as
of pitch, it is more accurate to consider homophony (see p.3 ff.) as a the polyphonic
antithesis to counterpoint. Even so, polyphonic music can be considered contrapuntal or homophonic only by degree, never in absolute terms. For example, the final
chorus in most trad jazz band performances of almost any number (many instrumentalists improvising different rhythmic and tonal lines around the same tune
and its chords, e.g. King Oliver, 1923) is more contrapuntal than the preceding solos (one melodic line, a bass line and chordal rhythm), much more so than conventional hymn singing (voices moving to different notes in the same rhythm) and
infinitely more so than doubling a vocal line at the third or sixth (following the same
pitch profile in the same rhythm). In short, the more differences there are between
concurrent parts in terms of melodic rhythm and pitch profile, the more contrapuntal the music.
Imitative counterpoint of the type taught to composition students is uncommon in
popular music, even though a few well-known canons (Frre Jacques, Three Blind
Mice, Londons Burning, for example) must be among the most frequently sung
songs in the world. Indeed, despite the fact that canonic singing is also widespread
in some parts of Africa (e.g. the Ekonda of Zaire, the Shona of Zimbabwe, the Jabo
of Liberia) (Nketia, 1974: 144-5), the most common forms of counterpoint in popular
music are: (i) the simultaneous occurrence of different melodies in the overlap between call and response (see example 4); (ii) the contrapuntal interplay between (a)
melodic line, (b) accompanying or lead instrument, (c) bass line (see ex. 5).
Ex. 4
Ex. 5
Heterophony 6
Heterophony
Heterophony, from Greek hteros [terow] (other) and fne [fvn] (sound), means
polyphony resulting from differences of pitch produced when two or more people
sing or play the same melodic line at the same time. Heterophony can denote everything from the unintentional polyphonic effect of slightly unsynchronised unison
singing to the intentional discrepancies between vocal line and its instrumental
embellishment which are characteristic of much music from Greece, Turkey and
the Arab world (ex. 6).
Ex. 6
Heterophony is also at the heart of most forms of Indonesian gamelan music. Several layers of heterophony can combine to produce a distinctly chordal effect (ex. 7).
Ex. 7
Another type of heterophony is found in traditional music from the Hebrides where
each florid pentatonic improvisation on the same psalm tune is thought to present
each individuals relation to God on a personal basis (Knudsen, 1968, ex. 8).
Ex. 8
Hebridean home worship - Martyrdom (Musique des les Hbrides, 1968, transcr. Knudsen )
Classical harmony 7
Harmony
Two main types of harmony practice are currently used in popular music: classical
(p.7) and modal (p.14), the latter divisible into the general subcategories tertial and
quartal. Since most writing on harmony deals with procedure inside only one of
these categories or subcategories (e.g. classical harmony, chorale harmony, bebop
jazz harmony, modal harmony), cardinal problems arise when terms conventionally
used with reference to one category of harmony usually the classical are applied to a much wider range of practices. Two conceptual areas are in particular
need of clarification: [1] classical harmony, [2] triads and tertial harmony.
Classical harmony
Classical harmony is so called because it denotes the most common practices of tonal polyphony found in the globally influential body of European classical music of
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Such harmony is also commonly referred
to as triadic, diatonic, functional, tonal etc., but these qualifiers are misleading
since they can each be applied to harmonic practices diverging significantly from
those of the European art-music canon, its immediate precursors and successors.
For example, all modal harmony using three-note chords is by definition triadic. It
is also diatonic if, as is often the case, its tonal material can be derived from a standard heptatonic scale containing two semitone intervals. Moreover, with the possible
exception of atonal underscores in horror films, all harmonic idioms in popular music are tonal and none is without function. In short, although many popular music
styles throughout the world may follow the basic harmonic principles of the European art music tradition, classical harmony is probably the least inadequate available descriptor of those principles.
Classical harmony 8
The historical legacy of European classical music theory is so strong that such a
common phenomenon as the triad is so named as if no triads existed in modal or
quartal harmony. The problem is that if dyad (from Greeks do/dyo, meaning
two) means, when applied to music, any chord containing two different notes, then
triad should mean any chord containing three different notes, tetrad four different notes, pentad five, and so on; however, as the expression common triad indicates, triads built on the superimposition of two adjoining thirds are literally so
common in classical harmony that triadic has come to qualify not so much chords
containing three different notes as chords built on the superimposition of adjoining
thirds. When discussing several harmonic idioms, including those associated with
European art music of the classical period, it is necessary to use triad and triadic
only in their original sense. Harmony based on superimposed thirds will therefore
be called tertial, not triadic, and triad will mean any chord, tertial or not, containing three different notes.
History
The tonal polyphony of European art music is generally regarded as having gradually developed into a form which by the end of the seventeenth century crystallised
into a set of practices qualifiable in todays terms as classical harmony. Its establishment is associated with the transition from contrapuntal to more homophonic
types of tonal polyphony in late sixteenth and early seventeenth century Central
Europe, and with the adoption of the melody-accompaniment dualism as a basic
compositional device in which harmony is generally associated with instrumental
or vocal accompaniment (background harmony, backing vocals, etc.). Practically
all European art music of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
uses harmonic practices which also form the basis of tonal polyphony in such common types of popular music as operetta, parlour song, music hall, waltzes, marches,
hymns, community songs, national anthems, romantic ballads, Schlager, evergreens, jazz standards, swing, bebop, etc. This broad tradition of harmony also pervades much Country music and film music.
Structural traits
Syntax, narrative, function
Classical harmony is generally thought to encompass the sequential (horizontal,
linear, contrapuntal) as well as simultaneous (vertical, homophonic) aspects of
chords. It is in other words not just a matter of instantaneous sonority or of short,
repeated chord sequences. On the contrary, one of its most salient features is the
implication of tonal direction of notes within chords (shown as , , in ex. 9-16),
such horizontal linearity being instrumental in elemental processes of musical narrative (opening, continuation, change, return, closure, etc.). The importance of narrative function in the European art music tradition led influential musicologists
like Riemann (1893) to qualify its harmony as functional. Although this nomenclature is misleading because it falsely implies that other harmonic practices have no
function, its insistence on syntactic function underlines important differences of expression and narrative organisation between European classical harmony and other types of tonal polyphony.
Classical harmony 9
(a)
(b)
The ionian is the only heptatonic diatonic mode to feature at the same time:
major triads on all perfect intervals of the scale (tonic, fourth and fifth, e.g. C, F
and G in C major, see table 1);
a dominant seventh chord, containing a tritone, on the fifth degree (e.g. G7, containing f8 and b8, in C);
semitone intervals, one ascending and one descending, which adjoin two of the
tonic triads three constituent notes, i.e. leading note to tonic (#7 8, or b8 c
in C) and subdominant to mediant (4 3, or f e in C).
In simple terms, the ionian modes fourth is felt to be pulled down to the major third
a semitone below, while its major seventh or leading note is so called because it is
heard as leading up to the keynote one semitone above. This simple principle of
voice leading endows the ionian mode with its unique qualities of tonal directionality.
Although this directionality is that of the V-I cadence
anticlockwise round the circle of fifths (e.g. G7 C, see
p.36 ff.), the ionian modes semitones can also exert a
pull in the opposite direction (ex. 10) because the third
degree can rise as leading note to the fourth (e.g. e f in
C) while degree one (or eight) can descend to degree seven (e.g. c b8), which also happens to be major third in a simple triad on the dominant. In the first instance (degree 3
4) harmonic direction remains
subdominantal in that the mediant of the tonic acts as leading note to the subdominant (e f, ex. 10a); but in the second instance the tonic acts as fourth descending
to the mediant of the dominant (c b8, ex. 10b).
Ex. 10
Ex. 11
(a)
(b)
(a)
(b)
Dominantal direction (clockwise round the circle of fifths, e.g. from C to G) is usually enhanced by raising the tonics fourth by one semitone (e.g. f to f# in the D7
chord of ex. 11a), such alteration making for a clearer direction towards the dominant by introducing a second, rising semitone (f# g) to complement the falling
Classical harmony 10
semitone already mentioned (c b8, ex. 10b, 11a). Raising the fourth by a semitone
(e.g. f to f#) moves the tonic of the ionian mode to the dominant, from I to V (e.g. C
G), and constitutes a change of key or modulation, especially if a pivot chord is
included in the progression (ex. 11a). Conversely, lowering the leading note by half
a tone (e.g. from b8 to b$ in the C7 chord of ex. 11b) will introduce a descending semitone (b$ a8) to underline the subdominantal direction of semitone rising to the
keynote of the new ionian mode (e.g. e8 f, see ex. 10a, 11b). The introduction of
accidentals providing ascending or descending leading notes for V-I cadences in
other keys than the tonic is an essential characteristic of classical ionian-mode harmony because such chromaticism is a precondition for the type of modulation without which the basic narrative of most European art music would be unthinkable.
Classical harmony 11
cadence in C (bars 7-8). Note also the frequency of dominant seventh chords containing the ionian modes two leading notes a tritone apart and how the major third
in those chords ascends to the next chords tonic ( in ex. 12-13), while the flat seventh descends to the next chords third ( ). These traits, including sometimes use
of tertial chords in their inversions, form the harmonic core of a global idiom of popular music which flourished during the late nineteenth century and the first half of
the twentieth century. They can be found, in varying proportions in such popular
tunes as Adeste Fideles, Cocoroc, La cucaracha, The Blue Danube, Le dserteur,
Gii phng min nam, Jingle Bells, the German national anthem, Lhirondelle du
faubourg, the Internationale, the song of the International Brigade, Liberty Bell,
Light Cavalry, the Marseillaise, Onward Christian Soldiers, Rubinsteins Melody
in F, Cielito Lindo, Sous le ciel de Paris, Sancta Lucia, The Star-Spangled Banner,
Waltzing Matilda (chorus), We Shall Overcome, When The Saints, Where Have All
the Flowers Gone, Workers of the World Awaken!
Ex. 12
Ex. 13
Voice leading the dominant seventh chords minor seventh and major third, dominantal modulation, subdominantal V-I directionality, the frequent occurrence of inversions etc. have in fact become so indicative of European art music that they can
be inserted as genre synecdoches in a context of non-classical harmony (e.g. pop and
rock) to connote, seriously or humorously, high art rather than low-brow entertainment, deep feelings and the transcendent rather than the superficial and
ephemeral (ex. 14-16).
Classical harmony 12
Together with dance styles like bossa nova, Jazz has relied heavily on a sense of
harmonic direction similar to that of the European classical tradition. Long and
sometimes quite complex chord sequences, an increasing amount of chromaticism,
and the use of modulation are all key factors in many types of jazz. The popularity
of the thirty-two bar standard as basis for improvisation bears witness to the essential role of harmonic narrative in jazz. Put simply, no jazz performance will work if
musicians do not know or cannot follow the changes.
Ex. 14
Tonic second inversion as second chord: a classical move: outline keyboard arpeggiation
structure. (a) J S Bach: Prelude in C major from Wohltemperiertes Klavier, Band I (1722); (b) Elton
John: Your Song (1970, transposed to C).
Ex. 15 Inversions through descending bass in major key: (a) J S Bach: Air from Orchestral Suite in D Major
(c. 1730, transposed to C); (b) Procol Harum: A Whiter Shade of Pale (1967); (c) bass common to
both (a) and (b),
Ex. 16
Altered supertonic seventh chord in fourth inversion: (a) Mozart: Ave verum corpus, K618 (1791);
(b) Procol Harum: Homburg (1967); Abba: Waterloo (1974).
Jazz harmony can be divided into four main historical idioms:[1] trad. jazz; [2]
swing; [3] bebop; [4] non-tertial (p.17). With the exception of [4], all jazz harmony
follows the underlying principles of European art music: flat sevenths fall, sharp
sevenths rise, accidentals (alterations) are used for chromatic effect or for modulation, there is strict adherence to falling, subdominantal (V-I) progressions anticlockwise round the circle of fifths. Trad. jazz harmony tends to use real circle-offifths progressions, adding sixths or sevenths to basic triads. Swing era harmony
tends to favour virtual circle-of-fifths progressions with sixths, sevenths and ninths
added to basic triads. Bebop harmony can be regarded as a radical expansion of
swing harmony: it features chromatic alteration, typically through tritone substi-
Non-classical harmony 13
tution which includes the flat fifth as an extra (voice) leading note, and chords of
the eleventh and thirteenth. Basic differences between these jazz harmony idioms
are illustrated in simplified form in example 17 which shows varying treatment of
the (I-) VI - II - V - I vamp sequence.
Ex. 17
(a)
(b1)
(c1)
(b2)
(c2)
Non-classical harmony
Non-directional tertial harmony
Ionian mode and barr
Although sequences of common triads in the ionian mode occur frequently in many
postwar popular music styles (for example, in cmbia, son, high life and kwela, as
well in pop, rock and soul music) such harmonic practices cannot be qualified as
classical because they rarely, if ever, follow the directional conventions of European
art musics voice-leading and modulation. For example, the tertial, ionian-mode La
Bamba matrix (I-IV-V, see table 2 (p.16)) does not modulate, contains no inversions,
and usually closes IV V, not V I (e.g. Guantanamera). Moreover, barr chord
progressions, so common in guitar-based popular music, automatically involve sequences of parallel fifths or octaves, forbidden in classical harmony, for example between the triads on IV and V of the La Bamba matrix. Similarly, bottleneck
performance relies entirely on chords strung together in parallel motion. By including such parallel motion and by excluding modulation and inversion, such tertial
matrices, which rarely involve more than four chords, function in a radically different way to progressions in the idiom of classical harmony. Although such matrices
may vary from one (section of a) song to another, their function is neither to provide
long-term harmonic direction nor to construct musical narrative but rather to pro-
Non-classical harmony 14
vide a fitting tonal dimension to underlying patterns of rhythm, metre and periodicity and to generate an immediate sense of ongoing tonal movement.
$II
II
$III
IV
$VI
$VII
ionian
dorian
phrygian
lydian
mixolydian
aeolian
The basic principles of tertial modal harmony can be simply grasped using only the
white notes of a piano keyboard instrument. Playing the major triads of F, G and
C, as well as the relevant tonic triad (if it is not based on f, g or c), while at the same
time holding down the keynote of the relevant mode in the bass (c for ionian, d for
dorian, e for phrygian and so on) will produce familiar but distinctive patterns of
modal harmony. This procedure can then be transposed to any of the octaves black
or white notes.
It should be noted that the most common alteration in tertial modal harmony is to
raise the third of tonic triads in minor modes. Such alteration can be understood in
terms of a tierce de Picardie used consistently throughout a piece of music as substitute for the tonic minor triad, not just as alteration of the final chord. This major
triad substitution practice was commonly used in the modal harmony of Elizabethan popular song and dance (ex. 18, 20; see also Farnabys Dreame, Dowlands
King of Denmarks Galliard, etc.).
Major third substitution in the tonic triad is widespread in blues and in some Country music where minor or blues thirds are executed to the accompaniment of major
Non-classical harmony 15
triads (ex.19), or when barr techniques are used to progress between I $III and IV,
as in the dorian-mode riffs of Green Onions or Smoke On The Water. Dorian harmonies are in other words suited to the accompaniment of minor pentatonic melody (1
$3 4 5 $7) because, with alteration of the tonic, major triads occur on four of five
pitches (I $III IV $VII).
Ex. 18
Farnaby: Loth to Depart (c.1610): aeolian triads with major tonic triad
(I $III iv $VI $VII)
Ex. 19
Darling Corey (USA Trad., Doc Watson 1963): major tonic triad for minor mode tun e
Ex. 20
The fifth degree triad of minor modes was also often altered to major in European
polyphonic music during the ascendancy of the ionian mode, typically to introduce
V-I cadences containing dominant sevenths and their double leading notes (see p.9).
Example 20 (bars 1-2) shows a dorian (I IV $III) and (bars 4-5) a mixolydian progression (I IV $VII), each followed by the standard V7-I ionian cadence of classical
harmony.
Alteration of minor dominant also occurs in blues-related styles, especially when
barr, slide and bottleneck techniques are used on guitar. In these cases, however,
such alteration relates to tuning and playing practices, not to any predilection for
the ionian mode or perfect cadences, as is evident from the absence of V-I changes
(B E) in example 21.
Ex. 21
Slide guitar chords (opening tuning E) for Vigilante Man (Guthrie), adapted from Cooder (1971).
Non-classical harmony 16
Table 2 shows the major triads, including, where applicable, the altered tonic (in
square brackets), of each mode. (The lydian and locrian modes are excluded because
they are uncommon in most forms of popular music.) Table 2 also presents each
modes major triads as they would occur in C (no sharps, no flats) and in E (four
sharps), along with references to examples of popular music in which each relevant
modal tertial harmony can be heard.
The tertial harmony of each mode is often related to the frequency with which it is
(assumed to be) used in particular types of music. Hence, dorian harmony is a trait
of some blues-based styles (ex.21), while phrygian chord changes are often regarded, at least by non-Hispanics, as distinctive of Hispanic popular music styles
(ex.22). Tertial phrygian harmony is also used extensively in popular music from
Greece, Turkey, the Balkans and the Near East, mostly in accompaniment to melody in the Hijaz mode (e.g. Misirlou, a.k.a. the theme from Pulp Fiction).
Ex. 22
(a)
(b)
Mixolydian harmonies are often linked with British and Irish or Anglo-American
folk music (ex. 28, p. 19), with some forms of rock and Country, and with music for
Western adventures (ex. 23, p. 17). One particular trait of mixolydian harmony, the
cowboy half cadence, from $VII to an altered major triad on V, is familiar enough
to have become an object of both pastiche (ex. 24a, p.17) and parody (ex. 24b).
Aeolian harmony seems to have acquired two main functions in pop and rock music:
[i] connoting, by means of the aeolian pendulum, notions of the ominous, fateful or
implacable (Bjrnberg 1984); [ii] substituting standard IV-I or V-I cadences with
the more colourful and dramatic $VI-$VII-I aeolian cadence, easily performed as
barr chords on guitar.
Table 2
relative
positions
with 4
sharps
examples
ionian
I IV V
CFG
EAB
La bamba, Twist and Shout [D-G-A in D]; Guantanamera [F-B$-C in F]; Pata Pata [F-B$-F-C].
dorian
[I] $III IV
$VII
[D] F
GC
[E] G
AD
phrygian
[E] F C
G
[E] F
CG
See ex. 22, verse of E viva Espaa, start of Rodriguos Concierto de Aranjuez. Misirlou.
mixolydian
I IV $VII
GCF
EAD
Sweet Home Alabama [D-C-G in D]; Hey Jude [GF-C-G]; The Magnificent Seven [E $-A$-E$ -D$ in
E $]; ex. 23-28
aeolian
[I] $III
$VI $VII
[A] C F
G
[E] G
CD
All Along the Watchtower [A-G-F-G in A], Flashdance [G-F-E $-F in G]. Cadences in Lady
Madonna [F-G-A], PS I Love You [B$-C-D], SOS
[D$ -E$-F], Brown Sugar [A $-B$ -C].
Ex. 23
Quartal harmony 17
Mixolydian shuttles: (a) Tiomkin: Duel in the Sun (1947); (b) Mancini: Cades County (1971).
(a)
(b)
Ex. 24
Cowboy half cadences: (a) The Shadows: Dakota (1963); (b) Brooks: Blazing Saddles (1974).
(b)
Quartal harmony
Structural definition
Quartal harmony is so called because it is based on the fourth and on its octave complement, the fifth. Unlike its tertial counterpart, quartal harmony it is not based
on thirds, nor on the ionian mode, nor do its basic chords contain tritones whose
constituent notes demand voice leading by semitone steps. The structural elements
of quartal harmony are set out in example 25.
The first line (a) of example 25 shows: (1) c
Ex. 25 Basis of quartal harmony in C
at the centre of a pile of fourths (d g c f b$);
(2) the pentatonic scale resulting from that
pile of fourths (1-2-4-5-$7 or c d f g b $); (3)
c at the centre of a pile of fifths containing
exactly the same tonal material as ex. 25
(a1) and (a2): whether the notes be piled in
fourths or fifths, they still constitute a run
of five consecutive positions round the circle of fifths. Lines (b) and (c) in ex. 25 show
(2) the resultant pentatonic scales when c
is shifted subdominantally to position 2 or,
dominantally, to position 4 in the pile of
fourths (b1, c1), and to position 2 or 4 respectively in the equivalent pile of fifths
(b3, c3). Note [i] that the quartal notes of C
in central position (ex. 25a) are the same
Quartal harmony 18
as those of the G minor or B$ major anhemitonic pentatonic modes; [ii] that those
of C in dominantal position (ex. 25b) tally with the pentatonic scales of D minor and
F major; [iii] that those of C in subdominantal position (ex. 25c) coincide with C minor and E$ major pentatonic scales. Simple triads and tetrads resulting from C in
central quartal position (ex. 25a) are presented in example 26 and are transposable
to any of the chromatic scales eleven other pitches.
Ex. 26
Each note of the pile of fourths (or fifths, or of the relevant pentatonic scale) can be
used as bass for chords consisting of the same tonal vocabulary. Moreover, all of the
chords tabulated can be sounded with any pitch from the relevant pentatonic material as bass note. This procedure occasionally produces tertial chords (in ex. 26
Gm and B$, marked in black) which, in a consistently quartal idiom, are usually
supplied with a bass note foreign to the tertial chord in question. For example, with
c in the bass, Gm(7) and B$(6) produce variants of C11, a chord which even in a tertial context contains a fourth and is sounded without third (see table 6, p.29, chords
4a-4d). Most of the chords in example 26 are, however, unequivocally quartal.
In jazz and pop circles quartal chords are sometimes referred to as suspensions.
Chords C and C in ex. 26 might, for example, be called Csus9 and C7sus4 respectively. However, it is apparent from examples 29-32 that quartal chords are consonances in their own right, not suspensions requiring resolution as in example 9b.
Similarly, the chord marked C6/9 in the sheet music version of Stings Seven Days
(ex. 32, p. 20) is neither a C6 chord, nor a C9 nor a C9add6, nor C6/9 (see table 6,
p.29-30), but a 1-2-5-6 quartal chord (C in dominantal position, see ex. 25b2) that
constitutes the main keynote sonority of the whole song.
Borodin: (a) Song of the Dark Forest (1868); (b) The Sleeping Princess (1867).
Russians like Mussorgsky and Borodin (ex. 27) are followed much later by composers of the Spanish school (ex. 28a, bar 2) but tertial modal harmony was for some
Quartal harmony 19
time the most common approach to the problem of harmonising music outside with
the Central European classical idiom (e.g. Dvork, Grieg, Rimsky-Korsakov,
Vaughan Williams). However, the attitude of classically trained European musicians to music outside the canon did change during the nineteenth century. Whereas the Czech-German symphonist Carl Stamitz had in 1798 deemed Irish tunes
incapable of bearing any harmony (Hamm 1979: 50), Herbert Hughes, in his preface to Irish Country Songs (vol. 1, London, 1909: iv), expressed the need for a radical and unacademic approach when dealing with such material, championing the
work of M. Claude Debussy who, he claimed, had set the trend to break the bonds
of this old slave-driver [classical tonality, etc.] and return to the freedom of primitive scales. Indeed, Hughess accompaniment to the mixolydian ballad She Moved
Through the Fair (popularised by Simple Minds as Belfast Child) resolves its chains
of open fifths and tertial triads into a final quartal chord (ex. 28b, p.19).
,
Ex. 28
Debussy is one of the first to use quartal harmony in modern Western music. Although whole sections of La cathdrale engloutie (1910), also as arranged by John
Carpenter and Alan Howarth in Escape from New York, move in layered parallel
fifths, Debussys use of quartal chords is generally limited to short passages providing contrasting harmonic colour to other sonorities, such as the whole-tone scale
and tertial chords of the sixth, seventh and ninth. Example 29 shows the first three
bars of one such brief passage.
Ex. 29
Quartal harmony 20
harmony were abandoned in favour of quartal chords (ex. 30). Among jazz musicians to follow in Daviss modal footsteps in the sixties and seventies were McCoy
Tyner and Freddie Hubbard (ex. 31).
Ex. 30
Ex. 31
Ex. 32
It is probable that the use of quartal harmony in pop and rock, including its occasional appearance in such Rolling Stones hits as Jumpin Jack Flash and Gimme
Shelter (1969), derives partly from old rural forms of polyphony (blues, folksong,
Quartal harmony 21
etc.). For example, Clarence Ashleys open-string banjo accompaniment to the minor pentatonic tune Coo-Coo Bird is entirely quartal and qualified by the Folkways
liner notes (1963) as archaic. Similarly, the thirdless harmonies of minor-mode
shape-note hymns like Hausers Wondrous Love (1835) bear more resemblance to
the polyphony of Heinrich Isaac (died 1517) than to their urbane contemporaries.
Indeed, during tertial harmonys global hegemony (c.1650-c.1950), polyphony based
on fourths or fifths was regarded as either archaic or primitive to the extent that
Hollywood stereotypes for almost any place or time felt to be distant enough from
our own was provided with some kind of thirdless polyphony. Ancient Egypt,
Greece and Rome, pre-Renaissance Europe, the Chinese, the Arabs and Native
Americans were often harmonically indistinguishable.
From this perspective it might seem as if modal and quartal harmony constitute no
more than a return to pre-classical polyphony. There is, however, little doubt that
classical harmony will survive as just one polyphonic idiom among several. It has
also left an indelible impression worldwide on practices of tonal polyphony. Its imprint on quartal harmony can be seen in the need to develop means of changing key
inside a tonal idiom which in earlier times contained no modulation. Quartal key
changes occur in examples 29 (from C#4-5-$7 to E4-5-$7), 30 (from Dm11 to E$m11)
and 31 (a riff whose two poles are [i] Dm11 and A4-5-$7 and [ii] Cm11, E$11, G$/f).
Moreover, the Kojak theme changes between Cm11 and E$m11, and much of the dynamic in Bartks harmonic language derives from tension between quartal chords
a tritone apart (Lendvai 1971). In short, it is possible to change quartal key by introducing a chord whose constituent notes are as different as possible to those in
the previous one. The most usual key changes from a quartal sonority in central position (1-2-4-5-$7, see ex. 25, p. 17) are therefore those to a quartal chord situated
a minor third above or below, or to a quartal chord at a tritones interval, or to a
quartal chord on either degree IV or V in relation to those three other pitches, i.e.
to any other note in the quartal tonics diminished seventh chord, or to either IV or
V in relation to those other three pitches. For example a quartal key change from C
can move to E$, F#/G$ or A 8, or to [i] A$ (IV in relation to E$), [ii] or B or C#/D$ (IV
or V in relation to F#/G$), or [iii] E (V in relation to A). Put simply, a 1-4-5 chord
can only change key to a 1-4-5 triad on a note at least three positions away in the
circle of fifths (C to E$, A $, D$, G$/F#, B, E, A: see p.36, ff.) but it cannot change
key to B$, F, G or D because these notes are already contained within its own tonal
vocabulary (1-2-4-5-$7, see ex. 25).
It is impossible to tell if developments in tonal polyphony during the twentieth century will survive as long as those of the classical tradition, or whether the tonal constraints of quartal and modal tonality will end up in the same sort of cul-de-sac as
tertial chromaticism. It is more likely that harmony might be superseded, not least
for technological reasons, by another compositional dynamic: that of sampling,
MIDI-looping and the juxtaposition of pre-existent musical and paramusical
sounds. Whatever the future holds, it is clear that harmony, and whatever, if anything, supersedes it is just as much an ideological as technical or theoretical matter.
Chords (2) 22
Chords (2)
Tertial chords
Tertial chords are based on common triads (see below) and can be regarded as the
fundamental harmonic building blocks in most forms of jazz, popular music and European classical music.
Tertial triads
A triad is any chord containing three notes (cf. German Dreiklang). The common
triad is constructed as two simultaneously sounding thirds, one superimposed on
the other. For example c-e (a major third) together with e-g (minor third) constitute
a C major triad, while d-f (minor third) with f-a (major third) makes for a D minor
triad (ex.34).
Ex. 34
There are four types of tertial triad: major, minor, diminished and augmented (see
table 3). The first three of these triad types can be generated from the seven keyspecific notes of any standard major or melodic minor scale (the ionian and aeolian
modes). As shown in ex.34, major triads derive from degrees 1, 4 and 5 of the major
and from degrees 3, 6 and 7 of the minor scale (e.g. C, F, G in C major / A minor),
while minor triads are found at degrees 2, 3 and 6 of the major and at degrees 4, 5
and 1 of the minor scale (Dm, Em, Am). The major scales degree 7 and the minor
scales degree 2 each produce a diminished triad. All four types of triad are set out,
with C as their root, in table 3.
Table 3 Tertial triad type definition (in C)
type of triad
type of third
type of fifth
notes in chord
lead symbol
roman num.
major
major
perfect
ceg
minor
minor
perfect
c e$ g
Cm
augmented
major
augmented
c e g# /a$
Caug / C+
I+
diminished
minor
diminished
c e$ g$/f #
Cdim / C o
io
Major triads comprise a minor third on top of a major third (e-g over c-e for C), minor
triads a major third over a minor third (e.g. e$-g over c-e$ for C minor), while augmented triads comprise two superimposed major thirds (e.g. e-g# over c-e) and diminished triads two minor thirds (e.g. e$-g$ over c-e$). All triadic chords contain
the root (1) and, with very few exceptions, both third (3) and fifth (5) of one of the
triad types defined in table 3Tertial chord symbols
Two types of shorthand are in common use so that musicians can quickly identify
tertial chords: (1) roman numerals (e.g. I, vi, ii7, V 7) and (2) lead sheet chord symbols
(e.g. C, Am, Dm7, G7, see p.27 ff.).
Chords (2) 23
Roman numerals
Ex. 35
Roman numerals are used to denote chords and their relation to the tonic of any
key. More specifically, single roman numerals denote tertial triads built on the
scale degree they designate the root within any particular key, upper case denoting major and lower case minor triads (see ex.34 whose root notes ar e c d e f g
a b). Bearing in mind that pitches extraneous to the tertial triad, most frequently
the seventh, are expressed as superscripted arabic numerals, it is clear that I vi
ii7 V7 designates the same chord progression in any major key, whereas C Am
Dm7 G7 and D Bm Em7 A7 designate the same sequence in two keys only (C
and D major respectively, see ex.35). Similarly, a repeated I $VII IV progression
(C B$ F in C) is found as D C G (in D) throughout Lynyrd Skynyrds Sweet Home
Alabama, as B A E (in B) repeatedly in The Rolling Stones Midnight Rambler, and
as G F C at the end of the Beatles Hey Jude (in G). Note that tertial triads built on
pitches foreign to the standard major or minor key of the piece must be preceded by
the requisite accidental, for example $VII for a major triad built on b$ in the
key of C major but just VII for the same chord in C minor. Similarly, notes within a tertial chord that are extraneous to the current key of the piece must also be
preceded by the requisite accidental, e.g. ii7$5 for the second-degree chord in C
major with d as root and containing also f, a$ and c.
Inversions
In most popular music the lowest note in a chord is usually also its root. However,
in choral settings and in music influenced by the European classical tradition, tertial chords are frequently inverted, i.e. the third, fifth or seventh is the lowest pitch.
The first three chords of example 36 show a C major common triad [1] in its root
position (with c in the bass), [2] in its first inversion (with its third, e, in the bass)
and [3] in its second inversion (with its fifth, g, in the bass). The final chord of example 36 is a C major triad with the flat seventh (b$) in the bass, i.e. a C7 chord in
its third inversion (with its seventh, b$, as lowest note).
Ex. 36
European textbook harmony symbols, derived from figured bass techniques of the
Baroque era (bottom line of symbols in ex. 36), are largely incompatible with the
way in which chords are understood by musicians in the popular field. Therefore,
when inversions need to be referred to they are most commonly denoted in the absolute terms of lead sheet chord symbols (top line in ex. 36, see also pp. 27-34),
sometimes in the relative terms of roman numerals, as shown in the line of symbols
between the two staves, i.e. as I/3 for the tonic triad with its third as bass note, I/
5 for the same chord with its fifth in the bass, etc.
Chords (2) 24
chord
short-hand
Occurrences
major triad
minor triad
augmented
triad
added sixth
chord
m6
minor triad
with added
(major)
sixth
(dominant)
seventh
chord
7+
seventh
chord with
augmented
fifth
7 $5
seventh
chord with
diminished fifth
style
bossa nova,
bebop, jazz
fusion
Chords (2) 25
chord
short-hand
Occurrences
style
maj7
m7
Youmans (1925): Tea For Two, first chord (on tea). Bacharach (1964): Walk On By, first chord. Beatles (1965):
Michelle, second chord; (1968): Rocky Racoon, 1st chord in
hook; (1969): You Never Give Me Your Money, first chord.
mmaj7
/
mmaj9
minor,
major seventh/ninth
detective and
spy music
m7$ 5
minor
seven flat
five or half
diminished
romantic pop
classics,
romantic ballads
dim
Beatles (1963): Till There Was You, 2nd chord (at hill);
(1967): Strawberry Fields, at nothing is real.
usual horror
chord in
silent movies.
(dominant)
ninth chord
swing, bebop
+9
plus nine
chord
rock c. 1970,
jazz fusion
maj9
ninth chord
with major
seventh
bossa nova,
1960s
m9
minor nine
chord
jazz standards
11
chord of
the eleventh
Righteous Brothers (1965): Youve Lost That Lovin Feeling, 1st chord. Beatles (1967): Shes Leaving Home, at
leaving the note, standing alone, quietly turning, stepping outside, meeting a man; (1970): Long And Winding
Road, at first occurrence of road. Zawinul (1977): Mercy
Mercy, Gospel chord after unison runup just before
minor key section. Abba (1977): Name of the Game, at
repeated I want to know.
gospel,
soul,
fusion,
modal jazz
m11
minor
eleven
chord
modal jazz
chord
short-hand
Occurrences
style
13
chord of
the thirteenth
pre-jazz,
swing,
bebop
add9
major triad
with added
ninth
pop ballads
madd9
minor triad
with added
ninth
wistful, sad
or bittersweet ballads
/3
major triad
in first
inversion
classical
/5
major triad
in second
inversion
Beach Boys (1966): God Only Knows, 1st chord. Foundations (1967): Baby, Now That Ive Found You, at love you
so. Procol Harum (1970): Wreck of the Hesperus, start of
major key section.
classical
m/5
minor triad
in second
inversion
7/7
seventh
chord in
third inversion
classical
maj7/7
major triad
with major
seventh in
bass
classical,
reflective
sus4
susp.
fourth
chord /
quartal
chord
pop 1960s70s
Lead sheet
Definition and history
A lead sheet is a piece of paper displaying the basic information necessary for performance and interpretation of a piece of popular music. Elements usually featured
on a lead sheet are: (i) melody, including its mensuration, in staff notation; (ii) lead
sheet chord shorthand, usually placed above the melody; (iii) lyrics (if applicable).
Such sheets are used extensively by musicians in the fields of jazz, cabaret, chanson
and most types of dance music, etc. Lead sheets consisting of lyrics and chord shorthand only are common among musicians in the rock, pop and Country music
spheres.
Lead sheets originated for reasons of copyright. In the 1920s, the only way to protect authorship of an unpublished song in the USA was to deposit a written copy
with the Copyright Division of the Library of Congress in Washington. For example, to protect a song recorded by early blues artists (e.g. Sippie Wallace, Bertha
Chippie Hill, Eva Taylor), musicians such as George Thomas, Richard M Jones
and Clarence Williams provided the Library of Congress with a transcription of the
melodys most salient features along with typewritten lyrics and basic elements of
the songs accompaniment (Leib, 1981:56). Such a document was called a lead
sheet, its function descriptive rather than prescriptive, not least because: (i) the
most profitable popular music distribution commodity of the time was not the recording but three-stave sheet music in arrangement for voice and piano; (ii) most
big band musicians read their parts from staff notation provided by the arranger.
However, guitarists and bass players of the thirties usually played from a mensurated sequence of chord names (see p.26 ff.), i.e. from basic elements of the songs
accompaniment as written on a lead sheet in its original sense. With the decline of
big bands and the rise of smaller combos in postwar years, with the increasing popularity of the electric guitar as main chordal instrument in such combos, and with
the shift from sheet music to records as primary popular music commodity, lead
sheets ousted staff notation as the most important scribal aide-memoire for musicians in the popular sphere. Other reasons for the subsequent ubiquity of lead
sheets are that: (i) their interpretation demands no more than rudimentary notational skills; (ii) since they contain no more than the bare essentials of a song, an
extensive repertoire can be easily maintained and transported to performance venues (a fake book).
Basic rationale
Lead sheet chord shorthand has a tertial basis. Since the shorthand evolved during
the heyday of tertial harmony in jazz-based popular music, its simplest symbols denote common triads built on the designated note (e.g. C for a C major triad). Moreover, characters placed after the triad name tend merely to qualify that tertial
triad, either in terms of notes added to it or by denoting chromatic alteration of any
degree within the chord except for the root and its third. Similarly, the numerals
seen most frequently after the triad symbol (7, 9, 11, 13) represent pitches stacked
in thirds above the two thirds already contained within the triad (1-3, 3-5) on which
a more complex chord is based (e.g. C9 containing b$ and d flat seventh and major
ninth in addition to c-e-g). The shorthand system also assumes that root and bass
note are the same. Developed in style-specific contexts, lead sheet chord shorthand
allows for the concise and efficient representation of chords in many types of popular music, for example jazz, pop, rock, country music, chanson, Schlager and most
styles of dance music. The system is, however, cumbersome in its codification of inversions and of non-tertial harmony.
Symbol components
Lead sheet chord symbols are built from the following components placed in the following order: (i) note name of the chords root, present in every symbol; (ii) triad
type; (iii) type of seventh; (iv) thirteenths, elevenths and ninths, with or without alteration; (v) altered fifth; (vi) added or omitted notes and suspensions; (vii) inversions. Since components (ii) through (vii) are only included when necessary, chord
symbols range from very simple (e.g. C, Cm, C7) to quite complex (e.g. F#m6add9, B$13+9, E omit G# ). Table 5 (p.28) summarises the order of presentation for symbols
most commonly used in connection with tertial chords containing neither added
notes, nor suspensions nor inversions.
Table 5 Basic order of components in lead sheet chord shorthand
1: root note name:
chord/interval type:
perfect
major
2: triad type
minor
augmented
diminished
m (or min/mi)
aug or +(5)
[v. unusual]
3: type of seventh
maj(7) or
4a: thirteenth
13
13
b: eleventh
c: ninth
11
dim(7) or o(7)
+11
9
5: fifth
+9
+ or aug
5 or $5
Legend
= note always omitted from the chord
in C)
Table 6,
contd
table 6
pronunciation
C+ or Caug
1c
Cmaj7, Cmaj9
2b, 3b
C7-5 or C7$5
2c
C7aug, C7+
2d
C9+ (C9aug5), C +9
3f, 3g
C13+11 (C11+13)
5g
7a, 8a, 8c
Cmmaj7, Cmmaj9
7b, 8b
Cm7-5 or Cm7$ 5
or C
7c
Cdim or Cdim7
7d
C6, Cm6
9a, 9b
Csus(4), C sus9
10a, 10c
Cadd9, Cmadd9
10c, 10d
C7/3, C7/e
11g
Type of seventh
Since the minor (flat) seventh (e.g. b$ in relation to c) is more common than the keyspecific major seventh (e.g. b8 in relation to c) in the jazz-related styles for which
lead sheet symbols were originally developed, and since the qualifier minor is applied exclusively to the third in tertial triads, a major triad with an added minor
seventh requires no other qualification than the numeral 7 (table 6: 2a): flat seven
is, so to speak, default seventh in the same way as default triads feature major
thirds. On the other hand, tertial chords containing a key-specific major seventh
need to be flagged by means of maj or (table 6: 2b). Since maj and are reserved
as qualifiers of the seventh and no other degree, the 7 may be omitted in conjunction with these symbols (e.g. Cmaj or C = Cmaj7). However, the 7 is always present
to denote the any seventh chord whose 7 has the default value (flat/minor, see table
6: examples 2a, 2c, 2d, 7a, 7c; see also p.31).
Seventh chords containing an augmented fifth indicate such alteration by 7+ or
7aug (table 6: 2d). Diminished fifths in seventh chords containing a major third appear as 7-5 or 7$5 (table 6: 2c, 7c). Seventh chords containing minor third, diminished fifth and flat seventh are written as m7-5 or m7$5, sometimes as (half
diminished). The dim chord constitutes a special case, containing both diminished
seventh and fifth, and is most frequently indicated by dim placed straight after the
root note name, sometimes by dim7, occasionally by o or o7 (table 6: 7d).
Altered fifths
Although simple augmented and diminished triads are encoded + or aug and dim
respectively, the symbol for altered fifths (+ and 5 or $5) in chords of the seventh,
ninth, eleventh and thirteenth is always placed last after all other relevant information (e.g. C7$5 or Cm7-5, Cm7$5 or Cm7-5, C7+ or C7aug; see table 6, chords 2c,
2d, 3e, 3h, 7c).
Additional symbols
Omitted notes
The more notes a chord theoretically contains, the more difficult it becomes to space
those notes on the keyboard or guitar in a satisfactory manner. In some cases, the
principle of stacking thirds even leads to problems of unacceptable dissonance, usually involving an internal minor ninth, which cannot be resolved by the most ingenious techniques of chord spacing. For example, the major third is always absent
from the 11 chord (table 6: 4a), and the unaltered eleventh is always left out of thirteenth chords based on the major triad (table 6: 5a-5f). Similarly, the perfect fifth
is often omitted from thirteenth chords as well as from certain ninth chords (table
6: 5a-5h, 3a-3e, 3g). These omissions constitute standard practice and need not be
indicated. However, one chord which does require indication of note omission is the
bare fifth, often used as the power chord of heavy metal and usually written (in E)
E no 3 or E omit G# (see p.33).
Added ninths and sixths
Added chords are those consisting of a simple triad to which another single note has
been added without inclusion of intervening odd-number degrees. For example,
add9 and madd9 chords are triads to which the ninth has been added without including an intermediate seventh (table 6: 10c-d). Similarly, the two sixth chords
shown in table 6 (9a, 9b) are qualifiable as added because both consist of a triad to
which a major sixth has been added without intervening sevenths, ninths or elevenths making them into chords of the thirteenth. It should be noted that the m in
m6 refers to the minor third, not to the sixth which is always major (table 6: 9b).
Unlike added ninths, added sixth chords are not indicated with the prefix add before the 6.
Suspended fourths and ninths
Suspensions are chords that can be resolved into a subsequent tertial consonance.
The most common suspensions in popular music, sus4 and sus9, both resolve to
common major or minor triads, the fourth of sus4 to a third, the ninth of sus9 to the
octave (e.g. the f in Csus4 to the e of C or the e$ of Cm, the d in Csus9 to the c of C
or Cm, see table 6: 10a-d). The absence of any numeral after sus assumes that the
suspension is held on a fourth. Although sus9 and add9 may be identical as individual chords, sus9 should typically resolve in the manner just described, while add9
need not.
Inversions
Since inversions in popular music mainly occur in passing-note patterns or
anacruses created by the bass player without reference to notation, no standard
lead sheet codification exists for such practices. This lacuna in the system obstructs
efficient indication of chord sequences for music in the classical vein. One way of
indicating inversions is to write the relevant bass note by interval number or note
name after the rest of the chords symbols and a forward slash, for example C7/3 or
C7/e for a C seven chord with its third, e, in the bass (see also table 6: 11a:-g). Inversions audible in pop recordings are often absent from published lead sheets and
tend only be indicated if they occur on an important downbeat or its syncopated anticipation.
Anomalies
Flat, sharp, plus and minus
Sharp and flat signs (# $) are mainly reserved as accidentals qualifying the root note name. Thus, the $ in
(a)
(b)
E$9 indicates that the E itself, not the ninth above it,
is flat. In this way it is possible, as shown in example
37, to distinguish between an E flat nine chord (E$9) and an E minus nine chord
(E-9, i.e. E7 with a flat ninth). In any chord, all altered degrees except 3 and 7 (see
p.31 ff.) are indicated by + (=#) or (=$). The only exception to this rule is that a
flat sign is often used as an alternative for minus before the final 5 of a chord containing a diminished triad (e.g. C7$5 instead of C7-5, see table 6: 2c, 3e, 3h, 7c). It
should be noted that conflicting conventions concerning the use of these symbols
are in operation. For example, some versions of the Real Book (the most wellknown Fake Book) use minus signs instead of m or min to denote minor triads, flat
and sharp signs instead of + and to signal chromatic alteration.
Ex. 37
Enharmonic spelling
Lead sheet chord shorthand tends to disregard enharmonic orthography. For example, although the $III cadence in The Girl from Ipanema (Jobim, 1963) might appear as A$9$5 Gmaj7 on a lead sheet in G, the same $II I cadence would in E$
almost certainly be spelt E9$5 E$maj7 rather than F$9$5 E$maj7. Similarly,
distinction is rarely made between chords containing a falling minor tenth and
those including a rising augmented ninth: the implicit assumption is that since
both -10 and +9 refer to the same equal-tone pitch, the difference between them is
immaterial. Hence, +9 is much more commonly used than -10, even though the latter may more often be enharmonically correct.
Non-tertial chords
Since non-tertial chords do not derive from superimposed thirds, they are not easily
expressible in lead sheet shorthand. Apart from power fifths, already mentioned,
there are considerable problems in encoding harmonies used in modal and bitonal
jazz as well as in some types of folk music and avant-garde rock. For example,
standard consonances in quartal harmony are frequently indicated by sus(4) (e.g.
C7sus, see table 6: 10b and 14d) even though harmonic suspension is neither intended nor perceived. Similarly, many musicians often conceptualise chords of the eleventh and thirteenth bitonally rather than in terms of stacked thirds, for example
C13+11 as a D major triad on top of C7, or C11 as Gm7 with c in the bass. No satisfactory consensus exists as to how such sonorities might be more adequately encoded. One possible solution to part of the problem may be to refer to some of these
chords in the way suggested in table 6, examples 13a-14d (see Quartal harmony,
p.17 ff.).
Turnaround
A turnaround is, strictly speaking, a short chord progression played at the end of
one section in a song or instrumental number and whose purpose is to facilitate recapitulation of the complete harmonic sequence of that section. Turnaround has
also come to mean any short sequence of chords, usually three or four, recurring
consecutively inside the same section of a single piece of music.
Example 38 (p.34) shows a typical turnaround (in its original sense) for a slow
twelve-bar blues in F whose changes run, for example
||: F | B$ | F | F7 | B $ | B$ | F | F | C | B $ | F | F :||.
To avoid harmonic stasis and to lead back into the initial F chord of bar 1, the final
F chord of bars 11 and 12 can be replaced with a sequence such as the progression
shown in example 38 (F F7/a B$ Bdim | F/c E$9 C7). This turnaround first increases the rate of harmonic change in motion towards the final C chord (bar 12)
which, in its turn, leads back to the F of bar 1, creating in the process a highlighted
VI cadence and an effect of continuity over the join between the two periods.
Ex. 38
Performance of jazz standards in AABA form feature turnarounds before each recurrence of the A section. Table 8 shows the basic chord changes for the ten-bar A
section of the chorus of the World-War-II hit A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley
Square (Sherwin).
Table 8 Basic changes for A section of A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square (slow
4/4)
1
E$
2
Cm7
6
E$
Gm7
3
E $9
7
A$ m7
E $
A $
4
G7
Cm7
5
D$ 9
10
E$ 6
E $6
Cm7
Fm7
B $7
G$ 13
Fm9
E9$5
F9
E $6
A $
E $6
Cm7
B$-9
E$
A harmonic rhythm of two chords to the bar is established in the first eight bars of
this song. However, harmonic progression stops on E$ in bars 9-10 and across the
join to the reprise from bar 1. To avoid such harmonic stasis, the last two bars can
be provided with a simple turnaround consisting of a standard IviiiV vamp
figure, for example || E$6 Cm7 | Fm7 B$7 || or a tritone substitution of those
changes (E$6 G$13 | Fm9 E9$5).
Since the purpose of a turnaround is, in the sense just described, to maintain harmonic rhythm and direction while at the same time effectuating a return to the first
chord in a period, it is by its very nature circular. In fact, one of the most common
turnarounds in popular song is the Ivi/IViiV progression (vamp) which was
often used as a consecutively repeated two or four bar accompanying figure to provide a sense of movement before the entry of a solo singer or instrumentalist between verses or periods, or at the start of a song (vamp until ready). Moreover, the
consecutively repeated IviiiV vamp and its variant IviIVV constitute
either all or most of the chord changes found in much English-language popular
song (see Table 9, p.35 ff., row 2). With vamps providing the majority of changes for
large parts of many pop songs, it is hardly surprising that turnaround came also
to denote, especially in pop and rock circles, any short, consecutively repeated sequence of chords.
In this transferred sense of the term, turnarounds usually consist of three or four
chords covering a period of two or four bars. A sequence of only two chords constitutes a chord shuttle or pendulum, not a turnaround. Conversely, a harmonic progression occupying a complete period (section) of eight or more bars cannot be a
turnaround in itself because a turnaround sequence must, in order to qualify as
such, occur consecutively at least twice within one period or section. Turnarounds
are extremely common in pop and rock music, often contributing importantly to the
particular character and style specificity of individual songs and instrumental
numbers. For example, most of the vamp turnaround songs mentioned in row 2 of
table 9 were recorded in the USA around 1960. Similarly, most of the songs referenced in row 3 of table 9 are in the rock vein and sport lyrics circumscribing a relatively uniform field of associations which might be characterised by such concepts
as modernity, uncertainty, sadness, stasis, etc. (Bjrnberg, 1984: 382).
Table 9 Some common pop turnarounds
Suggested
Name
Progression
la Bamba
IIVV
vamp
Ivii
ii/IVV
aeolian
shuttle
(I/i) $VI
$VII (I/i)
mixolydian
turnaround
I$ VII
IV(V)
Circle of fifths
The circle of fifths has been a central concept of tonality in Western music theory
since the advent of equal tone tuning (c.1700). Its main functions are (i) to visualise
the system of keys and key signatures used in much music of the Western world;
(ii) to facilitate understanding of harmonic progressions found frequently in such
music.
Since ancient times (China, Greece, etc.) it has been known that an interval of
twelve fifths is, with a minimal margin of error (the Pythagorean comma or 0.24%
of one semitone per octave), equal to an interval of eight octaves, i.e. that the frequencies of pitches one fifth apart are separated by a factor of 12:8 or 3:2 (1.5)
when ascending and of 2:3 (0.67) when descending. The concept also assumes that
the interval of a fourth (4:3 or 1.33 up and 3:4 or 0.75 down) is complementary to
that of the fifth within an octave, so that ascending a fourth and then descending
an octave (e.g. from c3 to f 3 to f 2 ) will land on the same pitch as just descending a
fifth (e.g. c3 to f 2 ) and, conversely, that ascending a fifth and then descending an
octave (e.g. c3 to g3 to g 2 ) will end up on the same pitch as just descending a fourth
(e.g. c3 to g 2 ). Hence, a series of alternately falling fifths and rising fourths, running anticlockwise round the complete circle of fifths (e.g. c3 f 2 b$3 e$2 a$2
d$2 g$2/f #2 b2 e2 a2 d2 g1 c2, see table 10) visits every note in the
twelve-tone chromatic scale within a relatively restricted range. The same principle
applies to a series of alternately rising fifths and falling fourths running clockwise
(e.g. c2 g2 d2 a3 e2 b2 f # 2/g$2 d$3 a$3 e$3 b$3 f3 c3 ).
The fact that the circle of fifths also constitutes a circle of fourths but is never referred to as such probably stems from the notions development in the European
classical tradition where chords constructed on the fifth degree of any scale (V) are
understood and referred to as dominant, those on the fourth degree (IV) as subdominant.
The circle of fifths is a tonal concept applied to harmony rather than to melody, not
least because progressions based on fourths and fifths are much more common in
the former than in the latter. It is of particular use in the theoretical and practical
study of popular music in most jazz idioms as well as in other styles influenced by
European traditions of tertial harmony.
Keys and their signatures are arranged as the twelve figures of an analogue clock
with C major and its relative A minor (no sharps and no flats) on the hour, and F#/
G$ major with their relative D#/E$ minor (six sharps or six flats) at half past. Moving clockwise, the number of sharps in each key signature increases (one for G major at five past, two for D major at ten past and so on) or the number of flats
decreases (five for D$ major at twenty-five to, four for A $ major at twenty to, etc.).
Since movement clockwise round the circle is by ascending fifths and since an increase in sharps or a decrease in flats implies upward movement, this tonal direction sharpwards towards the dominant (from I to V, e.g. C to G) can be referred to
as rising, while anticlockwise tonal movement flatwards towards the subdominant
(from V to I or from I to IV, e.g. from G to C or from C to F) can be referred to as
falling.
Harmonic progressions based on the circle of fifths are extremely common in popular music. Those running anticlockwise (flatwards, falling, see table 10) are particularly common in styles using the tertial harmonic practices of jazz or classical
music. Two basic types of such progression exist: (i) the real or modulatory circle of
fifths; (ii) the virtual or key-specific circle of fifths. Both these types of anticlockwise
progression involve the same two-stage V I cadence (e.g. G7C) because all unaltered notes in the dominant seventh chord (V7, e.g. g b d f in G7) are contained in
the major scale of the tonic (I, e.g. C major, containing c d e f g a b). However, as
soon as an anticlockwise circle-of-fifths progression contains more than two stages
it will become either real/modulatory, for example VI7 II7 V 7 I (A7 D7
G7 C in C, see ex.39, p. 37), or virtual/key-specific, e.g. vi7 ii7 V7 I (Am7
Dm7 G7 C in C). The former constitutes a real circle of fifths because A7 (VI
the chord on the sixth degree) is the real dominant seventh of D (II, on the second
degree), D7 (II) the real dominant seventh of G (V); it can also be termed modulatory
because A7 and D7 both contain notes foreign to the tonic key of C major (c# and f#
respectively). The virtual circle-of-fifths progression is key-specific because all notes
in all chords belong to the same tonic key (e.g. C major, see example 39) and can be
termed virtual because neither Am7 (on the sixth degree) nor Dm7 (second degree)
are real dominant sevenths of subsequent chords in the progression.
Ex. 39
Some predilection for real circles of fifths in US popular song from the nineteen tens
and twenties was superseded by preference for more virtual variants in standards
and evergreens of the thirties and forties (see table 11). The virtual or key-specific
circle-of-fifths is moreover a distinctive trait of the Baroque style (Corelli, Vivaldi,
J.S. Bach, etc.) and is also quite common in European popular song showing classical influences. Many well-known popular songs use a mixture of real and virtual
circle-of-fifths progressions. Anticlockwise circle-of-fifth progressions are, as shown
in example 39 and table 11, frequently constructed as a chain of seventh chords
(sometimes also ninths, elevenths or thirteenths).
Table 11 Anticlockwise circle-of-fifth progression types in English-language
songs
Song
typei
Chord progression
(B 7) E 7 | E7 | A7 |A7 | D7 | D7 | G (III)-VI-II-V-I in G
Charleston
[B $] | D7 | G7 | G7 | C7 | F7 | B$ G7 | C7 F7
III-VI-II-V-I in B $
F | A7 | D7 | D7 | G7 | C7 | F D7 | G7 C 7 III-VI-II-V-I in F
Blue Moon
Jeepers Creepers
K/M
Moonlight Serenade
K/M
K/M
Autumn Leaves
Gm7 C7 | F7 B7 | E7-5 A7 | Dm
iv-VII-III-VI-ii-V-i in D minor.
E7 Am D7 G7 C 7 F# m7-5 B7 Em
I-iv-VII-III-VI-ii-V-I in E minor.
Bluesette
[B $] | Am7 D7 | Gm7 C7 | F7 B$ 7 | E$
vii-iii-vi-ii-V-I-IV in B $ major
Yesterday
Example 40 (p.39) illustrates one common way of playing such chains as key-specific circles in (i) C major, (ii) D $ major, (iii) G # minor. (This example assumes the
presence of each chords root in the bass part.) To effectuate any complete key-specific circle-of-fifths one step in the bass line will be a diminshed fifth (between vii
and IV in the major key, between ii and V in the minor, e.g. from F7 to Bm7$5 in C
major or A minor), each of the remaining seven steps either falling by a perfect fifth
or rising by a perfect fourth.
Playing anticlockwise circle-of-fifths progressions demands a minimum of physical
effort because: (i) stringed bass instruments are tuned in fourths, facilitating leaps
of the fourth, fifth and octave (see above); (ii) fifths, fourths and octaves are easy to
pitch on brass instruments playing a bass line; (iii) the constituent notes of any two
contiguous seventh chords in a circle-of-fifths progression are, with the exception of
the root, either immediately adjacent or the same, this rendering them amenable
to hand and finger positioning for keyboard players and guitarists.
Clockwise (rising) circle-of-fifths progressions may be less common than their anticlockwise counterparts but do occur in pop/rock styles using certain types of modal
harmony. For example, the mixolydian turnaround $VII IV I runs clockwise (e.g.
B$ F C), as do all progressions listed in table 12.
Ex. 40
Seventh chords in key-specific (virtual) sequence anti-clockwise round the circle of fifths: (i) C
major; (ii) D$ major; (iii) G# minor. .
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
Table 12
Progression
D A E B $III $VII IV I in B
Ex. 41
Rolling Stones: Brown Sugar (1971). Clockwise circle-of-fifths progression through plagal
ornamentation of aeolian cadence.
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