Acordes en Ingles - Chord
Acordes en Ingles - Chord
Acordes en Ingles - Chord
This article describes pitch simultaneity and harmony in music. For other meanings of the
word, see Chord.
A chord in music is any set of notes that is heard as if sounding simultaneously. These need
not actually be played together: arpeggios and broken chords may for many practical and
theoretical purposes be understood as chords. Chords and sequences of chords are frequently
used in modern western, west African[1] and Oceanian[2] music, whereas they are absent from
the music of many other parts of the world. [3]
The most frequently encountered chords in theory and music are triads, so called because they
consist of three distinct notes: further notes may be added to give seventh chords, extended
chords, or added tone chords. The most common chords are the major and minor triads and
then the augmented and diminished triads. The descriptions "major", "minor", "augmented" and
"diminished" are sometimes referred to collectively as chordal "quality".
Chords are also commonly classed by their root note so, for instance, the chord C Major may
be described as a three-note chord of major quality built upon the note C. However, since the
structural meaning of a chord depends exclusively upon the degree of the scale upon which it
is built,[4] chords are usually analysed by numbering them, using Roman numerals, upwards
from the key-note. A chord may also be classified by its inversion, the order in which its notes
are stacked from lowest to highest.
There are four common ways of notating or representing chords[5] in western music other than
conventional staff notation; Roman numerals,figured bass, much used in the Baroque
era, macro symbols, sometimes used in modern musicology, and various systems of symbols
and notations such as are typically found in the lead sheets, fake books and chord charts used
in jazz and popular music to lay out the harmonic groundplan of a piece so that the musician
may improvise, "jam", "vamp", "busk" or "head arrange" a part.
Contents
[hide]
• 2 Chord characteristics
o 2.3 Inversion
quartal chords
• 3 Triads
• 4 Seventh chords
• 5 Extended chords
• 6 Altered chords
• 8 Suspended chords
• 9 Notation
o 9.1 Roman numerals
• 10 Borrowed chords
• 11 Progression
• 12 See also
• 13 References
• 14 Further reading
• 15 External links
The English word "chord" derives from "cord", a Middle English shortening of "accord" in the
sense of "in tune with one another". For a sound configuration to be recognized as a chord it
must have a certain duration.
Since a chord may be understood as such even when all its notes are not simultaneously
audible there has been some academic discussion regarding the point at which a group of
notes can be called a chord. Jean-Jacques Nattiez (1990, p. 218) explains that "we can
encounter 'pure chords' in a musical work," such as in the "Promenade" of Modest
Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition but "often, we must go from a textual given to a
more abstract representation of the chords being used" - as in Claude Debussy's Première
Arabesque.
Upper stave: Claude Debussy's Première Arabesque. The chords on the lower stave are constructed from
the notes in the actual piece, shown on the upper stave.
Early Christian harmony featured the perfect intervals of a fourth, a fifth, and an octave. In the
15th and 16th centuries, the major and minor triads became increasingly common, and were
soon established as the default sonority for Western music. Such triads can be described as a
series of three notes; the root note, the "third", and the "fifth" of the chord. As an example,
the C major scale consists of the notes C D E F G A B C while the chord of C Major - the
major triad formed using the note C as the root - consists of C itself (the root note of the
scale), E (the third note of the scale) and G (the fifth note of the scale). This triad is major
because the interval from C to E, of four semitones, is a major third. Using the same scale a
chord may be constructed using the D as the root note; D(root), F (third), A (fifth). While there
were four semitones between the root and third of the chord on C, in the D chord there are only
3 semitones between the root and third (the outer notes are still a perfect fifth apart). Thus,
while the C triad is major, the D triad is minor. A triad can be constructed on any note of the C
major scale and all will be minor or major, with the exception of the triad on the leading-
tonewhich is diminished.
Taking any other major scale (Ionian mode), the first, fourth and fifth intervals, when used as
roots, form major triads. Similarly, as any major scale can also yield a relative minor, in any
natural minor scale (Aeolian mode) minor triads are found on the tonic, fourth and fifth degrees
of the scale. Each seven-note diatonic scale can provide three major and three minor chords,
both sets of three standing in the same I-IV-Vrelationship to one another. The seventh degree
of the major (degree two of the relative minor) will result in a diminished
chord. SeeMathematics of musical scales.
Four-note "seventh chords" were widely adopted from the 17th century. The harmony of many
contemporary popular Western genres continues to be founded in the use of triads and seventh
chords, though far from universally. Notable exceptions include chromatic, atonal or post-tonal
contemporary classical music (including the music of some film scores) and modern jazz
(especially circa 1960), in which chords often include at least five notes, with seven (and
occasionally more) being quite common.
Polychords are formed by two or more chords superimposed. Often these may be analysed as
extended chords but some examples lack thetertian sonority of triads (See: altered
chord, secundal chord, quartal and quintal harmony and Tristan chord). A nonchord tone is
a dissonantor unstable tone that lies outside the chord currently heard, though
often resolving to a chord tone. A succession of chords is called a chord progression.
[edit]Chord characteristics
Every chord has certain characteristics, which include:
Number of pitch classes (distinct notes without respect to octave) that constitute the
chord.
Scale degree of the root note
Chords, however, are so well-established in Western music that sonorities of two pitches, or
even single-note melodies, are commonly heard as "implying" chords,
a psychoacoustic phenomenon resulting from a lifetime of exposure to the conventional
harmonies of music so that the brain "completes" the chord.[6] Otto Karolyi[7] writes that "two or
more notes sounded simultaneously are known as a chord."
Two-note combinations, whether referred to as chords or intervals, are called dyads. Chords
constructed of three notes of some underlyingscale are described as triads. They may be
understood to be constructed from a stack of two third intervals. Chords of four notes are
known as tetrads, those containing five are called pentads and those using six are hexads.
Sometimes the terms "trichord", "tetrachord", "pentachord" and "hexachord" are used, though
these more usually refer to the pitch classes of any scale, not generally played simultaneously.
Chords that may contain more than three notes include suspended chords, pedal
point chords, dominant seventh chords and others termed extended chords, added tone
chords, clusters, and polychords.
[edit]Scale degree
Many analysts use lower-case Roman numerals to indicate minor triads and upper-case for
major ones, and "degree" and "plus" signs ( oand + ) to indicate diminished and augmented
triads respectively. Otherwise all the numerals may be upper-case and the qualities of the
chords inferred from the scale degree. Chords outside the scale can be indicated by placing a
flat/sharp sign before the chord — for example, the chord of E flat major in the key of C major is
represented by ♭III. The tonic of the scale may be indicated to the left (e.g. F♯:)or may be
understood from a key signature or other contextual clues. Indications of inversions or added
tones may be omitted if they are not relevant to the analysis. Roman numerals indicate the root
of the chord as a scale degree within a particular major key as follows:
When a chord is analysed as "borrowed" from another key it may be shown by the Roman
numeral corresponding with that key after a slash so, for example, V/V indicates the dominant
chord of the dominant key of the present home-key. The dominant key of C major is G major so
this secondary dominant will be the chord of the fifth degree of the G major scale, which
is D major. If used, this chord will cause amodulation.
[edit]Inversion
Root position, first inversion, and second inversion C major chords Play root position C major
chord (help·info), Play first inversion C major chord (help·info), or Play second inversion C major
chord (help·info). Chord roots (all the same) in red.
Root position, first inversion, and second inversion chords over C bass Play root position C major
chord (help·info), Play first inversion A minor chord (help·info), or Play second inversion F major
chord (help·info). Chord roots in red.
In the harmony of Western art music a chord is said to be in root position when the tonic note is
the lowest in the chord, and the other notes are above it. When the lowest note is not the tonic,
the chord is said to be inverted. Chords, having many constituent notes, can have many
different inverted positions as shown below for the C major chord:
Bass
Position Order of notes Notation
Note
Further, a four-note chord can be inverted to four different positions by the same method as
triadic inversion. Where guitar chords are concerned the term "inversion" is used slightly
differently; to refer to stock fingering "shapes".[8]
A chord such as C-D-E♭, though, is a series of seconds, containing a major second (C-D) and
a minor second (D-E♭). Any such chord that can be decomposed into a series of (major or
minor) seconds is called secundal.
Quartal chord: C-F-B chord[9] Play (help·info).
The chord C-F-B, consists of a perfect fourth C-F and an augmented fourth (tritone) F-B. Any
such chord that can be decomposed into a series of (perfect or augmented) fourths is called
quartal.
These terms can become ambiguous when dealing with non-diatonic scales such as
thepentatonic or chromatic scales. The use of accidentals can also complicate the terminology.
For example the chord B♯-E-A♭ appears to be a series of diminished fourths (B♯-E and E-A♭)
but isenharmonically equivalent to (and sonically indistinguishable from) the chord C-E-G♯,
which is a series of major thirds (C-E and E-G♯).
[edit]Triads
Triads, also called triadic chords, are tertian chords (see above) with three notes. The
four basic triads are described below.
minor
Minor triad perfect fifth C-E♭-G Cm, C-, Cmi, Cmin, play (help·info)
third
Augmented major augmented fifth C-E-G♯ C+, C+, Caug play (help·info)
triad third
[edit]Seventh chords
Seventh chords are tertian chords (see above), constructed by adding a fourth note
to a triad, at the interval of a third above the fifth of the chord. This creates the
interval of a seventh above the root of the chord, the next natural step in composing
tertian chords. The seventh chord on the fifth step of the scale (the dominant
seventh) is the only one available in the major scale: it contains all three notes of
the diminished triad of the seventh and is frequently used as a stronger substitute
for it.
There are various types of seventh chordsdepending on the quality of both the
chord and the seventh added. In chord notation the chord type is sometimes
superscripted and sometimes not (e.g. Dm7, Dm7, and Dm7 are all identical).
Component intervals
Thir Chord symbol Notes Audio
Fifth Seventh
d
Diminish C
diminishe diminishe o Play (help·i
ed minor C 7, Cdim7 E♭ G♭ B
d d nfo)
seventh
Half- C
diminishe Play (help·i
diminishe minor minor Cø7, Cm7♭5, C−7(♭5) E♭ G♭ B
d nfo)
d seventh ♭
Minor C E♭ G Play (help·i
minor perfect minor Cm7, Cmin7, C−7, C−7
seventh B♭ nfo)
Minor
Cm(M7), C−(j7), C−Δ7, C− C E♭ G Play (help·i
major minor perfect major
M7 B nfo)
seventh
Dominant CEG Play (help·i
major perfect minor C7, C7, Cdom7
seventh B♭ nfo)
Augment
augmente C+7, Caug7, C7+, C7+5, C E Play (help·i
ed major minor
d C7♯5 G♯ B♭ nfo)
seventh
Augment
augmente C+(M7), CM7+5, CE Play (help·i
ed major major major
d CM7♯5, C+j7, CΔ+7 G♯ B nfo)
seventh
[edit]Extended chords
Main article: Extended chord
Extended chords are triads with further tertian notes added beyond the
seventh; the ninth, eleventh, and thirteenth chords. After the thirteenth any
notes added in thirds will duplicate notes elsewhere in the chord: all seven
notes of the scale are present in the chord and further added notes will not
give new pitch classes. Such chords may be constructed only by using notes
that lie outside the diatonic seven-note scale (See #Altered chords below).
Chord
Components (chord and intervals) Audio
symbol
Dominant dominant major - - C9 Play (help·inf
seventh
ninth ninth o)
chord
dominant
Dominant seventh major perfect Play (help·inf
chord - C11
eleventh ninth eleventh o)
(the third is
usually omitted)
dominant perfect
Dominant major eleventh major Play (help·inf
seventh C13
thirteenth ninth (usually thirteenth o)
chord omitted)
Other extended chords follow similar rules, so that for example maj9, maj11,
and maj13 contain major seventh chords rather than dominant seventh
chords, while min9, min11, and min13 contain minor seventh chords.
[edit]Altered chords
Main article: Altered chord
Altered chord on C with flat 5th, 7th, and 9th. Play (help·info)
Although the third and seventh of the chord are always determined by the
symbols shown above, the fifth, ninth, eleventh and thirteenth may all be
chromatically altered by accidentals (the root cannot be so altered without
changing the name of the chord, while the third cannot be altered without
altering the chord's quality). These are noted alongside the element to be
altered. Accidentals are most often used in conjunction with dominant seventh
chords. "Altered" dominant seventh chords (C7alt) may have a flat ninth, a
sharp ninth, a diminished fifth or an augmented fifth (see Levine's Jazz
Theory). Some write this as C7+9, which assumes also the flat ninth,
diminished fifth and augmented fifth (see Aebersold's Scale Syllabus). The
augmented ninth is often referred to in blues and jazz as a blue note, being
enharmonically equivalent to the flat third or tenth. When superscripted
numerals are used the different numbers may be listed horizontally (as
shown) or else vertically.
Chord
Component notes Audio
symbol
Seventh augmented dominant
augmented fifth C7+5, C7♯5 Play (help·info)
fifth seventh
dominant
Seventh flat nine minor ninth C7-9, C7♭9 Play (help·info)
seventh
dominant augmented
Seventh sharp nine C7+9, C7♯9 Play (help·info)
seventh ninth
Seventh augmented dominant augmented
C7+11, C7♯11 Play (help·info)
eleventh seventh eleventh
Seventh flat dominant
minor thirteenth C7-13, C7♭13 Play (help·info)
thirteenth seventh
Half-diminished
minor seventh diminished fifth Cø, Cm7♭5 Play (help·info)
seventh
Suspended chord (sus2) and added tone chord (add9) both with D (ninth=second),
distinguished by the absence or presence of the third (E♭).[10]
An added tone chord is a triad chord with an added, non-tertian note, such as
the commonly added sixth as well as chords with an added second (ninth) or
fourth (eleventh) or a combination of the three. These chords do not include
"intervening" thirds as in an extended chord. Added chords can also have
variations. Thus madd9, m4 and m6 are minor triads with extended notes.
The major sixth chord (also called, sixth or added sixth with the chord
notation 6, e.g., "C6") is by far the most common type of sixth chord of the first
group. It comprises a major triad with the added major sixth above the root,
common in popular music[5]. For example, the chord C6 contains the notes C-
E-G-A. The minor sixth chord (min6 or m6, e.g., "Cm6") is a minor triad with
the same added note. For example, the chord Cmin6 contains the notes C-E♭-
G-A. In chord notation, the sixth of either chord is always assumed to be a
major sixth rather than aminor sixth, however a minor sixth interval may be
indicated in the notation as, for example, "Cm(m6)", or Cmm6.
The augmented sixth chord usually appears in chord notation as its
enharmonic equivalent, the seventh chord. This chord contains two notes
separated by the interval of an augmented sixth (or, by inversion, a diminished
third, though this inversion is rare). The augmented sixth is generally used as
a dissonant interval most commonly used in motion towards a dominant chord
in root position (with the root doubled to create the octave to which the
augmented sixth chord resolves) or to a tonic chord in second inversion (a
tonic triad with the fifth doubled for the same purpose). In this case, the tonic
note of the key is included in the chord, sometimes along with an optional
fourth note, to create one of the following (illustrated here in the key of C
major):
The augmented sixth family of chords exhibits certain peculiarities. Since they
are not based on triads, as are seventh chords and other sixth chords, they
are not generally regarded as having roots (nor, therefore, inversions),
although one re-voicing of the notes is common (with the namesake interval
inverted to create a diminished third).
The second group of sixth chords includes inverted major and minor chords,
which may be called sixth chords in that the six-three (6/3) andsix-four (6/4)
chords contain intervals of a sixth with the bass note, though this is not the
root. Nowadays this is mostly for academic study or analysis (see figured
bass) but the neapolitan sixth chord is an important example; a major triad
with a flat supertonic scale degree as its root that is called a "sixth" because it
is almost always found in first inversion. Though a technically accurate Roman
numeral analysis would be ♭II, it is generally labelled N6. In C major, the chord
is notated (from root position) D♭, F, A♭. Because it uses chromatically altered
tonesthis chord is often grouped with the borrowed chords (see below) but the
chord is not borrowed from the relative major or minor and it may appear in
both major and minor keys.
[edit]Suspended chords
Main article: Suspended chord
[edit]Notation
Chords can be represented in many and various different ways. The most
common notation systems are:[5]
[edit]Roman numerals
Main article: Roman numerals#Music theory
While scale degrees are typically represented with Arabic numerals, often
modified with a caret or circumflex, the triads that have these degrees as their
roots are often identified by Roman numerals (see also diatonic functions).
Since the 1970s, upper-case Roman numerals indicate major triads while
lower-case Roman numerals indicate minor triads, as the following chart
illustrates. Some writers, (e.g. Schoenberg) however, use upper case Roman
numerals for both major and minor triads. Lower-case Roman numerals with
a degree symbolindicate diminished triads. For example, in the major
mode the triad on the seventh scale degree, the leading tone triad is
diminished. Some writers use upper-case Roman numerals to indicate the
chord is diatonic in the major scale, and lower-case Roman numerals to
indicate that the chord is diatonic in the minor scale.
Roman
I ii iii IV V vi vii°
numeral
Scale
degree leading
tonic supertonic mediant subdominant dominant submediant
(major tone
mode)
Roman
numer i ii° (♭)III iv v (♭)VI (♭)VII vii°
al
Scale
degree supertoni median subdominan dominan submedian subtoni leading
tonic
(minor c t t t t c tone
mode)
Also:
Roman
I II III IV V VI VII
numeral
Scale
degree leading
tonic supertonic mediant subdominant dominant submediant
(major tone
mode)
Roman
numera i ii iii iv v vi vii
l
A part notated with figured bass consists of a bass-line notated with notes on
a musical staff plus added numbers and accidentals beneath the staff to
indicate at what intervals above the bass notes should be played, and
therefore which inversions of which chords are to be played. The numbers
indicate the number of scale steps above the given bass-line that a note
should be played. For example:
Here, the bass note is a C, and the numbers 4 and 6 indicate that notes a
fourth and a sixth above it should be played, that is an F and an A. In other
words, the second inversion of an F major chord is to be played.
[edit]Macro analysis
Main article: Macro analysis
Triad
+
Augmented triad Uppercase C+
o
Diminished triad Lowercase co
For instance, the name C augmented seventh, and the corresponding symbol
Caug7, or C+7, are both composed of parts 1, 2, and 3.
Chord quality
Chord qualities are related with the qualities of the component intervals which define the
chord (see below). As explained below, they typically appear immediately after the root (e.g.,
in CmM7 m is the chord quality, and M is the quality of the additional M7 interval). The main
chord qualities are:
Dominant.
Some of the symbols used for chord quality are similar to those used for interval quality. In
addition, however,
In this case, the quality (minor, in the example) of the additional interval is omitted. Less
often, the full name or symbol of the additional interval is provided. For instance, a
C augmented major seventh chord is a C augmented triad with an extra note defined by
a major seventh interval:
C+M7 = C+ + M7
augmented augmented major
chord triad interval
In both cases, the quality of the chord is the same as the quality of the basic triad it
contains. This is not true for all chord qualities, as the chord qualities "half-diminished", and
"dominant" refer not only to the quality of the basic triad, but also to the quality of the
additional intervals.
The amount of information provided in a chord name/symbol lean toward the minimum, to
increase efficiency. However, it is often necessary to deduce from a chord name or symbol
the component intervals which define the chord. The missing information is implied and must
be deduced according to some conventional rules:
1. For
triads, major or minor a
lways refer to the third
interval,
while augmented and d
iminished always refer
to the fifth. The same
is true for the
corresponding symbols
(e.g., Cm means Cm3,
and C+ means C+5).
Thus, the
terms third and fifth an
d the corresponding
symbols 3 and 5 are
typically omitted. This
rule can be
generalized to all kinds
of chords,[11] provided
the above mentioned
qualities appear
immediately after the
root note, or at the
beginning of the chord
name or symbol. For
instance, in the chord
symbols Cm and Cm7,
m refers to the interval
m3, and 3 is omitted.
When these qualities
do not appear
immediately after the
root note, or at the
beginning of the name
or symbol, they should
be considered interval
qualities, rather than
chord qualities. For
instance, in Cm/M7
(minor-major seventh
chord), m is the chord
quality and refers to
the m3 interval, while
M refers to the M7
interval. When
the number of an extra
interval is specified
immediately after
chord quality, the
quality of that interval
may coincide with
chord quality (e.g. CM7
= CM/M7). However,
this is not always true
(e.g. Cm6 = Cm/M6,
C+7 = C+/m7, CM11 =
CM/P11).[11] See
specific rules 5 and 6
for further details.
2. Without contrary
information, a major
third interval and
a perfect fifth interval
(major triad) are
implied. For instance, a
C chord is a C major
triad, and the name C
minor seventh (Cm7)
implies a minor 3rd by
rule 1, a perfect 5th by
this rule, and a minor
7th by definition (see
below). This rule has
one exception (see
next rule).
3. When the fifth
interval is diminished,
the third must be
minor.[12] This rule
overrides rule 2. For
instance, Cdim7
implies a diminished
5th by rule 1, a minor
3rd by this rule, and a
diminished 7th by
definition (see below).
4. Names and
symbols which contain
only a plain interval
number (e.g. “Seventh
chord”) or the chord
root and a number
(e.g. “C seventh”, or
C7) are interpreted as
follows:
If the number is 2, 4, 6, etc., the chord is a major added tone chord (e.g. C6 = CM6
= Cadd6) and contains, together with the implied major triad, an extra major 2nd, perfect
4th, or major 6th (see names and symbols for added tone chords).
If the number is 7, 9, 11, 13, etc., the chord is dominant (e.g. C7 = Cdom7) and
contains, together with the implied major triad, one or more of the following extra
intervals: minor 7th, major 9th, perfect 11th, and major 13th (see names and symbols
forseventh and extended chords).
5. For sixth
chord names or
symbols composed
only
of root, quality and nu
mber (such as "C
major sixth", or "CM6"):
6. For seventh
chord names or
symbols composed
only of root, quality and
number (such as "C
major seventh", or
"CM7"):
The table shows the application of these generic and specific rules to interpret some of the
main chord symbols. The same rules apply for the analysis of chord names. A limited
amount of information is explicitly provided in the chord symbol (boldface font in the column
labeled "Component intervals"), and can be interpreted with rule 1. The rest is implied (plain
font), and can be deduced by applying the other rules. The "Analysis of symbol parts" is
performed by applying rule 1.
Chord name
C C maj3 perf5
Major triad
Dominant seventh
C7 Cdom7 C 7 maj3 perf5 min7
chord
Diminished seventh
Co7 Cdim7 C dim 7 min3 dim5 dim7
chord
CmM7 Cminmaj7
Minor-major seventh
Cm/M7 Cmin/maj7 C min 7 min3 perf5 maj7
chord
Cm(M7) Cmin(maj7)
[edit]Borrowed chords
Borrowed chords from the parallel minor key are commonly found in the Baroque, Classical and Romantic eras.
A borrowed chord is one that is taken from a different key to that of the piece it is used in (called
"home key"). The most common occurrence of this is where a chord from the parallel major or
minor key is used. Particularly good examples can be found throughout the works of composers such
as Schubert.
For instance, for a composer working in the C major key, a major ♭III chord would be borrowed, as
this appears only in the C minor key.
Although borrowed chords could theoretically include chords taken from any key other than the home
key, this is not how the term is used when a chord is described in formal musical analysis.
[edit]Progression
IV-V-I progression in C Play (help·info)
Chord sequence
from Erik
Satie's Sarabande no. 3
Whenever different chords are played in sequence they can be described as a chord progression (or
harmonic progression). Chord progressions are frequently used in Western music.[3]
A chord progression "aims for a definite goal" of establishing (or contradicting) atonality founded on
a key, root or tonic chord.[4]
The study of harmony involves chords and chord progressions, and the principles of connection that
govern them.[13]
[edit]See also
Chord
bible
Elektra
chord
Chord
factor
Guitar
chord
Harmon
ized scale
Homop
hony
Mystic
chord
Open
chord
Petrush
ka chord
Prolong
ation
Psalms
chord
Spider
chord
Subsidi
ary chord
[edit]References
1. ^ http://theoryofmusic.wordpress.com/2008/01/16/an-explanation-for-the-emergence-of-jazz-
1956/
2. ^ Linkels, Ad, The Real Music of Paradise", In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with
McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America,
Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific, pp 218–229. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-
85828-636-0
3. ^ a b Mal
m, William
P.
(1996). Mus
ic Cultures
of the
Pacific, the
Near East,
and Asia.
p.15. ISBN
0-13-
182387-6.
Third
edition:
"Indeed this
harmonic
orientation
is one of the
major
differences
between
Western
and much
non-
Western
music."
4. ^ a b c Ar
nold
Schoenberg
, Structural
Functions of
Harmony,
Faber and
Faber,
1983, p.1-2.
5. ^ a b c d e
Benward &
Saker
(2003). Mus
ic: In Theory
and
Practice,
Vol. I, p. 77.
Seventh
Edition. ISB
N 978-0-07-
294262-0.
6. ^ Schell
enberg, E.
Glenn;
Bigand,
Emmanuel;
Poulin-
Charronnat,
Benedicte;
Garnier,
Cecilia;
Stevens,
Catherine
(Nov.).
"Children's
implicit
knowledge
of harmony
in Western
music". Dev
elopmental
Science 8 (8
): 551–
566. doi:10.
1111/j.1467-
7687.2005.0
0447.x.PMI
D 16246247
7. ^ Károlyi
,
Otto, Introd
ucing Music,
p. 63.
England:
Penguin
Books.
8. ^ Bert
Weedon, Pl
ay in a Day,
Faber Music
Ltd, ISBN
10:
0571529658
, passim -
among a
wide range
of other
guitar tutors
9. ^ Dufren
ne, Mikel
(1989). The
Phenomeno
logy of
Aesthetic
Experience,
p.253. ISBN
0810105918
10. ^
Hawkins,
Stan.
"Prince-
Harmonic
Analysis of
'Anna
Stesia'",
p.329 and
334n7, Pop
ular Music,
3 (Oct.,
1992), pp.
325-335.
11. ^
a b
General
rule 1
achieves
consistency
in the
interpretatio
n of symbols
such as
CM7, Cm6,
and C+7.
Some
musicians
legitimately
prefer to
think that, in
CM7, M
refers to the
seventh,
rather than
to the third.
This
alternative
approach is
legitimate,
as both the
third and
seventh are
major, yet it
is
inconsistent,
as a similar
interpretatio
n is
impossible
C+7 (in
Cm6, m
cannot
possibly
refer to the
sixth, which
is major by
definition,
and in C+7,
+ cannot
refer to the
seventh,
which is
minor). Both
approaches
reveal only
one of the
intervals
(M3 or M7),
and require
other rules
to complete
the task.
Whatever is
the
decoding
method, the
result is the
same (e.g.,
CM7 is
always
conventional
ly decoded
as C-E-G-B,
implying M3,
P5, M7).
The
advantage
of rule 1 is
that it has
no
exceptions,
which
makes it the
simplest
possible
approach to
decode
chord
quality.
According to
the two
approaches,
some may
format CM7
as
CM7 (genera
l rule 1: M
refers to
M3), and
others as
CM7 (alternat
ive
approach: M
refers to
M7).
Fortunately,
even
CM7 become
s compatible
with rule 1 if
it is
considered
an
abbreviation
of CMM7, in
which the
first M is
omitted. The
omitted M is
the quality
of the third,
and is
deduced
according to
rule 2 (see
above),
consistently
with the
interpretatio
n of the
plain symbol
C, which by
the same
rule stands
for CM.
12. ^
All triads
are tertian c
hords
(chords
defined by
sequences
of thirds),
and a major
third would
produce in
this case a
non-tertian
chord.
Namely, the
diminished
fifth spans 6
semitones
from root,
thus it may
be
decompose
d into a
sequence of
two minor
thirds, each
spanning 3
semitones
(m3 + m3),
compatible
with the
definition of
tertian
chord. If a
major third
were used
(4
semitones),
this would
entail a
sequence
containing a
major
second (M3
+ M2 = 4 +
2 semitones
=6
semitones),
which would
definition of
tertian
chord.
13. ^
Dahlhaus,
Car.
"Harmony",
Grove
Music
Online, ed.
L. Macy
(accessed
24 February
2007), grove
music.com (
subscription
access).
Grout,
Donald Jay
(1960). A
History Of
Western Music.
Norton
Publishing.
Dahlhau
s, Carl.
Gjerdingen,
Robert O. trans.
(1990). Studies
in the Origin of
Harmonic
Tonality, p. 67.
Princeton
University
Press. ISBN 0-
691-09135-8.
Goldma
n (1965). Cited
in Nattiez
(1990).
Jones,
George T.
(1994).
HarperCollins C
ollege Outline
Music
Theory. ISBN 0-
06-467168-2.
Nattiez,
Jean-Jacques
(1990). Music
and Discourse:
Toward a
Semiology of
Music (Musicolo
gie générale et
sémiologue,
1987).
Translated by
Carolyn Abbate
(1990). ISBN 0-
691-02714-5.
Norman
Monath, Norman
(1984). How To
Play Popular
Piano In 10
Easy Lessons.
Fireside
Books. ISBN 0-
671-53067-4.
Stanley
Sadie and John
Tyrrell, eds.
(2001). The
New Grove
Dictionary of
Music and
Musicians. ISBN
1-56159-239-0.
Surmani
, Andrew
(2004). Essentia
ls of Music
Theory: A
Complete Self-
Study Course
for All
Musicians. ISBN
0-7390-3635-1.
[edit]Further
reading
Schejtm
an, Rod
(2008). Music
Fundamentals.
The Piano
Encyclopedia. IS
BN 978-987-
25216-2-2.
Persich
etti,
Vincent (1961).
Twentieth-
century
Harmony:
Creative
Aspects and
Practice. New
York: W. W.
Norton. ISBN 0-
393-09539-
8.OCLC 398434
.
Benwar
d, Bruce &
Saker, Marilyn
(2002). Music in
Theory and
Practice,
Volumes I &
II (7th ed.). New
York: McGraw
Hill. ISBN 0-07-
294262-2.
Piston,
Walter
(1987). Harmon
y (5th ed.). New
York: W.W.
Norton &
Company. ISBN
0-393-95480-3.
[edit]External
links
Wikiquote has a collection of
quotations related to: Chord
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Piano
Chord
Dictionary Onlin
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chord (and
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Music
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Morpho
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scales Chords
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