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Mode (music)

In music theory, the term mode or modus is used in a number of distinct senses, depending on context.

Diatonic major scale (Ionian mode, I) on C, a "white note" scale
The modern (diatonic) modes on C

Its most common use may be described as a type of musical scale coupled with a set of characteristic melodic and harmonic behaviors. It is applied to major and minor keys as well as the seven diatonic modes (including the former as Ionian and Aeolian) which are defined by their starting note or tonic. (Olivier Messiaen's modes of limited transposition are strictly a scale type.) Related to the diatonic modes are the eight church modes or Gregorian modes, in which authentic and plagal forms of scales are distinguished by ambitus and tenor or reciting tone. Although both diatonic and gregorian modes borrow terminology from ancient Greece, the Greek tonoi do not otherwise resemble their mediaeval/modern counterparts.

In the Middle Ages the term modus was used to describe both intervals and rhythm. Modal rhythm was an essential feature of the modal notation system of the Notre-Dame school at the turn of the 12th century. In the mensural notation that emerged later, modus specifies the subdivision of the longa.

Outside of Western classical music, "mode" is sometimes used to embrace similar concepts such as Octoechos, maqam, pathet etc. (see #Analogues in different musical traditions below).

Mode as a general concept

Regarding the concept of mode as applied to pitch relationships generally, Harold S. Powers proposed that "mode" has "a twofold sense", denoting either a "particularized scale" or a "generalized tune", or both. "If one thinks of scale and tune as representing the poles of a continuum of melodic predetermination, then most of the area between can be designated one way or the other as being in the domain of mode".[1]

In 1792, Sir Willam Jones applied the term "mode" to the music of "the Persians and the Hindoos".[2] As early as 1271, Amerus applied the concept to cantilenis organicis, i.e. most probably polyphony.[3] It is still heavily used with regard to Western polyphony before the onset of the common practice period, as for example "modale Mehrstimmigkeit" by Carl Dahlhaus[4] or "Tonarten" of the 16th and 17th centuries found by Bernhard Meier.[5][6]

The word encompasses several additional meanings. Authors from the 9th century until the early 18th century (e.g., Guido of Arezzo) sometimes employed the Latin modus for interval,[7] or for qualities of individual notes.[8] In the theory of late-medieval mensural polyphony (e.g., Franco of Cologne), modus is a rhythmic relationship between long and short values or a pattern made from them;[9] in mensural music most often theorists applied it to division of longa into 3 or 2 breves.[10]

Modes and scales

A musical scale is a series of pitches in a distinct order.

The concept of "mode" in Western music theory has three successive stages: in Gregorian chant theory, in Renaissance polyphonic theory, and in tonal harmonic music of the common practice period. In all three contexts, "mode" incorporates the idea of the diatonic scale, but differs from it by also involving an element of melody type. This concerns particular repertories of short musical figures or groups of tones within a certain scale so that, depending on the point of view, mode takes on the meaning of either a "particularized scale" or a "generalized tune". Modern musicological practice has extended the concept of mode to earlier musical systems, such as those of Ancient Greek music, Jewish cantillation, and the Byzantine system of octoechoi, as well as to other non-Western types of music.[1][11]

By the early 19th century, the word "mode" had taken on an additional meaning, in reference to the difference between major and minor keys, specified as "major mode" and "minor mode". At the same time, composers were beginning to conceive "modality" as something outside of the major/minor system that could be used to evoke religious feelings or to suggest folk-music idioms.[12]

Greek modes

Early Greek treatises describe three interrelated concepts that are related to the later, medieval idea of "mode": (1) scales (or "systems"), (2) tonos – pl. tonoi – (the more usual term used in medieval theory for what later came to be called "mode"), and (3) harmonia (harmony) – pl. harmoniai – this third term subsuming the corresponding tonoi but not necessarily the converse.[13]

Greek scales

 
 
 
The three genera of the Dorian octave species on E

The Greek scales in the Aristoxenian tradition were:[14][15]

  • Mixolydian: hypate hypaton–paramese (b–b′)
  • Lydian: parhypate hypaton–trite diezeugmenon (c′–c″)
  • Phrygian: lichanos hypaton–paranete diezeugmenon (d′–d″)
  • Dorian: hypate meson–nete diezeugmenon (e′–e″)
  • Hypolydian: parhypate meson–trite hyperbolaion (f′–f″)
  • Hypophrygian: lichanos meson–paranete hyperbolaion (g′–g″)
  • Common, Locrian, or Hypodorian: mese–nete hyperbolaion or proslambnomenos–mese (a′–a″ or a–a′)

These names are derived from an ancient Greek subgroup (Dorians), a small region in central Greece (Locris), and certain neighboring peoples (non-Greek but related to them) from Asia Minor (Lydia, Phrygia). The association of these ethnic names with the octave species appears to precede Aristoxenus, who criticized their application to the tonoi by the earlier theorists whom he called the "Harmonicists." According to Bélis (2001), he felt that their diagrams, which exhibit 28 consecutive dieses, were "... devoid of any musical reality since more than two quarter-tones are never heard in succession."[16]

Depending on the positioning (spacing) of the interposed tones in the tetrachords, three genera of the seven octave species can be recognized. The diatonic genus (composed of tones and semitones), the chromatic genus (semitones and a minor third), and the enharmonic genus (with a major third and two quarter tones or dieses).[17] The framing interval of the perfect fourth is fixed, while the two internal pitches are movable. Within the basic forms, the intervals of the chromatic and diatonic genera were varied further by three and two "shades" (chroai), respectively.[18][19]

In contrast to the medieval modal system, these scales and their related tonoi and harmoniai appear to have had no hierarchical relationships amongst the notes that could establish contrasting points of tension and rest, although the mese ("middle note") may have had some sort of gravitational function.[20]

Tonoi

The term tonos (pl. tonoi) was used in four senses: "as note, interval, region of the voice, and pitch. We use it of the region of the voice whenever we speak of Dorian, or Phrygian, or Lydian, or any of the other tones".[21] Cleonides attributes thirteen tonoi to Aristoxenus, which represent a progressive transposition of the entire system (or scale) by semitone over the range of an octave between the Hypodorian and the Hypermixolydian.[13] According to Cleonides, Aristoxenus's transpositional tonoi were named analogously to the octave species, supplemented with new terms to raise the number of degrees from seven to thirteen.[21] However, according to the interpretation of at least three modern authorities, in these transpositional tonoi the Hypodorian is the lowest, and the Mixolydian next-to-highest – the reverse of the case of the octave species,[13][22][23] with nominal base pitches as follows (descending order):

  • F: Hypermixolydian (or Hyperphrygian)
  • E: High Mixolydian or Hyperiastian
  • E: Low Mixolydian or Hyperdorian
  • D: Lydian
  • C: Low Lydian or Aeolian
  • C: Phrygian
  • B: Low Phrygian or Iastian
  • B: Dorian
  • A: Hypolydian
  • G: Low Hypolydian or Hypoaelion
  • G: Hypophrygian
  • F: Low Hypophrygian or Hypoiastian
  • F: Hypodorian

Ptolemy, in his Harmonics, ii.3–11, construed the tonoi differently, presenting all seven octave species within a fixed octave, through chromatic inflection of the scale degrees (comparable to the modern conception of building all seven modal scales on a single tonic). In Ptolemy's system, therefore there are only seven tonoi.[13][24] Pythagoras also construed the intervals arithmetically (if somewhat more rigorously, initially allowing for 1:1 = Unison, 2:1 = Octave, 3:2 = Fifth, 4:3 = Fourth and 5:4 = Major Third within the octave). In their diatonic genus, these tonoi and corresponding harmoniai correspond with the intervals of the familiar modern major and minor scales. See Pythagorean tuning and Pythagorean interval.

Harmoniai

Harmoniai of the School of Eratocles (enharmonic genus)
Mixolydian 14 14 2 14 14 2 1
Lydian 14 2 14 14 2 1 14
Phrygian 2 14 14 2 1 14 14
Dorian 14 14 2 1 14 14 2
Hypolydian 14 2 1 14 14 2 14
Hypophrygian 2 1 14 14 2 14 14
Hypodorian 1 14 14 2 14 14 2

In music theory the Greek word harmonia can signify the enharmonic genus of tetrachord, the seven octave species, or a style of music associated with one of the ethnic types or the tonoi named by them.[25]

Particularly in the earliest surviving writings, harmonia is regarded not as a scale, but as the epitome of the stylised singing of a particular district or people or occupation.[11] When the late-6th-century poet Lasus of Hermione referred to the Aeolian harmonia, for example, he was more likely thinking of a melodic style characteristic of Greeks speaking the Aeolic dialect than of a scale pattern.[26] By the late 5th century BC, these regional types are being described in terms of differences in what is called harmonia – a word with several senses, but here referring to the pattern of intervals between the notes sounded by the strings of a lyra or a kithara.

However, there is no reason to suppose that, at this time, these tuning patterns stood in any straightforward and organised relations to one another. It was only around the year 400 that attempts were made by a group of theorists known as the harmonicists to bring these harmoniai into a single system and to express them as orderly transformations of a single structure. Eratocles was the most prominent of the harmonicists, though his ideas are known only at second hand, through Aristoxenus, from whom we learn they represented the harmoniai as cyclic reorderings of a given series of intervals within the octave, producing seven octave species. We also learn that Eratocles confined his descriptions to the enharmonic genus.[27]

In the Republic, Plato uses the term inclusively to encompass a particular type of scale, range and register, characteristic rhythmic pattern, textual subject, etc.[13] He held that playing music in a particular harmonia would incline one towards specific behaviors associated with it, and suggested that soldiers should listen to music in Dorian or Phrygian harmoniai to help make them stronger but avoid music in Lydian, Mixolydian or Ionian harmoniai, for fear of being softened. Plato believed that a change in the musical modes of the state would cause a wide-scale social revolution.[28]

The philosophical writings of Plato and Aristotle (c. 350 BC) include sections that describe the effect of different harmoniai on mood and character formation. For example, Aristotle stated in his Politics:[29]

But melodies themselves do contain imitations of character. This is perfectly clear, for the harmoniai have quite distinct natures from one another, so that those who hear them are differently affected and do not respond in the same way to each. To some, such as the one called Mixolydian, they respond with more grief and anxiety, to others, such as the relaxed harmoniai, with more mellowness of mind, and to one another with a special degree of moderation and firmness, Dorian being apparently the only one of the harmoniai to have this effect, while Phrygian creates ecstatic excitement. These points have been well expressed by those who have thought deeply about this kind of education; for they cull the evidence for what they say from the facts themselves.[30]

Aristotle continues by describing the effects of rhythm, and concludes about the combined effect of rhythm and harmonia (viii:1340b:10–13):

From all this it is clear that music is capable of creating a particular quality of character [ἦθος] in the soul, and if it can do that, it is plain that it should be made use of, and that the young should be educated in it.[30]

The word ethos (ἦθος) in this context means "moral character", and Greek ethos theory concerns the ways that music can convey, foster, and even generate ethical states.[26]

Melos

Some treatises also describe "melic" composition (μελοποιΐα), "the employment of the materials subject to harmonic practice with due regard to the requirements of each of the subjects under consideration"[31] – which, together with the scales, tonoi, and harmoniai resemble elements found in medieval modal theory.[32] According to Aristides Quintilianus, melic composition is subdivided into three classes: dithyrambic, nomic, and tragic.[33] These parallel his three classes of rhythmic composition: systaltic, diastaltic and hesychastic. Each of these broad classes of melic composition may contain various subclasses, such as erotic, comic and panegyric, and any composition might be elevating (diastaltic), depressing (systaltic), or soothing (hesychastic).[34]

According to Thomas J. Mathiesen, music as a performing art was called melos, which in its perfect form (μέλος τέλειον) comprised not only the melody and the text (including its elements of rhythm and diction) but also stylized dance movement. Melic and rhythmic composition (respectively, μελοποιΐα and ῥυθμοποιΐα) were the processes of selecting and applying the various components of melos and rhythm to create a complete work. According to Aristides Quintilianus:

And we might fairly speak of perfect melos, for it is necessary that melody, rhythm and diction be considered so that the perfection of the song may be produced: in the case of melody, simply a certain sound; in the case of rhythm, a motion of sound; and in the case of diction, the meter. The things contingent to perfect melos are motion-both of sound and body-and also chronoi and the rhythms based on these.[35]

Western Church

 
Excerpt from Boethius' De musica depicting a scale

Tonaries, lists of chant titles grouped by mode, appear in western sources around the turn of the 9th century. The influence of developments in Byzantium, from Jerusalem and Damascus, for instance the works of Saints John of Damascus (d. 749) and Cosmas of Maiouma,[36][37] are still not fully understood. The eight-fold division of the Latin modal system, in a four-by-two matrix, was certainly of Eastern provenance, originating probably in Syria or even in Jerusalem, and was transmitted from Byzantine sources to Carolingian practice and theory during the 8th century. However, the earlier Greek model for the Carolingian system was probably ordered like the later Byzantine oktōēchos, that is, with the four principal (authentic) modes first, then the four plagals, whereas the Latin modes were always grouped the other way, with the authentics and plagals paired.[38]

The 6th-century scholar Boethius had translated Greek music theory treatises by Nicomachus and Ptolemy into Latin.[39] Later authors created confusion by applying mode as described by Boethius to explain plainchant modes, which were a wholly different system.[40] In his De institutione musica, book 4 chapter 15, Boethius, like his Hellenistic sources, twice used the term harmonia to describe what would likely correspond to the later notion of "mode", but also used the word "modus" – probably translating the Greek word τρόπος (tropos), which he also rendered as Latin tropus – in connection with the system of transpositions required to produce seven diatonic octave species,[41] so the term was simply a means of describing transposition and had nothing to do with the church modes.[42]

Later, 9th-century theorists applied Boethius's terms tropus and modus (along with "tonus") to the system of church modes. The treatise De Musica (or De harmonica institutione) of Hucbald synthesized the three previously disparate strands of modal theory: chant theory, the Byzantine oktōēchos and Boethius's account of Hellenistic theory.[43] The late-9th- and early 10th-century compilation known as the Alia musica imposed the seven octave transpositions, known as tropus and described by Boethius, onto the eight church modes,[44] but its compilator also mentions the Greek (Byzantine) echoi translated by the Latin term sonus. Thus, the names of the modes became associated with the eight church tones and their modal formulas – but this medieval interpretation does not fit the concept of the ancient Greek harmonics treatises. The modern understanding of mode does not reflect that it is made of different concepts that do not all fit.

 
The introit Jubilate Deo, from which Jubilate Sunday gets its name, is in Mode 8.

According to Carolingian theorists the eight church modes, or Gregorian modes, can be divided into four pairs, where each pair shares the "final" note and the four notes above the final, but they have different intervals concerning the species of the fifth. If the octave is completed by adding three notes above the fifth, the mode is termed authentic, but if the octave is completed by adding three notes below, it is called plagal (from Greek πλάγιος, "oblique, sideways"). Otherwise explained: if the melody moves mostly above the final, with an occasional cadence to the sub-final, the mode is authentic. Plagal modes shift range and also explore the fourth below the final as well as the fifth above. In both cases, the strict ambitus of the mode is one octave. A melody that remains confined to the mode's ambitus is called "perfect"; if it falls short of it, "imperfect"; if it exceeds it, "superfluous"; and a melody that combines the ambituses of both the plagal and authentic is said to be in a "mixed mode".[45]

Although the earlier (Greek) model for the Carolingian system was probably ordered like the Byzantine oktōēchos, with the four authentic modes first, followed by the four plagals, the earliest extant sources for the Latin system are organized in four pairs of authentic and plagal modes sharing the same final: protus authentic/plagal, deuterus authentic/plagal, tritus authentic/plagal, and tetrardus authentic/plagal.[38]

Each mode has, in addition to its final, a "reciting tone", sometimes called the "dominant".[46][47] It is also sometimes called the "tenor", from Latin tenere "to hold", meaning the tone around which the melody principally centres.[48] The reciting tones of all authentic modes began a fifth above the final, with those of the plagal modes a third above. However, the reciting tones of modes 3, 4, and 8 rose one step during the 10th and 11th centuries with 3 and 8 moving from B to C (half step) and that of 4 moving from G to A (whole step).[49]

 
Kyrie "orbis factor", in mode 1 (Dorian) with B on scale-degree 6, descends from the reciting tone, A, to the final, D, and uses the subtonium (tone below the final).

After the reciting tone, every mode is distinguished by scale degrees called "mediant" and "participant". The mediant is named from its position between the final and reciting tone. In the authentic modes it is the third of the scale, unless that note should happen to be B, in which case C substitutes for it. In the plagal modes, its position is somewhat irregular. The participant is an auxiliary note, generally adjacent to the mediant in authentic modes and, in the plagal forms, coincident with the reciting tone of the corresponding authentic mode (some modes have a second participant).[50]

Only one accidental is used commonly in Gregorian chant – B may be lowered by a half-step to B. This usually (but not always) occurs in modes V and VI, as well as in the upper tetrachord of IV, and is optional in other modes except III, VII and VIII.[51]

Mode I (Dorian) II (Hypodorian) III (Phrygian) IV (Hypophrygian) V (Lydian) VI (Hypolydian) VII (Mixolydian) VIII (Hypomixolydian)
Final D (re) D (re) E (mi) E (mi) F (fa) F (fa) G (sol) G (sol)
Dominant A (la) F (fa) B (si) or C (do) G (sol) or A (la) C (do) A (la) D (re) B (si) or C (do)

In 1547, the Swiss theorist Henricus Glareanus published the Dodecachordon, in which he solidified the concept of the church modes, and added four additional modes: the Aeolian (mode 9), Hypoaeolian (mode 10), Ionian (mode 11), and Hypoionian (mode 12). A little later in the century, the Italian Gioseffo Zarlino at first adopted Glarean's system in 1558, but later (1571 and 1573) revised the numbering and naming conventions in a manner he deemed more logical, resulting in the widespread promulgation of two conflicting systems.

Zarlino's system reassigned the six pairs of authentic–plagal mode numbers to finals in the order of the natural hexachord, C–D–E–F–G–A, and transferred the Greek names as well, so that modes 1 through 8 now became C-authentic to F-plagal, and were now called by the names Dorian to Hypomixolydian. The pair of G modes were numbered 9 and 10 and were named Ionian and Hypoionian, while the pair of A modes retained both the numbers and names (11, Aeolian, and 12 Hypoaeolian) of Glarean's system. While Zarlino's system became popular in France, Italian composers preferred Glarean's scheme because it retained the traditional eight modes, while expanding them. Luzzasco Luzzaschi was an exception in Italy, in that he used Zarlino's new system.[52][53][54]

In the late-18th and 19th centuries, some chant reformers (notably the editors of the Mechlin, Pustet-Ratisbon (Regensburg), and Rheims-Cambrai Office-Books, collectively referred to as the Cecilian Movement) renumbered the modes once again, this time retaining the original eight mode numbers and Glareanus's modes 9 and 10, but assigning numbers 11 and 12 to the modes on the final B, which they named Locrian and Hypolocrian (even while rejecting their use in chant). The Ionian and Hypoionian modes (on C) become in this system modes 13 and 14.[50]

Given the confusion between ancient, medieval, and modern terminology, "today it is more consistent and practical to use the traditional designation of the modes with numbers one to eight",[55] using Roman numeral (I–VIII), rather than using the pseudo-Greek naming system. Medieval terms, first used in Carolingian treatises, later in Aquitanian tonaries, are still used by scholars today: the Greek ordinals ("first", "second", etc.) transliterated into the Latin alphabet protus (πρῶτος), deuterus (δεύτερος), tritus (τρίτος), and tetrardus (τέταρτος). In practice they can be specified as authentic or as plagal like "protus authentus / plagalis".

 
The eight musical modes. f indicates "final".[56]

Use

A mode indicated a primary pitch (a final), the organization of pitches in relation to the final, the suggested range, the melodic formulas associated with different modes, the location and importance of cadences, and the affect (i.e., emotional effect/character). Liane Curtis writes that "Modes should not be equated with scales: principles of melodic organization, placement of cadences, and emotional affect are essential parts of modal content" in Medieval and Renaissance music.[56]

Dahlhaus lists "three factors that form the respective starting points for the modal theories of Aurelian of Réôme, Hermannus Contractus, and Guido of Arezzo":[57]

  • the relation of modal formulas to the comprehensive system of tonal relationships embodied in the diatonic scale
  • the partitioning of the octave into a modal framework
  • the function of the modal final as a relational center.

The oldest medieval treatise regarding modes is Musica disciplina by Aurelian of Réôme (dating from around 850) while Hermannus Contractus was the first to define modes as partitionings of the octave.[57] However, the earliest Western source using the system of eight modes is the Tonary of St Riquier, dated between about 795 and 800.[38]

Various interpretations of the "character" imparted by the different modes have been suggested. Three such interpretations, from Guido of Arezzo (995–1050), Adam of Fulda (1445–1505), and Juan de Espinosa Medrano (1632–1688), follow:[citation needed]

Name Mode D'Arezzo Fulda Espinosa Example chant
Dorian I serious any feeling happy, taming the passions Veni sancte spiritus
Hypodorian II sad sad serious and tearful Iesu dulcis amor meus
Phrygian III mystic vehement inciting anger Kyrie, fons bonitatis
Hypophrygian IV harmonious tender inciting delights, tempering fierceness Conditor alme siderum
Lydian V happy happy happy Salve Regina
Hypolydian VI devout pious tearful and pious Ubi caritas
Mixolydian VII angelical of youth uniting pleasure and sadness Introibo
Hypomixolydian VIII perfect of knowledge very happy Ad cenam agni providi

Modern modes

Modern Western modes use the same set of notes as the major scale, in the same order, but starting from one of its seven degrees in turn as a tonic, and so present a different sequence of whole and half steps. With the interval sequence of the major scale being W–W–H–W–W–W–H, where "W" means a whole tone (whole step) and "H" means a semitone (half step), it is thus possible to generate the following modes:[58]

Mode Tonic relative
to major scale
Interval sequence Example
Ionian I W–W–H–W–W–W–H C–D–E–F–G–A–B–C
Dorian ii W–H–W–W–W–H–W D–E–F–G–A–B–C–D
Phrygian iii H–W–W–W–H–W–W E–F–G–A–B–C–D–E
Lydian IV W–W–W–H–W–W–H F–G–A–B–C–D–E–F
Mixolydian V W–W–H–W–W–H–W G–A–B–C–D–E–F–G
Aeolian vi W–H–W–W–H–W–W A–B–C–D–E–F–G–A
Locrian viiø H–W–W–H–W–W–W B–C–D–E–F–G–A–B

For the sake of simplicity, the examples shown above are formed by natural notes (also called "white notes", as they can be played using the white keys of a piano keyboard). However, any transposition of each of these scales is a valid example of the corresponding mode. In other words, transposition preserves mode.[59]

 
Interval sequences for each of the modern modes, showing the relationship between the modes as a shifted grid of intervals.

Although the names of the modern modes are Greek and some have names used in ancient Greek theory for some of the harmoniai, the names of the modern modes are conventional and do not refer to the sequences of intervals found even in the diatonic genus of the Greek octave species sharing the same name.[60]

Analysis

Each mode has characteristic intervals and chords that give it its distinctive sound. The following is an analysis of each of the seven modern modes. The examples are provided in a key signature with no sharps or flats (scales composed of natural notes).

Ionian (I)

The Ionian mode is the modern major scale. The example composed of natural notes begins on C, and is also known as the C-major scale:

 
The modern Ionian mode on C
Natural notes C D E F G A B C
Interval from C P1 M2 M3 P4 P5 M6 M7 P8
  • Tonic triad: C major
  • Tonic seventh chord: CM7
  • Dominant triad: G (in modern tonal thinking, the fifth or dominant scale degree, which in this case is G, is the next-most important chord root after the tonic)
  • Seventh chord on the dominant: G7 (a dominant seventh chord, so-called because of its position in this – and only this – modal scale)

Dorian (II)

The Dorian mode is the second mode. The example composed of natural notes begins on D:

 
The modern Dorian mode on D
Natural notes D E F G A B C D
Interval from D P1 M2 m3 P4 P5 M6 m7 P8

The Dorian mode is very similar to the modern natural minor scale (see Aeolian mode below). The only difference with respect to the natural minor scale is in the sixth scale degree, which is a major sixth (M6) above the tonic, rather than a minor sixth (m6).

  • Tonic triad: Dm
  • Tonic seventh chord: Dm7
  • Dominant triad: Am
  • Seventh chord on the dominant: Am7 (a minor seventh chord)

Phrygian (III)

The Phrygian mode is the third mode. The example composed of natural notes starts on E:

 
The modern Phrygian mode on E
Natural notes E F G A B C D E
Interval from E P1 m2 m3 P4 P5 m6 m7 P8

The Phrygian mode is very similar to the modern natural minor scale (see Aeolian mode below). The only difference with respect to the natural minor scale is in the second scale degree, which is a minor second (m2) above the tonic, rather than a major second (M2).

Lydian (IV)

The Lydian mode is the fourth mode. The example composed of natural notes starts on F:

 
The modern Lydian mode on F
Natural notes F G A B C D E F
Interval from F P1 M2 M3 A4 P5 M6 M7 P8

The single tone that differentiates this scale from the major scale (Ionian mode) is its fourth degree, which is an augmented fourth (A4) above the tonic (F), rather than a perfect fourth (P4).

  • Tonic triad: F
  • Tonic seventh chord: FM7
  • Dominant triad: C
  • Seventh chord on the dominant: CM7 (a major seventh chord)

Mixolydian (V)

The Mixolydian mode is the fifth mode. The example composed of natural notes begins on G:

 
The modern Mixolydian mode on G
Natural notes G A B C D E F G
Interval from G P1 M2 M3 P4 P5 M6 m7 P8

The single tone that differentiates this scale from the major scale (Ionian mode) is its seventh degree, which is a minor seventh (m7) above the tonic (G), rather than a major seventh (M7). Therefore, the seventh scale degree becomes a subtonic to the tonic because it is now a whole tone lower than the tonic, in contrast to the seventh degree in the major scale, which is a semitone tone lower than the tonic (leading-tone).

  • Tonic triad: G
  • Tonic seventh chord: G7 (the dominant seventh chord in this mode is the seventh chord built on the tonic degree)
  • Dominant triad: Dm
  • Seventh chord on the dominant: Dm7 (a minor seventh chord)

Aeolian (VI)

The Aeolian mode is the sixth mode. It is also called the natural minor scale. The example composed of natural notes begins on A, and is also known as the A natural-minor scale:

 
The modern Aeolian mode on A
Natural notes A B C D E F G A
Interval from A P1 M2 m3 P4 P5 m6 m7 P8
  • Tonic triad: Am
  • Tonic seventh chord: Am7
  • Dominant triad: Em
  • Seventh chord on the dominant: Em7 (a minor seventh chord)

Locrian (VII)

The Locrian mode is the seventh mode. The example composed of natural notes begins on B:

 
The modern Locrian mode on B
Natural notes B C D E F G A B
Interval from B P1 m2 m3 P4 d5 m6 m7 P8

The distinctive scale degree here is the diminished fifth (d5). This makes the tonic triad diminished, so this mode is the only one in which the chords built on the tonic and dominant scale degrees have their roots separated by a diminished, rather than perfect, fifth. Similarly the tonic seventh chord is half-diminished.

  • Tonic triad: Bdim or B°
  • Tonic seventh chord: Bm75 or Bø7
  • Dominant triad: F
  • Seventh chord on the dominant: FM7 (a major seventh chord)

Summary

The modes can be arranged in the following sequence, which follows the circle of fifths. In this sequence, each mode has one more lowered interval relative to the tonic than the mode preceding it. Thus, taking Lydian as reference, Ionian (major) has a lowered fourth; Mixolydian, a lowered fourth and seventh; Dorian, a lowered fourth, seventh, and third; Aeolian (natural minor), a lowered fourth, seventh, third, and sixth; Phrygian, a lowered fourth, seventh, third, sixth, and second; and Locrian, a lowered fourth, seventh, third, sixth, second, and fifth. Put another way, the augmented fourth of the Lydian mode has been reduced to a perfect fourth in Ionian, the major seventh in Ionian to a minor seventh in Mixolydian, etc.[citation needed]

Mode White
note
Intervals with respect to the tonic
unison second third fourth fifth sixth seventh octave
Lydian F perfect major major augmented perfect major major perfect
Ionian C perfect
Mixolydian G minor
Dorian D minor
Aeolian A minor
Phrygian E minor
Locrian B diminished

The first three modes are sometimes called major,[61][62][63][64] the next three minor,[65][62][64] and the last one diminished (Locrian),[66] according to the quality of their tonic triads. The Locrian mode is traditionally considered theoretical rather than practical because the triad built on the first scale degree is diminished. Because diminished triads are not consonant they do not lend themselves to cadential endings and cannot be tonicized according to traditional practice.

  • The Ionian mode corresponds to the major scale. Scales in the Lydian mode are major scales with an augmented fourth. The Mixolydian mode corresponds to the major scale with a minor seventh.
  • The Aeolian mode is identical to the natural minor scale. The Dorian mode corresponds to the natural minor scale with a major sixth. The Phrygian mode corresponds to the natural minor scale with a minor second.
  • The Locrian is neither a major nor a minor mode because, although its third scale degree is minor, the fifth degree is diminished instead of perfect. For this reason it is sometimes called a "diminished" scale, though in jazz theory this term is also applied to the octatonic scale. This interval is enharmonically equivalent to the augmented fourth found between scale degrees 1 and 4 in the Lydian mode and is also referred to as the tritone.

Use

Use and conception of modes or modality today is different from that in early music. As Jim Samson explains, "Clearly any comparison of medieval and modern modality would recognize that the latter takes place against a background of some three centuries of harmonic tonality, permitting, and in the 19th century requiring, a dialogue between modal and diatonic procedure".[67] Indeed, when 19th-century composers revived the modes, they rendered them more strictly than Renaissance composers had, to make their qualities distinct from the prevailing major-minor system. Renaissance composers routinely sharped leading tones at cadences and lowered the fourth in the Lydian mode.[68]

The Ionian, or Iastian,[69][70][71][72][52][73][74][75] mode is another name for the major scale used in much Western music. The Aeolian forms the base of the most common Western minor scale; in modern practice the Aeolian mode is differentiated from the minor by using only the seven notes of the Aeolian mode. By contrast, minor mode compositions of the common practice period frequently raise the seventh scale degree by a semitone to strengthen the cadences, and in conjunction also raise the sixth scale degree by a semitone to avoid the awkward interval of an augmented second. This is particularly true of vocal music.[76]

Traditional folk music provides countless examples of modal melodies. For example, Irish traditional music makes extensive usage not only of the major and minor (Aeolian) modes, but also the Mixolydian and Dorian modes. Within the context of Irish traditional music, the tunes are most commonly played in the keys of G-Major/A-Dorian/D-Mixolydian/E-Aeolian (minor) and D-Major/E-Dorian/A-Mixolydian/B-Aeolian (minor). Some Irish music is written in A-Major/F#-Aeolian (minor), with B-Dorian and E-Mixolydian tunes not being completely unheard of. Rarer still are Irish tunes in E-Major/F#-Dorian/B-Mixolydian.

In some regions of Ireland, such as the west-central coast area of Galway and Clare, “flat” keys are far more prevalent than in other areas. Instruments will be constructed or pitched accordingly to allow for modal playing in C-Major/D-Dorian/G-Mixolydian or F-Major/G-Dorian/C-Mixolydian/D-Aeolian (minor), with some rare exceptions in Eb-Major/C-minor being played regionally. Some tunes are even composed in Bb-Major, with modulating sections in F-Mixolydian. Interestingly, A-minor is less popularly played in the region, despite the localised prevalence of tunes in C-Major and related modes.[77] Much Flamenco music is in the Phrygian mode, though frequently with the third and seventh degrees raised by a semitone.[78]

Zoltán Kodály, Gustav Holst, and Manuel de Falla use modal elements as modifications of a diatonic background, while modality replaces diatonic tonality in the music of Claude Debussy and Béla Bartók.[79]

Other types

While the term "mode" is still most commonly understood to refer to Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, or Locrian modes, in modern music theory the word is often applied to scales other than the diatonic. This is seen, for example, in melodic minor scale harmony, which is based on the seven rotations of the ascending melodic minor scale, yielding some interesting scales as shown below. The "chord" row lists tetrads that can be built from the pitches in the given mode[80] (in jazz notation, the symbol Δ is for a major seventh).

Mode I II III IV V VI VII
Name Ascending melodic minor Dorian 2 or
Phrygian 6
Lydian augmented Acoustic Aeolian dominant or Mixolydian 6 Half-diminished Altered
Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chord C–Δ D–7 EΔ5 F711 G76 Aø B7alt
Mode I II III IV V VI VII
Name Harmonic minor Locrian 6 Ionian 5 Ukrainian Dorian Phrygian Dominant Lydian 2 Altered Diminished
Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6  7
Chord C–Δ Dø EΔ5 F–7 G79 AΔ or AΔ Bo7
Mode I II III IV V VI VII
Name Harmonic major Dorian ♭5 or Locrian 2 6 Phrygian ♭4 or Altered Dominant 5 Lydian ♭3 or Melodic Minor 4 Mixolydian ♭2 Lydian Augmented ♯2 Locrian  7
Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6  7
Chord CΔ Dø7 E–7or E7 F–Δ G7 A +Δ Bo7
Mode I II III IV V VI VII
Name Double harmonic Lydian 2 6 Phrygian  7 4 (or Altered Diminished 5) Hungarian minor Locrian 6 3 or
Mixolydian 5 2
Ionian 5 2 Locrian  3  7
Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6  7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2  3 4 5 6  7
Chord CΔ DΔ11 E–6 or E6 F–Δ G75 AΔ5 Bo 3

The number of possible modes for any intervallic set is dictated by the pattern of intervals in the scale. For scales built of a pattern of intervals that only repeats at the octave (like the diatonic set), the number of modes is equal to the number of notes in the scale. Scales with a recurring interval pattern smaller than an octave, however, have only as many modes as notes within that subdivision: e.g., the diminished scale, which is built of alternating whole and half steps, has only two distinct modes, since all odd-numbered modes are equivalent to the first (starting with a whole step) and all even-numbered modes are equivalent to the second (starting with a half step).[citation needed]

The chromatic and whole-tone scales, each containing only steps of uniform size, have only a single mode each, as any rotation of the sequence results in the same sequence. Another general definition excludes these equal-division scales, and defines modal scales as subsets of them: according to Karlheinz Stockhausen, "If we leave out certain steps of a[n equal-step] scale we get a modal construction".[81] In "Messiaen's narrow sense, a mode is any scale made up from the 'chromatic total,' the twelve tones of the tempered system".[82]

Analogues in different musical traditions

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Powers (2001), §I,3
  2. ^ Powers (2001), §V,1
  3. ^ Powers (2001), §III,1
  4. ^ Dahlhaus (1968), pp. 174 et passim
  5. ^ Meier (1974)
  6. ^ Meier (1992)
  7. ^ Powers (2001), §1,2
  8. ^ N. Meeùs, "Modi vocum. Réflections sur la théorie modale médiévale." Con-Scientia Musica. Contrapunti per Rossana Dalmonte e Mario Baroni, A. R. Addessi e. a. ed., Lucca, Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2010, pp. 21-33
  9. ^ Powers (2001), Introduction
  10. ^ A. M. Busse Berger, "The Evolution of Rhythmic Notation", The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory, Th. Christensen ed., Cambridge University Press 2002, pp. 628-656, particularly pp. 629-635
  11. ^ a b Winnington-Ingram (1936), pp. 2–3
  12. ^ Porter (2001)
  13. ^ a b c d e Mathiesen (2001a), 6(iii)(e)
  14. ^ Barbera (1984), p. 240
  15. ^ Mathiesen (2001a), 6(iii)(d)
  16. ^ Bélis (2001)
  17. ^ Cleonides (1965), pp. 35–36
  18. ^ Cleonides (1965), pp. 39–40
  19. ^ Mathiesen (2001a), 6(iii)(c)
  20. ^ Palisca (2006), p. 77
  21. ^ a b Cleonides (1965), p. 44
  22. ^ Solomon (1984), pp. 244–245
  23. ^ West (1992),[page needed]
  24. ^ Mathiesen (2001c)
  25. ^ Mathiesen (2001b)
  26. ^ a b Anderson and Mathiesen (2001)
  27. ^ Barker (1984–89), 2:14–15
  28. ^ Plato (1902), III.10–III.12 = 398C–403C
  29. ^ Aristotle (1895), viii:1340a:40–1340b:5
  30. ^ a b Barker (1984–89), 1:175–176
  31. ^ Cleonides (1965), p. 35
  32. ^ Mathiesen (2001a), 6(iii)
  33. ^ Mathiesen (1983), i.12
  34. ^ Mathiesen (2001a), p. 4
  35. ^ Mathiesen (1983), p. 75
  36. ^ Nikodēmos ’Agioreitēs (1836), 1:32–33
  37. ^ Barton (2009)
  38. ^ a b c Powers (2001), §II.1(ii)
  39. ^ Powers (2001)
  40. ^ Palisca (1984), p. 222
  41. ^ Bower (1984), pp. 253, 260–261
  42. ^ Powers (2001), §II.1(i)
  43. ^ Powers (2001), §II.2
  44. ^ Powers (2001), §II.2(ii)
  45. ^ Rockstro (1880), p. 343
  46. ^ Apel (1969), p. 166
  47. ^ Smith (1989), p. 14
  48. ^ Fallows (2001)
  49. ^ Hoppin (1978), p. 67
  50. ^ a b Rockstro (1880), p. 342
  51. ^ Powers (2001), §II.3.i(b), Ex. 5
  52. ^ a b Powers (2001), §III.4(ii)(a)
  53. ^ Powers (2001), §III.4(iii)
  54. ^ Powers (2001), §III.5(i & ii)
  55. ^ Curtis (1997), p. 256
  56. ^ a b Curtis (1997), p. 255
  57. ^ a b Dahlhaus (1990), pp. 191–192
  58. ^ Levine (1995), Figure 2-4
  59. ^ Boyden (1994), p. 8
  60. ^ Kolinski, Mieczyslaw (September 9, 2010). "Mode". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
  61. ^ Carroll (2002), p. 134
  62. ^ a b Marx (1852), p. 336
  63. ^ Marx (1852), pp. 338, 342, 346
  64. ^ a b Serna (2013), p. 35
  65. ^ Carroll (2002), p. 153
  66. ^ Voitinskaia, Anastasia (9 December 2018). "The Aural Illusions of the Locrian Mode". Musical U. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  67. ^ Samson (1977), p. 148
  68. ^ Carver (2005), 74n4
  69. ^ Anon. (1896)
  70. ^ Chafe (1992), pp. 23, 41, 43, 48
  71. ^ Glareanus (1965), p. 153
  72. ^ Hiley (2002), §2(b)
  73. ^ Pratt (1907), p. 67
  74. ^ Taylor (1876), p. 419
  75. ^ Wiering (1995), p. 25
  76. ^ Jones (1974), p. 33
  77. ^ Cooper (1995), pp. 9–20
  78. ^ Gómez, Díaz-Báñez, Gómez, and Mora (2014), pp. 121, 123
  79. ^ Samson (1977),[page needed]
  80. ^ Levine (1995), pp. 55–77
  81. ^ Cott (1973), p. 101
  82. ^ Vieru (1985), p. 63

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Further reading

  • Brent, Jeff, with Schell Barkley (2011). Modalogy: Scales, Modes & Chords: The Primordial Building Blocks of Music. Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 978-1-4584-1397-0
  • Chalmers, John H. (1993). Divisions of the Tetrachord / Peri ton tou tetrakhordou katatomon / Sectiones tetrachordi: A Prolegomenon to the Construction of Musical Scales, edited by Larry Polansky and Carter Scholz, foreword by Lou Harrison. Hanover, New Hampshire: Frog Peak Music. ISBN 0-945996-04-7.
  • Fellerer, Karl Gustav (1982). "Kirchenmusikalische Reformbestrebungen um 1800". Analecta Musicologica: Veröffentlichungen der Musikgeschichtlichen Abteilung des Deutschen Historischen Instituts in Rom 21:393–408.
  • Grout, Donald, Claude V. Palisca, and J. Peter Burkholder (2006). A History of Western Music. New York: W. W. Norton. 7th edition. ISBN 0-393-97991-1.
  • Jowett, Benjamin (1937). The Dialogues of Plato, translated by Benjamin Jowett, third edition, 2 vols. New York: Random House. OCLC 2582139
  • Jowett, Benjamin (1943). Aristotle's Politics, translated by Benjamin Jowett. New York: Modern Library.
  • Judd, Cristle (ed) (1998). Tonal Structures in Early Music: Criticism and Analysis of Early Music, 1st ed. New York: Garland. ISBN 0-8153-2388-3.
  • Levine, Mark (1989). The Jazz Piano Book. Petaluma, California: Sher Music Co. ISBN 0-9614701-5-1.
  • Lonnendonker, Hans. 1980. "Deutsch-französische Beziehungen in Choralfragen. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des gregorianischen Chorals in der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts". In Ut mens concordet voci: Festschrift Eugène Cardine zum 75. Geburtstag, edited by Johannes Berchmans Göschl, 280–295. St. Ottilien: EOS-Verlag. ISBN 3-88096-100-X
  • Mathiesen, Thomas J. (1999). Apollo's Lyre: Greek Music and Music Theory in Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Publications of the Center for the History of Music Theory and Literature 2. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-3079-6.
  • McAlpine, Fiona (2004). "Beginnings and Endings: Defining the Mode in a Medieval Chant". Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 45, nos. 1 & 2 (17th International Congress of the International Musicological Society IMS Study Group Cantus Planus): 165–177.
  • Meeùs, Nicolas [fr] (1997). "Mode et système. Conceptions ancienne et moderne de la modalité". Musurgia 4, no. 3:67–80.
  • Meeùs, Nicolas (2000). "Fonctions modales et qualités systémiques". Musicae Scientiae, Forum de discussion 1:55–63.
  • Meier, Bernhard (1974). Die Tonarten der klassischen Vokalpolyphonie: nach den Quellen dargestellt. Utrecht.
  • Meier, Bernhard (1988). The Modes of Classical Vocal Polyphony: Described According to the Sources, translated from the German by Ellen S. Beebe, with revisions by the author. New York: Broude Brothers. ISBN 978-0-8450-7025-3
  • Meier, Bernhard (1992). Alte Tonarten: dargestellt an der Instrumentalmusik des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts. Kassel
  • Miller, Ron (1996). Modal Jazz Composition and Harmony, Vol. 1. Rottenburg, Germany: Advance Music. OCLC 43460635
  • Ordoulidis, Nikos. (2011). "". British Postgraduate Musicology 11 (December). (Online journal, accessed 24 December 2011)
  • Pfaff, Maurus (1974). "Die Regensburger Kirchenmusikschule und der cantus gregorianus im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert". Gloria Deo-pax hominibus. Festschrift zum hundertjährigen Bestehen der Kirchenmusikschule Regensburg, Schriftenreihe des Allgemeinen Cäcilien-Verbandes für die Länder der Deutschen Sprache 9, edited by Franz Fleckenstein, 221–252. Bonn: Allgemeiner Cäcilien-Verband, 1974.
  • Powers, Harold (1998). "From Psalmody to Tonality". In Tonal Structures in Early Music, edited by Cristle Collins Judd, 275–340. Garland Reference Library of the Humanities 1998; Criticism and Analysis of Early Music 1. New York: Garland Publishing. ISBN 0-8153-2388-3.
  • Ruff, Anthony, and Raphael Molitor (2008). "Beyond Medici: The Struggle for Progress in Chant". Sacred Music 135, no. 2 (Summer): 26–44.
  • Scharnagl, August (1994). "Carl Proske (1794–1861)". In Musica divina: Ausstellung zum 400. Todesjahr von Giovanni Pierluigi Palestrina und Orlando di Lasso und zum 200. Geburtsjahr von Carl Proske. Ausstellung in der Bischöflichen Zentralbibliothek Regensburg, 4. November 1994 bis 3. Februar 1995, Bischöfliches Zentralarchiv und Bischöfliche Zentralbibliothek Regensburg: Kataloge und Schriften, no. 11, edited by Paul Mai, 12–52. Regensburg: Schnell und Steiner, 1994.
  • Schnorr, Klemens (2004). "El cambio de la edición oficial del canto gregoriano de la editorial Pustet/Ratisbona a la de Solesmes en la época del Motu proprio". In El Motu proprio de San Pío X y la Música (1903–2003). Barcelona, 2003, edited by Mariano Lambea, introduction by María Rosario Álvarez Martínez and José Sierra Pérez. Revista de musicología 27, no. 1 (June) 197–209.
  • Street, Donald (1976). "The Modes of Limited Transposition". The Musical Times 117, no. 1604 (October): 819–823.
  • Vieru, Anatol (1980). Cartea modurilor. Bucharest: Editura Muzicală. English edition, as The Book of Modes, translated by Yvonne Petrescu and Magda Morait. Bucharest: Editura Muzicală, 1993.
  • Vieru, Anatol (1992). "Generating Modal Sequences (A Remote Approach to Minimal Music)]". Perspectives of New Music 30, no. 2 (Summer): 178–200. JSTOR 3090632
  • Vincent, John (1974). The Diatonic Modes in Modern Music, revised edition. Hollywood: Curlew Music. OCLC 249898056
  • Wellesz, Egon (1954). "Music of the Eastern Churches". The New Oxford History of Music, vol. 2:14–57. Oxford University Press.
  • Wiering, Frans (1998). "Internal and External Views of the Modes". In Tonal Structures in Early Music, edited by Cristle Collins Judd, 87–107. Garland Reference Library of the Humanities 1998; Criticism and Analysis of Early Music 1. New York: Garland Publishing. ISBN 0-8153-2388-3.

External links

  • All modes mapped out in all positions for 6, 7 and 8 string guitar
  • The use of guitar modes in jazz music
  • Neume Notation Project 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Division of the Tetrachord, John Chalmers
  • Greek and Liturgical Modes
  • The Ancient Musical Modes: What Were They?, Eric Friedlander MD
  • An interactive demonstration of many scales and modes
  • The Music of Ancient Greeks, an approach to the original singing of the Homeric epics and early Greek epic and lyrical poetry by Ioannidis Nikolaos
  • Ἀριστοξενου ἁρμονικα στοιχεια: The Harmonics of Aristoxenus, edited with translation notes introduction and index of words by Henry S. Macran. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1902.
  • Monzo, Joe. 2004. "The Measurement of Aristoxenus's Divisions of the Tetrachord"

mode, music, this, article, about, modes, used, music, other, uses, mode, disambiguation, music, theory, term, mode, modus, used, number, distinct, senses, depending, context, source, audio, playback, supported, your, browser, download, audio, file, diatonic, . This article is about modes as used in music For other uses see Mode disambiguation In music theory the term mode or modus is used in a number of distinct senses depending on context source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Diatonic major scale Ionian mode I on C a white note scale source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern diatonic modes on C Its most common use may be described as a type of musical scale coupled with a set of characteristic melodic and harmonic behaviors It is applied to major and minor keys as well as the seven diatonic modes including the former as Ionian and Aeolian which are defined by their starting note or tonic Olivier Messiaen s modes of limited transposition are strictly a scale type Related to the diatonic modes are the eight church modes or Gregorian modes in which authentic and plagal forms of scales are distinguished by ambitus and tenor or reciting tone Although both diatonic and gregorian modes borrow terminology from ancient Greece the Greek tonoi do not otherwise resemble their mediaeval modern counterparts In the Middle Ages the term modus was used to describe both intervals and rhythm Modal rhythm was an essential feature of the modal notation system of the Notre Dame school at the turn of the 12th century In the mensural notation that emerged later modus specifies the subdivision of the longa Outside of Western classical music mode is sometimes used to embrace similar concepts such as Octoechos maqam pathet etc see Analogues in different musical traditions below Contents 1 Mode as a general concept 2 Modes and scales 3 Greek modes 3 1 Greek scales 3 2 Tonoi 3 3 Harmoniai 3 4 Melos 4 Western Church 4 1 Use 5 Modern modes 5 1 Analysis 5 1 1 Ionian I 5 1 2 Dorian II 5 1 3 Phrygian III 5 1 4 Lydian IV 5 1 5 Mixolydian V 5 1 6 Aeolian VI 5 1 7 Locrian VII 5 2 Summary 5 3 Use 6 Other types 7 Analogues in different musical traditions 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksMode as a general concept EditRegarding the concept of mode as applied to pitch relationships generally Harold S Powers proposed that mode has a twofold sense denoting either a particularized scale or a generalized tune or both If one thinks of scale and tune as representing the poles of a continuum of melodic predetermination then most of the area between can be designated one way or the other as being in the domain of mode 1 In 1792 Sir Willam Jones applied the term mode to the music of the Persians and the Hindoos 2 As early as 1271 Amerus applied the concept to cantilenis organicis i e most probably polyphony 3 It is still heavily used with regard to Western polyphony before the onset of the common practice period as for example modale Mehrstimmigkeit by Carl Dahlhaus 4 or Tonarten of the 16th and 17th centuries found by Bernhard Meier 5 6 The word encompasses several additional meanings Authors from the 9th century until the early 18th century e g Guido of Arezzo sometimes employed the Latin modus for interval 7 or for qualities of individual notes 8 In the theory of late medieval mensural polyphony e g Franco of Cologne modus is a rhythmic relationship between long and short values or a pattern made from them 9 in mensural music most often theorists applied it to division of longa into 3 or 2 breves 10 Modes and scales EditA musical scale is a series of pitches in a distinct order The concept of mode in Western music theory has three successive stages in Gregorian chant theory in Renaissance polyphonic theory and in tonal harmonic music of the common practice period In all three contexts mode incorporates the idea of the diatonic scale but differs from it by also involving an element of melody type This concerns particular repertories of short musical figures or groups of tones within a certain scale so that depending on the point of view mode takes on the meaning of either a particularized scale or a generalized tune Modern musicological practice has extended the concept of mode to earlier musical systems such as those of Ancient Greek music Jewish cantillation and the Byzantine system of octoechoi as well as to other non Western types of music 1 11 By the early 19th century the word mode had taken on an additional meaning in reference to the difference between major and minor keys specified as major mode and minor mode At the same time composers were beginning to conceive modality as something outside of the major minor system that could be used to evoke religious feelings or to suggest folk music idioms 12 Greek modes EditMain article Musical system of ancient Greece Early Greek treatises describe three interrelated concepts that are related to the later medieval idea of mode 1 scales or systems 2 tonos pl tonoi the more usual term used in medieval theory for what later came to be called mode and 3 harmonia harmony pl harmoniai this third term subsuming the corresponding tonoi but not necessarily the converse 13 Greek scales Edit source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The three genera of the Dorian octave species on E The Greek scales in the Aristoxenian tradition were 14 15 Mixolydian hypate hypaton paramese b b Lydian parhypate hypaton trite diezeugmenon c c Phrygian lichanos hypaton paranete diezeugmenon d d Dorian hypate meson nete diezeugmenon e e Hypolydian parhypate meson trite hyperbolaion f f Hypophrygian lichanos meson paranete hyperbolaion g g Common Locrian or Hypodorian mese nete hyperbolaion or proslambnomenos mese a a or a a These names are derived from an ancient Greek subgroup Dorians a small region in central Greece Locris and certain neighboring peoples non Greek but related to them from Asia Minor Lydia Phrygia The association of these ethnic names with the octave species appears to precede Aristoxenus who criticized their application to the tonoi by the earlier theorists whom he called the Harmonicists According to Belis 2001 he felt that their diagrams which exhibit 28 consecutive dieses were devoid of any musical reality since more than two quarter tones are never heard in succession 16 Depending on the positioning spacing of the interposed tones in the tetrachords three genera of the seven octave species can be recognized The diatonic genus composed of tones and semitones the chromatic genus semitones and a minor third and the enharmonic genus with a major third and two quarter tones or dieses 17 The framing interval of the perfect fourth is fixed while the two internal pitches are movable Within the basic forms the intervals of the chromatic and diatonic genera were varied further by three and two shades chroai respectively 18 19 In contrast to the medieval modal system these scales and their related tonoi and harmoniai appear to have had no hierarchical relationships amongst the notes that could establish contrasting points of tension and rest although the mese middle note may have had some sort of gravitational function 20 Tonoi Edit The term tonos pl tonoi was used in four senses as note interval region of the voice and pitch We use it of the region of the voice whenever we speak of Dorian or Phrygian or Lydian or any of the other tones 21 Cleonides attributes thirteen tonoi to Aristoxenus which represent a progressive transposition of the entire system or scale by semitone over the range of an octave between the Hypodorian and the Hypermixolydian 13 According to Cleonides Aristoxenus s transpositional tonoi were named analogously to the octave species supplemented with new terms to raise the number of degrees from seven to thirteen 21 However according to the interpretation of at least three modern authorities in these transpositional tonoi the Hypodorian is the lowest and the Mixolydian next to highest the reverse of the case of the octave species 13 22 23 with nominal base pitches as follows descending order F Hypermixolydian or Hyperphrygian E High Mixolydian or Hyperiastian E Low Mixolydian or Hyperdorian D Lydian C Low Lydian or Aeolian C Phrygian B Low Phrygian or Iastian B Dorian A Hypolydian G Low Hypolydian or Hypoaelion G Hypophrygian F Low Hypophrygian or Hypoiastian F HypodorianPtolemy in his Harmonics ii 3 11 construed the tonoi differently presenting all seven octave species within a fixed octave through chromatic inflection of the scale degrees comparable to the modern conception of building all seven modal scales on a single tonic In Ptolemy s system therefore there are only seven tonoi 13 24 Pythagoras also construed the intervals arithmetically if somewhat more rigorously initially allowing for 1 1 Unison 2 1 Octave 3 2 Fifth 4 3 Fourth and 5 4 Major Third within the octave In their diatonic genus these tonoi and corresponding harmoniai correspond with the intervals of the familiar modern major and minor scales See Pythagorean tuning and Pythagorean interval Harmoniai Edit Harmoniai of the School of Eratocles enharmonic genus Mixolydian 1 4 1 4 2 1 4 1 4 2 1Lydian 1 4 2 1 4 1 4 2 1 1 4Phrygian 2 1 4 1 4 2 1 1 4 1 4Dorian 1 4 1 4 2 1 1 4 1 4 2Hypolydian 1 4 2 1 1 4 1 4 2 1 4Hypophrygian 2 1 1 4 1 4 2 1 4 1 4Hypodorian 1 1 4 1 4 2 1 4 1 4 2In music theory the Greek word harmonia can signify the enharmonic genus of tetrachord the seven octave species or a style of music associated with one of the ethnic types or the tonoi named by them 25 Particularly in the earliest surviving writings harmonia is regarded not as a scale but as the epitome of the stylised singing of a particular district or people or occupation 11 When the late 6th century poet Lasus of Hermione referred to the Aeolian harmonia for example he was more likely thinking of a melodic style characteristic of Greeks speaking the Aeolic dialect than of a scale pattern 26 By the late 5th century BC these regional types are being described in terms of differences in what is called harmonia a word with several senses but here referring to the pattern of intervals between the notes sounded by the strings of a lyra or a kithara However there is no reason to suppose that at this time these tuning patterns stood in any straightforward and organised relations to one another It was only around the year 400 that attempts were made by a group of theorists known as the harmonicists to bring these harmoniai into a single system and to express them as orderly transformations of a single structure Eratocles was the most prominent of the harmonicists though his ideas are known only at second hand through Aristoxenus from whom we learn they represented the harmoniai as cyclic reorderings of a given series of intervals within the octave producing seven octave species We also learn that Eratocles confined his descriptions to the enharmonic genus 27 In the Republic Plato uses the term inclusively to encompass a particular type of scale range and register characteristic rhythmic pattern textual subject etc 13 He held that playing music in a particular harmonia would incline one towards specific behaviors associated with it and suggested that soldiers should listen to music in Dorian or Phrygian harmoniai to help make them stronger but avoid music in Lydian Mixolydian or Ionian harmoniai for fear of being softened Plato believed that a change in the musical modes of the state would cause a wide scale social revolution 28 The philosophical writings of Plato and Aristotle c 350 BC include sections that describe the effect of different harmoniai on mood and character formation For example Aristotle stated in his Politics 29 But melodies themselves do contain imitations of character This is perfectly clear for the harmoniai have quite distinct natures from one another so that those who hear them are differently affected and do not respond in the same way to each To some such as the one called Mixolydian they respond with more grief and anxiety to others such as the relaxed harmoniai with more mellowness of mind and to one another with a special degree of moderation and firmness Dorian being apparently the only one of the harmoniai to have this effect while Phrygian creates ecstatic excitement These points have been well expressed by those who have thought deeply about this kind of education for they cull the evidence for what they say from the facts themselves 30 Aristotle continues by describing the effects of rhythm and concludes about the combined effect of rhythm and harmonia viii 1340b 10 13 From all this it is clear that music is capable of creating a particular quality of character ἦ8os in the soul and if it can do that it is plain that it should be made use of and that the young should be educated in it 30 The word ethos ἦ8os in this context means moral character and Greek ethos theory concerns the ways that music can convey foster and even generate ethical states 26 Melos Edit Some treatises also describe melic composition melopoiia the employment of the materials subject to harmonic practice with due regard to the requirements of each of the subjects under consideration 31 which together with the scales tonoi and harmoniai resemble elements found in medieval modal theory 32 According to Aristides Quintilianus melic composition is subdivided into three classes dithyrambic nomic and tragic 33 These parallel his three classes of rhythmic composition systaltic diastaltic and hesychastic Each of these broad classes of melic composition may contain various subclasses such as erotic comic and panegyric and any composition might be elevating diastaltic depressing systaltic or soothing hesychastic 34 According to Thomas J Mathiesen music as a performing art was called melos which in its perfect form melos teleion comprised not only the melody and the text including its elements of rhythm and diction but also stylized dance movement Melic and rhythmic composition respectively melopoiia and ῥy8mopoiia were the processes of selecting and applying the various components of melos and rhythm to create a complete work According to Aristides Quintilianus And we might fairly speak of perfect melos for it is necessary that melody rhythm and diction be considered so that the perfection of the song may be produced in the case of melody simply a certain sound in the case of rhythm a motion of sound and in the case of diction the meter The things contingent to perfect melos are motion both of sound and body and also chronoi and the rhythms based on these 35 Western Church Edit Excerpt from Boethius De musica depicting a scale Tonaries lists of chant titles grouped by mode appear in western sources around the turn of the 9th century The influence of developments in Byzantium from Jerusalem and Damascus for instance the works of Saints John of Damascus d 749 and Cosmas of Maiouma 36 37 are still not fully understood The eight fold division of the Latin modal system in a four by two matrix was certainly of Eastern provenance originating probably in Syria or even in Jerusalem and was transmitted from Byzantine sources to Carolingian practice and theory during the 8th century However the earlier Greek model for the Carolingian system was probably ordered like the later Byzantine oktōechos that is with the four principal authentic modes first then the four plagals whereas the Latin modes were always grouped the other way with the authentics and plagals paired 38 The 6th century scholar Boethius had translated Greek music theory treatises by Nicomachus and Ptolemy into Latin 39 Later authors created confusion by applying mode as described by Boethius to explain plainchant modes which were a wholly different system 40 In his De institutione musica book 4 chapter 15 Boethius like his Hellenistic sources twice used the term harmonia to describe what would likely correspond to the later notion of mode but also used the word modus probably translating the Greek word tropos tropos which he also rendered as Latin tropus in connection with the system of transpositions required to produce seven diatonic octave species 41 so the term was simply a means of describing transposition and had nothing to do with the church modes 42 Later 9th century theorists applied Boethius s terms tropus and modus along with tonus to the system of church modes The treatise De Musica or De harmonica institutione of Hucbald synthesized the three previously disparate strands of modal theory chant theory the Byzantine oktōechos and Boethius s account of Hellenistic theory 43 The late 9th and early 10th century compilation known as the Alia musica imposed the seven octave transpositions known as tropus and described by Boethius onto the eight church modes 44 but its compilator also mentions the Greek Byzantine echoi translated by the Latin term sonus Thus the names of the modes became associated with the eight church tones and their modal formulas but this medieval interpretation does not fit the concept of the ancient Greek harmonics treatises The modern understanding of mode does not reflect that it is made of different concepts that do not all fit The introit Jubilate Deo from which Jubilate Sunday gets its name is in Mode 8 According to Carolingian theorists the eight church modes or Gregorian modes can be divided into four pairs where each pair shares the final note and the four notes above the final but they have different intervals concerning the species of the fifth If the octave is completed by adding three notes above the fifth the mode is termed authentic but if the octave is completed by adding three notes below it is called plagal from Greek plagios oblique sideways Otherwise explained if the melody moves mostly above the final with an occasional cadence to the sub final the mode is authentic Plagal modes shift range and also explore the fourth below the final as well as the fifth above In both cases the strict ambitus of the mode is one octave A melody that remains confined to the mode s ambitus is called perfect if it falls short of it imperfect if it exceeds it superfluous and a melody that combines the ambituses of both the plagal and authentic is said to be in a mixed mode 45 Although the earlier Greek model for the Carolingian system was probably ordered like the Byzantine oktōechos with the four authentic modes first followed by the four plagals the earliest extant sources for the Latin system are organized in four pairs of authentic and plagal modes sharing the same final protus authentic plagal deuterus authentic plagal tritus authentic plagal and tetrardus authentic plagal 38 Each mode has in addition to its final a reciting tone sometimes called the dominant 46 47 It is also sometimes called the tenor from Latin tenere to hold meaning the tone around which the melody principally centres 48 The reciting tones of all authentic modes began a fifth above the final with those of the plagal modes a third above However the reciting tones of modes 3 4 and 8 rose one step during the 10th and 11th centuries with 3 and 8 moving from B to C half step and that of 4 moving from G to A whole step 49 Kyrie orbis factor in mode 1 Dorian with B on scale degree 6 descends from the reciting tone A to the final D and uses the subtonium tone below the final After the reciting tone every mode is distinguished by scale degrees called mediant and participant The mediant is named from its position between the final and reciting tone In the authentic modes it is the third of the scale unless that note should happen to be B in which case C substitutes for it In the plagal modes its position is somewhat irregular The participant is an auxiliary note generally adjacent to the mediant in authentic modes and in the plagal forms coincident with the reciting tone of the corresponding authentic mode some modes have a second participant 50 Only one accidental is used commonly in Gregorian chant B may be lowered by a half step to B This usually but not always occurs in modes V and VI as well as in the upper tetrachord of IV and is optional in other modes except III VII and VIII 51 Mode I Dorian II Hypodorian III Phrygian IV Hypophrygian V Lydian VI Hypolydian VII Mixolydian VIII Hypomixolydian Final D re D re E mi E mi F fa F fa G sol G sol Dominant A la F fa B si or C do G sol or A la C do A la D re B si or C do In 1547 the Swiss theorist Henricus Glareanus published the Dodecachordon in which he solidified the concept of the church modes and added four additional modes the Aeolian mode 9 Hypoaeolian mode 10 Ionian mode 11 and Hypoionian mode 12 A little later in the century the Italian Gioseffo Zarlino at first adopted Glarean s system in 1558 but later 1571 and 1573 revised the numbering and naming conventions in a manner he deemed more logical resulting in the widespread promulgation of two conflicting systems Zarlino s system reassigned the six pairs of authentic plagal mode numbers to finals in the order of the natural hexachord C D E F G A and transferred the Greek names as well so that modes 1 through 8 now became C authentic to F plagal and were now called by the names Dorian to Hypomixolydian The pair of G modes were numbered 9 and 10 and were named Ionian and Hypoionian while the pair of A modes retained both the numbers and names 11 Aeolian and 12 Hypoaeolian of Glarean s system While Zarlino s system became popular in France Italian composers preferred Glarean s scheme because it retained the traditional eight modes while expanding them Luzzasco Luzzaschi was an exception in Italy in that he used Zarlino s new system 52 53 54 In the late 18th and 19th centuries some chant reformers notably the editors of the Mechlin Pustet Ratisbon Regensburg and Rheims Cambrai Office Books collectively referred to as the Cecilian Movement renumbered the modes once again this time retaining the original eight mode numbers and Glareanus s modes 9 and 10 but assigning numbers 11 and 12 to the modes on the final B which they named Locrian and Hypolocrian even while rejecting their use in chant The Ionian and Hypoionian modes on C become in this system modes 13 and 14 50 Given the confusion between ancient medieval and modern terminology today it is more consistent and practical to use the traditional designation of the modes with numbers one to eight 55 using Roman numeral I VIII rather than using the pseudo Greek naming system Medieval terms first used in Carolingian treatises later in Aquitanian tonaries are still used by scholars today the Greek ordinals first second etc transliterated into the Latin alphabet protus prῶtos deuterus deyteros tritus tritos and tetrardus tetartos In practice they can be specified as authentic or as plagal like protus authentus plagalis The eight musical modes f indicates final 56 Use Edit A mode indicated a primary pitch a final the organization of pitches in relation to the final the suggested range the melodic formulas associated with different modes the location and importance of cadences and the affect i e emotional effect character Liane Curtis writes that Modes should not be equated with scales principles of melodic organization placement of cadences and emotional affect are essential parts of modal content in Medieval and Renaissance music 56 Dahlhaus lists three factors that form the respective starting points for the modal theories of Aurelian of Reome Hermannus Contractus and Guido of Arezzo 57 the relation of modal formulas to the comprehensive system of tonal relationships embodied in the diatonic scale the partitioning of the octave into a modal framework the function of the modal final as a relational center The oldest medieval treatise regarding modes is Musica disciplina by Aurelian of Reome dating from around 850 while Hermannus Contractus was the first to define modes as partitionings of the octave 57 However the earliest Western source using the system of eight modes is the Tonary of St Riquier dated between about 795 and 800 38 Various interpretations of the character imparted by the different modes have been suggested Three such interpretations from Guido of Arezzo 995 1050 Adam of Fulda 1445 1505 and Juan de Espinosa Medrano 1632 1688 follow citation needed Name Mode D Arezzo Fulda Espinosa Example chantDorian I serious any feeling happy taming the passions source source Veni sancte spiritusHypodorian II sad sad serious and tearful source source Iesu dulcis amor meusPhrygian III mystic vehement inciting anger source source Kyrie fons bonitatisHypophrygian IV harmonious tender inciting delights tempering fierceness source source Conditor alme siderumLydian V happy happy happy source source Salve ReginaHypolydian VI devout pious tearful and pious source source Ubi caritasMixolydian VII angelical of youth uniting pleasure and sadness source source IntroiboHypomixolydian VIII perfect of knowledge very happy source source Ad cenam agni providiModern modes EditModern Western modes use the same set of notes as the major scale in the same order but starting from one of its seven degrees in turn as a tonic and so present a different sequence of whole and half steps With the interval sequence of the major scale being W W H W W W H where W means a whole tone whole step and H means a semitone half step it is thus possible to generate the following modes 58 Mode Tonic relativeto major scale Interval sequence ExampleIonian I W W H W W W H C D E F G A B CDorian ii W H W W W H W D E F G A B C DPhrygian iii H W W W H W W E F G A B C D ELydian IV W W W H W W H F G A B C D E FMixolydian V W W H W W H W G A B C D E F GAeolian vi W H W W H W W A B C D E F G ALocrian viio H W W H W W W B C D E F G A BFor the sake of simplicity the examples shown above are formed by natural notes also called white notes as they can be played using the white keys of a piano keyboard However any transposition of each of these scales is a valid example of the corresponding mode In other words transposition preserves mode 59 Interval sequences for each of the modern modes showing the relationship between the modes as a shifted grid of intervals Although the names of the modern modes are Greek and some have names used in ancient Greek theory for some of the harmoniai the names of the modern modes are conventional and do not refer to the sequences of intervals found even in the diatonic genus of the Greek octave species sharing the same name 60 Analysis Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Each mode has characteristic intervals and chords that give it its distinctive sound The following is an analysis of each of the seven modern modes The examples are provided in a key signature with no sharps or flats scales composed of natural notes Ionian I Edit The Ionian mode is the modern major scale The example composed of natural notes begins on C and is also known as the C major scale source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Ionian mode on C Natural notes C D E F G A B CInterval from C P1 M2 M3 P4 P5 M6 M7 P8Tonic triad C major Tonic seventh chord CM7 Dominant triad G in modern tonal thinking the fifth or dominant scale degree which in this case is G is the next most important chord root after the tonic Seventh chord on the dominant G7 a dominant seventh chord so called because of its position in this and only this modal scale Dorian II Edit The Dorian mode is the second mode The example composed of natural notes begins on D source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Dorian mode on D Natural notes D E F G A B C DInterval from D P1 M2 m3 P4 P5 M6 m7 P8The Dorian mode is very similar to the modern natural minor scale see Aeolian mode below The only difference with respect to the natural minor scale is in the sixth scale degree which is a major sixth M6 above the tonic rather than a minor sixth m6 Tonic triad Dm Tonic seventh chord Dm7 Dominant triad Am Seventh chord on the dominant Am7 a minor seventh chord Phrygian III Edit The Phrygian mode is the third mode The example composed of natural notes starts on E source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Phrygian mode on E Natural notes E F G A B C D EInterval from E P1 m2 m3 P4 P5 m6 m7 P8The Phrygian mode is very similar to the modern natural minor scale see Aeolian mode below The only difference with respect to the natural minor scale is in the second scale degree which is a minor second m2 above the tonic rather than a major second M2 Tonic triad Em Tonic seventh chord Em7 Dominant triad Bdim Seventh chord on the dominant Bo7 a half diminished seventh chord Lydian IV Edit The Lydian mode is the fourth mode The example composed of natural notes starts on F source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Lydian mode on F Natural notes F G A B C D E FInterval from F P1 M2 M3 A4 P5 M6 M7 P8The single tone that differentiates this scale from the major scale Ionian mode is its fourth degree which is an augmented fourth A4 above the tonic F rather than a perfect fourth P4 Tonic triad F Tonic seventh chord FM7 Dominant triad C Seventh chord on the dominant CM7 a major seventh chord Mixolydian V Edit The Mixolydian mode is the fifth mode The example composed of natural notes begins on G source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Mixolydian mode on G Natural notes G A B C D E F GInterval from G P1 M2 M3 P4 P5 M6 m7 P8The single tone that differentiates this scale from the major scale Ionian mode is its seventh degree which is a minor seventh m7 above the tonic G rather than a major seventh M7 Therefore the seventh scale degree becomes a subtonic to the tonic because it is now a whole tone lower than the tonic in contrast to the seventh degree in the major scale which is a semitone tone lower than the tonic leading tone Tonic triad G Tonic seventh chord G7 the dominant seventh chord in this mode is the seventh chord built on the tonic degree Dominant triad Dm Seventh chord on the dominant Dm7 a minor seventh chord Aeolian VI Edit The Aeolian mode is the sixth mode It is also called the natural minor scale The example composed of natural notes begins on A and is also known as the A natural minor scale source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Aeolian mode on A Natural notes A B C D E F G AInterval from A P1 M2 m3 P4 P5 m6 m7 P8Tonic triad Am Tonic seventh chord Am7 Dominant triad Em Seventh chord on the dominant Em7 a minor seventh chord Locrian VII Edit The Locrian mode is the seventh mode The example composed of natural notes begins on B source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The modern Locrian mode on B Natural notes B C D E F G A BInterval from B P1 m2 m3 P4 d5 m6 m7 P8The distinctive scale degree here is the diminished fifth d5 This makes the tonic triad diminished so this mode is the only one in which the chords built on the tonic and dominant scale degrees have their roots separated by a diminished rather than perfect fifth Similarly the tonic seventh chord is half diminished Tonic triad Bdim or B Tonic seventh chord Bm7 5 or Bo7 Dominant triad F Seventh chord on the dominant FM7 a major seventh chord Summary Edit The modes can be arranged in the following sequence which follows the circle of fifths In this sequence each mode has one more lowered interval relative to the tonic than the mode preceding it Thus taking Lydian as reference Ionian major has a lowered fourth Mixolydian a lowered fourth and seventh Dorian a lowered fourth seventh and third Aeolian natural minor a lowered fourth seventh third and sixth Phrygian a lowered fourth seventh third sixth and second and Locrian a lowered fourth seventh third sixth second and fifth Put another way the augmented fourth of the Lydian mode has been reduced to a perfect fourth in Ionian the major seventh in Ionian to a minor seventh in Mixolydian etc citation needed Mode Whitenote Intervals with respect to the tonicunison second third fourth fifth sixth seventh octaveLydian F perfect major major augmented perfect major major perfectIonian C perfectMixolydian G minorDorian D minorAeolian A minorPhrygian E minorLocrian B diminishedThe first three modes are sometimes called major 61 62 63 64 the next three minor 65 62 64 and the last one diminished Locrian 66 according to the quality of their tonic triads The Locrian mode is traditionally considered theoretical rather than practical because the triad built on the first scale degree is diminished Because diminished triads are not consonant they do not lend themselves to cadential endings and cannot be tonicized according to traditional practice The Ionian mode corresponds to the major scale Scales in the Lydian mode are major scales with an augmented fourth The Mixolydian mode corresponds to the major scale with a minor seventh The Aeolian mode is identical to the natural minor scale The Dorian mode corresponds to the natural minor scale with a major sixth The Phrygian mode corresponds to the natural minor scale with a minor second The Locrian is neither a major nor a minor mode because although its third scale degree is minor the fifth degree is diminished instead of perfect For this reason it is sometimes called a diminished scale though in jazz theory this term is also applied to the octatonic scale This interval is enharmonically equivalent to the augmented fourth found between scale degrees 1 and 4 in the Lydian mode and is also referred to as the tritone Use Edit Use and conception of modes or modality today is different from that in early music As Jim Samson explains Clearly any comparison of medieval and modern modality would recognize that the latter takes place against a background of some three centuries of harmonic tonality permitting and in the 19th century requiring a dialogue between modal and diatonic procedure 67 Indeed when 19th century composers revived the modes they rendered them more strictly than Renaissance composers had to make their qualities distinct from the prevailing major minor system Renaissance composers routinely sharped leading tones at cadences and lowered the fourth in the Lydian mode 68 The Ionian or Iastian 69 70 71 72 52 73 74 75 mode is another name for the major scale used in much Western music The Aeolian forms the base of the most common Western minor scale in modern practice the Aeolian mode is differentiated from the minor by using only the seven notes of the Aeolian mode By contrast minor mode compositions of the common practice period frequently raise the seventh scale degree by a semitone to strengthen the cadences and in conjunction also raise the sixth scale degree by a semitone to avoid the awkward interval of an augmented second This is particularly true of vocal music 76 Traditional folk music provides countless examples of modal melodies For example Irish traditional music makes extensive usage not only of the major and minor Aeolian modes but also the Mixolydian and Dorian modes Within the context of Irish traditional music the tunes are most commonly played in the keys of G Major A Dorian D Mixolydian E Aeolian minor and D Major E Dorian A Mixolydian B Aeolian minor Some Irish music is written in A Major F Aeolian minor with B Dorian and E Mixolydian tunes not being completely unheard of Rarer still are Irish tunes in E Major F Dorian B Mixolydian In some regions of Ireland such as the west central coast area of Galway and Clare flat keys are far more prevalent than in other areas Instruments will be constructed or pitched accordingly to allow for modal playing in C Major D Dorian G Mixolydian or F Major G Dorian C Mixolydian D Aeolian minor with some rare exceptions in Eb Major C minor being played regionally Some tunes are even composed in Bb Major with modulating sections in F Mixolydian Interestingly A minor is less popularly played in the region despite the localised prevalence of tunes in C Major and related modes 77 Much Flamenco music is in the Phrygian mode though frequently with the third and seventh degrees raised by a semitone 78 Zoltan Kodaly Gustav Holst and Manuel de Falla use modal elements as modifications of a diatonic background while modality replaces diatonic tonality in the music of Claude Debussy and Bela Bartok 79 Other types EditWhile the term mode is still most commonly understood to refer to Ionian Dorian Phrygian Lydian Mixolydian Aeolian or Locrian modes in modern music theory the word is often applied to scales other than the diatonic This is seen for example in melodic minor scale harmony which is based on the seven rotations of the ascending melodic minor scale yielding some interesting scales as shown below The chord row lists tetrads that can be built from the pitches in the given mode 80 in jazz notation the symbol D is for a major seventh Mode I II III IV V VI VIIName Ascending melodic minor Dorian 2 orPhrygian 6 Lydian augmented Acoustic Aeolian dominant or Mixolydian 6 Half diminished AlteredNotes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7Chord C D D 7 E D 5 F7 11 G7 6 Ao B7altMode I II III IV V VI VIIName Harmonic minor Locrian 6 Ionian 5 Ukrainian Dorian Phrygian Dominant Lydian 2 Altered DiminishedNotes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7Chord C D Do E D 5 F 7 G7 9 A D or A D Bo 7Mode I II III IV V VI VIIName Harmonic major Dorian 5 or Locrian 2 6 Phrygian 4 or Altered Dominant 5 Lydian 3 or Melodic Minor 4 Mixolydian 2 Lydian Augmented 2 Locrian 7Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7Chord CD Do 7 E 7or E7 F D G7 A D Bo 7Mode I II III IV V VI VIIName Double harmonic Lydian 2 6 Phrygian 7 4 or Altered Diminished 5 Hungarian minor Locrian 6 3 orMixolydian 5 2 Ionian 5 2 Locrian 3 7Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7Chord CD D D 11 E 6 or E6 F D G7 5 A D 5 Bo 3The number of possible modes for any intervallic set is dictated by the pattern of intervals in the scale For scales built of a pattern of intervals that only repeats at the octave like the diatonic set the number of modes is equal to the number of notes in the scale Scales with a recurring interval pattern smaller than an octave however have only as many modes as notes within that subdivision e g the diminished scale which is built of alternating whole and half steps has only two distinct modes since all odd numbered modes are equivalent to the first starting with a whole step and all even numbered modes are equivalent to the second starting with a half step citation needed The chromatic and whole tone scales each containing only steps of uniform size have only a single mode each as any rotation of the sequence results in the same sequence Another general definition excludes these equal division scales and defines modal scales as subsets of them according to Karlheinz Stockhausen If we leave out certain steps of a n equal step scale we get a modal construction 81 In Messiaen s narrow sense a mode is any scale made up from the chromatic total the twelve tones of the tempered system 82 Analogues in different musical traditions EditCantillation Jewish music Echos Byzantine music Dastgah Persian traditional music Maqam Arabic music Makam Arabic Persian and Turkish classical music Raga Indian classical music Thaat North Indian or Hindustani music Melakarta South Indian or Carnatic music Pann Ancient Tamil music Pathet Javanese music for gamelan Pentatonic scaleSee also EditGamut music Jewish prayer modes List of musical scales and modes Modal jazz Znamenny chantReferences EditFootnotes Edit a b Powers 2001 I 3 Powers 2001 V 1 Powers 2001 III 1 Dahlhaus 1968 pp 174 et passim Meier 1974 Meier 1992 Powers 2001 1 2 N Meeus Modi vocum Reflections sur la theorie modale medievale Con Scientia Musica Contrapunti per Rossana Dalmonte e Mario Baroni A R Addessi e a ed Lucca Libreria Musicale Italiana 2010 pp 21 33 Powers 2001 Introduction A M Busse Berger The Evolution of Rhythmic Notation The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory Th Christensen ed Cambridge University Press 2002 pp 628 656 particularly pp 629 635 a b Winnington Ingram 1936 pp 2 3 Porter 2001 a b c d e Mathiesen 2001a 6 iii e Barbera 1984 p 240 Mathiesen 2001a 6 iii d Belis 2001 Cleonides 1965 pp 35 36 Cleonides 1965 pp 39 40 Mathiesen 2001a 6 iii c Palisca 2006 p 77 a b Cleonides 1965 p 44 Solomon 1984 pp 244 245 West 1992 page needed Mathiesen 2001c Mathiesen 2001b a b Anderson and Mathiesen 2001 Barker 1984 89 2 14 15 Plato 1902 III 10 III 12 398C 403C Aristotle 1895 viii 1340a 40 1340b 5 a b Barker 1984 89 1 175 176 Cleonides 1965 p 35 Mathiesen 2001a 6 iii Mathiesen 1983 i 12 Mathiesen 2001a p 4 Mathiesen 1983 p 75 Nikodemos Agioreites 1836 1 32 33 Barton 2009 a b c Powers 2001 II 1 ii Powers 2001 Palisca 1984 p 222 Bower 1984 pp 253 260 261 Powers 2001 II 1 i Powers 2001 II 2 Powers 2001 II 2 ii Rockstro 1880 p 343 Apel 1969 p 166 Smith 1989 p 14 Fallows 2001 Hoppin 1978 p 67 a b Rockstro 1880 p 342 Powers 2001 II 3 i b Ex 5 a b Powers 2001 III 4 ii a Powers 2001 III 4 iii Powers 2001 III 5 i amp ii Curtis 1997 p 256 a b Curtis 1997 p 255 a b Dahlhaus 1990 pp 191 192 Levine 1995 Figure 2 4 Boyden 1994 p 8 Kolinski Mieczyslaw September 9 2010 Mode Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved November 13 2020 Carroll 2002 p 134 a b Marx 1852 p 336 Marx 1852 pp 338 342 346 a b Serna 2013 p 35 Carroll 2002 p 153 Voitinskaia Anastasia 9 December 2018 The Aural Illusions of the Locrian Mode Musical U Retrieved 2022 09 04 Samson 1977 p 148 Carver 2005 74n4 Anon 1896 Chafe 1992 pp 23 41 43 48 Glareanus 1965 p 153 Hiley 2002 2 b Pratt 1907 p 67 Taylor 1876 p 419 Wiering 1995 p 25 Jones 1974 p 33 Cooper 1995 pp 9 20 Gomez Diaz Banez Gomez and Mora 2014 pp 121 123 Samson 1977 page needed Levine 1995 pp 55 77 Cott 1973 p 101 Vieru 1985 p 63 Bibliography Edit Anderson Warren and Thomas J Mathiesen 2001 Ethos The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Anon 1896 Plain song Chambers s Encyclopaedia A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge new edition Volume 8 Peasant to Roumelia London and Edinburgh William amp Robert Chambers Ltd Philadelphia J B Lippincott Co Apel Willi 1969 Harvard Dictionary of Music Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 37501 7 Aristotle 1895 Aristotle s Politics A Treatise on Government translated from the Greek of Aristotle by William Ellis MA with an Introduction by Henry Morley London George Routledge and Sons Ltd Barbera Andre 1984 Octave Species The Journal of Musicology 3 no 3 July 229 241 doi 10 1525 jm 1984 3 3 03a00020 JSTOR 763813 Subscription access Barker Andrew ed 1984 89 Greek Musical Writings 2 vols Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23593 6 v 1 ISBN 0 521 30220 X v 2 Barton Louis W G 2009 Influence of Byzantium on Western Chant The Neume Notation Project Research in Computer Applications to Medieval Chant Belis Annie 2001 Aristoxenus Grove Music Online doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 01248 subscription required Bower Calvin M 1984 The Modes of Boethius The Journal of Musicology 3 no 3 July 252 263 doi 10 1525 jm 1984 3 3 03a00040 JSTOR 763815 subscription required Boyden David D 1994 Manual of Counterpoint Carl Fischer ISBN 9780825827648 Carroll Nansi 2002 The Walden School Musicianship Course A Manual for Teachers Dublin New Hampshire and San Francisco The Walden School Carver Anthony F 2005 Bruckner and the Phrygian Mode Music amp Letters 86 no 1 74 99 doi 10 1093 ml gci004 Chafe Eric Thomas 1992 Monteverdi s Tonal Language New York Schirmer Books ISBN 9780028704951 Cleonides 1965 Harmonic Introduction translated by Oliver Strunk In Source Readings in Music History vol 1 Antiquity and the Middle Ages edited by Oliver Strunk 34 46 New York W W Norton amp Co Cooper Peter 1995 Mel Bay s Complete Irish Fiddle Player Pacific Missouri Mel Bay Publications ISBN 0 7866 6557 2 Cott Jonathan 1973 Stockhausen Conversations with the Composer New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 671 21495 0 Curtis Liane 1997 Mode In Companion to Medieval and Renaissance Music edited by Tess Knighton and David Fallows page needed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21081 6 Dahlhaus Carl 1968 Untersuchungen uber die Entstehung der harmonischen Tonalitat Kassel full citation needed Dahlhaus Carl 1990 Studies on the Origin of Harmonic Tonality Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09135 8 Fallows David 2001 Tenor 1 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Glareanus Henricus 1965 Dodecachordon Volume 1 translated by Clement Albin Miller Musicological Studies and Documents 6 Rome American Institute of Musicology Gomez Francisco Jose Miguel Diaz Banez Emilia Gomez and Joaquin Mora 2014 Flamenco Music and Its Computational Study In Proceedings of Bridges 2014 Mathematics Music Art Architecture Culture edited by Gary Greenfield George Hart and Reza Sarhangi 119 126 Phoenix Arizona Tessellations Publishing ISBN 978 1 938664 11 3 Hiley David 2002 Mode The Oxford Companion to Music edited by Alison Latham Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 866212 9 Hoppin Richard 1978 Medieval Music The Norton Introduction to Music History New York Norton ISBN 0 393 09090 6 Jones George Thaddeus 1974 Music Theory Barnes amp Noble College Outline Series 137 New York Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 0 06 467168 2 Levine Mark 1995 The Jazz Theory Book Petaluma California Sher Music Co ISBN 1 883217 04 0 Marx Adolf Bernhard 1852 The School of Musical Composition translated from the fourth edition of the original German by August Heinrich Wehrhan London Robert Cocks and Co Leipzig Breitkopf and Hartel Mathiesen Thomas J 1983 Aristides Quintilianus On Music Translated by Thomas J Mathiesen New Haven and London Yale University Press Mathiesen Thomas J 2001a Greece I Ancient The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Mathiesen Thomas J 2001b Harmonia i The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Mathiesen Thomas J 2001c Tonos The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Meier Bernhard 1974 Die Tonarten der klassischen Vokalpolyphonie nach den Quellen dargestellt Utrecht full citation needed Meier Bernhard 1992 Alte Tonarten dargestellt an der Instrumentalmusik des 16 und 17 Jahrhunderts Kassel full citation needed Nikodemos Agioreites St Nikodemos of the Holy Mountain 1836 Eortodromion etoi ermeneia eis tous admatikous kanonas tōn despotikōn kai theometorikōn eortōn edited by Benediktos Kralides Venice N Gluku Reprinted Athens H I Spanos 1961 Palisca Claude V 1984 Introductory Notes on the Historiography of the Greek Modes The Journal of Musicology 3 no 3 Summer 221 228 doi 10 1525 jm 1984 3 3 03a00010 JSTOR 763812 subscription required Palisca Claude V 2006 Music and Ideas in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Studies in the History of Music Theory and Literature 1 Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 9780252031564 Plato 1902 The Republic of Plato 2 vols edited with critical notes commentary and appendices by James Adam Cambridge University Press Porter James 2001 Mode IV Modal Scales and Traditional Music The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Powers Harold S 2001 Mode The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Pratt Waldo Selden 1907 The History of Music A Handbook and Guide for Students New York G Schirmer Rockstro W illiam S myth 1880 Modes the Ecclesiastical A Dictionary of Music and Musicians A D 1450 1880 by Eminent Writers English and Foreign vol 2 edited by George Grove D C L 340 343 London Macmillan Samson Jim 1977 Music in Transition A Study of Tonal Expansion and Atonality 1900 1920 Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 460 86150 6 Serna Desi 2013 Guitar Theory for Dummies Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118646939 Smith Charlotte 1989 A Manual of Sixteenth Century Contrapuntal Style Newark University of Delaware Press London Associated University Presses ISBN 978 0 87413 327 1 Solomon Jon 1984 Towards a History of Tonoi The Journal of Musicology 3 no 3 July 242 251 doi 10 1525 jm 1984 3 3 03a00030 JSTOR 763814 subscription required Taylor John 1876 The Student s Text book of the Science of Music London and Liverpool George Philip and Son Vieru Anatol 1985 Modalism A Third World Perspectives of New Music 24 no 1 Fall Winter 62 71 West Martin L 1992 Ancient Greek Music Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 814975 1 Wiering Frans 1995 The Language of the Modes Studies in the History of Polyphonic Modality Breukelen Frans Wiering Winnington Ingram Reginald Pepys 1936 Mode in Ancient Greek Music Cambridge Classical Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press Reprinted Amsterdam Hakkert 1968 Further reading EditBrent Jeff with Schell Barkley 2011 Modalogy Scales Modes amp Chords The Primordial Building Blocks of Music Milwaukee Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 978 1 4584 1397 0 Chalmers John H 1993 Divisions of the Tetrachord Peri ton tou tetrakhordou katatomon Sectiones tetrachordi A Prolegomenon to the Construction of Musical Scales edited by Larry Polansky and Carter Scholz foreword by Lou Harrison Hanover New Hampshire Frog Peak Music ISBN 0 945996 04 7 Fellerer Karl Gustav 1982 Kirchenmusikalische Reformbestrebungen um 1800 Analecta Musicologica Veroffentlichungen der Musikgeschichtlichen Abteilung des Deutschen Historischen Instituts in Rom 21 393 408 Grout Donald Claude V Palisca and J Peter Burkholder 2006 A History of Western Music New York W W Norton 7th edition ISBN 0 393 97991 1 Jowett Benjamin 1937 The Dialogues of Plato translated by Benjamin Jowett third edition 2 vols New York Random House OCLC 2582139 Jowett Benjamin 1943 Aristotle s Politics translated by Benjamin Jowett New York Modern Library Judd Cristle ed 1998 Tonal Structures in Early Music Criticism and Analysis of Early Music 1st ed New York Garland ISBN 0 8153 2388 3 Levine Mark 1989 The Jazz Piano Book Petaluma California Sher Music Co ISBN 0 9614701 5 1 Lonnendonker Hans 1980 Deutsch franzosische Beziehungen in Choralfragen Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des gregorianischen Chorals in der zweiten Halfte des 19 Jahrhunderts In Ut mens concordet voci Festschrift Eugene Cardine zum 75 Geburtstag edited by Johannes Berchmans Goschl 280 295 St Ottilien EOS Verlag ISBN 3 88096 100 X Mathiesen Thomas J 1999 Apollo s Lyre Greek Music and Music Theory in Antiquity and the Middle Ages Publications of the Center for the History of Music Theory and Literature 2 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 3079 6 McAlpine Fiona 2004 Beginnings and Endings Defining the Mode in a Medieval Chant Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 45 nos 1 amp 2 17th International Congress of the International Musicological Society IMS Study Group Cantus Planus 165 177 Meeus Nicolas fr 1997 Mode et systeme Conceptions ancienne et moderne de la modalite Musurgia 4 no 3 67 80 Meeus Nicolas 2000 Fonctions modales et qualites systemiques Musicae Scientiae Forum de discussion 1 55 63 Meier Bernhard 1974 Die Tonarten der klassischen Vokalpolyphonie nach den Quellen dargestellt Utrecht Meier Bernhard 1988 The Modes of Classical Vocal Polyphony Described According to the Sources translated from the German by Ellen S Beebe with revisions by the author New York Broude Brothers ISBN 978 0 8450 7025 3 Meier Bernhard 1992 Alte Tonarten dargestellt an der Instrumentalmusik des 16 und 17 Jahrhunderts Kassel Miller Ron 1996 Modal Jazz Composition and Harmony Vol 1 Rottenburg Germany Advance Music OCLC 43460635 Ordoulidis Nikos 2011 The Greek Popular Modes British Postgraduate Musicology 11 December Online journal accessed 24 December 2011 Pfaff Maurus 1974 Die Regensburger Kirchenmusikschule und der cantus gregorianus im 19 und 20 Jahrhundert Gloria Deo pax hominibus Festschrift zum hundertjahrigen Bestehen der Kirchenmusikschule Regensburg Schriftenreihe des Allgemeinen Cacilien Verbandes fur die Lander der Deutschen Sprache 9 edited by Franz Fleckenstein 221 252 Bonn Allgemeiner Cacilien Verband 1974 Powers Harold 1998 From Psalmody to Tonality In Tonal Structures in Early Music edited by Cristle Collins Judd 275 340 Garland Reference Library of the Humanities 1998 Criticism and Analysis of Early Music 1 New York Garland Publishing ISBN 0 8153 2388 3 Ruff Anthony and Raphael Molitor 2008 Beyond Medici The Struggle for Progress in Chant Sacred Music 135 no 2 Summer 26 44 Scharnagl August 1994 Carl Proske 1794 1861 In Musica divina Ausstellung zum 400 Todesjahr von Giovanni Pierluigi Palestrina und Orlando di Lasso und zum 200 Geburtsjahr von Carl Proske Ausstellung in der Bischoflichen Zentralbibliothek Regensburg 4 November 1994 bis 3 Februar 1995 Bischofliches Zentralarchiv und Bischofliche Zentralbibliothek Regensburg Kataloge und Schriften no 11 edited by Paul Mai 12 52 Regensburg Schnell und Steiner 1994 Schnorr Klemens 2004 El cambio de la edicion oficial del canto gregoriano de la editorial Pustet Ratisbona a la de Solesmes en la epoca del Motu proprio In El Motu proprio de San Pio X y la Musica 1903 2003 Barcelona 2003 edited by Mariano Lambea introduction by Maria Rosario Alvarez Martinez and Jose Sierra Perez Revista de musicologia 27 no 1 June 197 209 Street Donald 1976 The Modes of Limited Transposition The Musical Times 117 no 1604 October 819 823 Vieru Anatol 1980 Cartea modurilor Bucharest Editura Muzicală English edition as The Book of Modes translated by Yvonne Petrescu and Magda Morait Bucharest Editura Muzicală 1993 Vieru Anatol 1992 Generating Modal Sequences A Remote Approach to Minimal Music Perspectives of New Music 30 no 2 Summer 178 200 JSTOR 3090632 Vincent John 1974 The Diatonic Modes in Modern Music revised edition Hollywood Curlew Music OCLC 249898056 Wellesz Egon 1954 Music of the Eastern Churches The New Oxford History of Music vol 2 14 57 Oxford University Press Wiering Frans 1998 Internal and External Views of the Modes In Tonal Structures in Early Music edited by Cristle Collins Judd 87 107 Garland Reference Library of the Humanities 1998 Criticism and Analysis of Early Music 1 New York Garland Publishing ISBN 0 8153 2388 3 External links EditAll modes mapped out in all positions for 6 7 and 8 string guitar The use of guitar modes in jazz music Neume Notation Project Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine Division of the Tetrachord John Chalmers Greek and Liturgical Modes The Ancient Musical Modes What Were They Eric Friedlander MD An interactive demonstration of many scales and modes The Music of Ancient Greeks an approach to the original singing of the Homeric epics and early Greek epic and lyrical poetry by Ioannidis Nikolaos Ἀristo3enoy ἁrmonika stoixeia The Harmonics of Aristoxenus edited with translation notes introduction and index of words by Henry S Macran Oxford Clarendon Press 1902 Monzo Joe 2004 The Measurement of Aristoxenus s Divisions of the Tetrachord Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mode music amp oldid 1151463174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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