fbpx
Wikipedia

Secondary chord

A secondary chord is an analytical label for a specific harmonic device that is prevalent in the tonal idiom of Western music beginning in the common practice period: the use of diatonic functions for tonicization.

Secondary chords are a type of altered or borrowed chord, chords that are not part of the music piece's key. They are the most common sort of altered chord in tonal music.[2] Secondary chords are referred to by the function they have and the key or chord in which they function. Conventionally, they are written with the notation "function/key". Thus, the most common secondary chord, the dominant of the dominant, is written "V/V" and read as "five of five" or "the dominant of the dominant". The major or minor triad on any diatonic scale degree may have any secondary function applied to it; secondary functions may even be applied to diminished triads in some special circumstances.

Secondary chords were not used until the Baroque period and are found more frequently and freely in the Classical period, even more so in the Romantic period. Composers began to use them less frequently with the breakdown of conventional harmony in modern classical music—but secondary dominants are a cornerstone of popular music and jazz in the 20th century.[3]

Secondary dominant edit

 
V7 of V in C, four-part harmony[4]

A secondary dominant (also applied dominant, artificial dominant, or borrowed dominant) is a major triad or dominant seventh chord built and set to resolve to a scale degree other than the tonic, with the dominant of the dominant (written as V/V or V of V) being the most frequently encountered.[5] The chord that the secondary dominant is the dominant of is said to be a temporarily tonicized chord. The secondary dominant is normally, though not always, followed by the tonicized chord. Tonicizations that last longer than a phrase are generally regarded as modulations to a new key (or new tonic).

According to music theorists David Beach and Ryan C. McClelland, "[t]he purpose of the secondary dominant is to place emphasis on a chord within the diatonic progression."[6] The secondary-dominant terminology is still usually applied even if the chord resolution is nonfunctional. For example, the V/ii label is still used even if the V/ii chord is not followed by ii.[7]

Definition edit

The major scale contains seven basic chords, which are named with Roman numeral analysis in ascending order. Because tonic triads are either major or minor, one would not expect to find diminished chords (either the viio in major or the iio in minor) tonicized by a secondary dominant.[2] It would also not make sense for the tonic of the key itself to be tonicized.

In the key of C major, the five remaining chords are:

 

Of these chords, the V chord (G major) is said to be the dominant of C major. However, each of the chords from ii to vi also has its own dominant. For example, V (G major) has a D major triad as its dominant. These extra dominant chords are not part of the key of C major as such because they include notes that are not part of the C major scale. Instead, they are secondary dominants.

The notation below shows the secondary-dominant chords for C major. Each chord is accompanied by its standard number in harmonic notation. In this notation, a secondary dominant is usually labeled with the formula "V of ..." (dominant chord of); thus "V of ii" stands for the dominant of the ii chord, "V of iii" for the dominant of iii, and so on. A shorter notation, used below, is "V/ii", "V/iii", etc.

 

Like most chords, secondary dominants may be seventh chords or chords with other upper extensions. Dominant seventh chords are commonly used as secondary dominants. The notation below shows the same secondary dominants as above but with dominant seventh chords.

 

Note that the triad V/IV is the same as the I triad. When a seventh is added (V7/IV), it becomes an altered chord because the seventh is not a diatonic pitch. Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 begins with a V7/IV chord:[8]

 

According to the principles exposed above, in fact, V7/IV, which means the C7 chord, i.e. the dominant seventh chord on the F major scale (C–E–G–B♭), does not represent the tonic because it contains a B♭, which isn't included in the main key, as Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 is written in the key of C major. The chord then resolves on the natural IV (F major) and in the following bar the V7, i.e. G7 (dominant seventh chord on the C major key), is presented.

Chromatic mediants, for example VI is also a secondary dominant of ii (V/ii) and III is V/vi, are distinguished from secondary dominants with context and analysis revealing the distinction.[9]

History edit

 
Secondary dominants in Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 10, op. 14, no. 2, mvmt. II[10]

Before the 20th century, in the music of J.S. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, and Brahms, a secondary dominant, along with its chord of resolution, was considered a modulation.[citation needed] Since this was a rather self-contradictory description, theorists in the early 1900s, such as Hugo Riemann (who used the term "Zwischendominante"—"intermediary dominant", still the usual German term for a secondary dominant), searched for a better description of the phenomenon.[citation needed]

Walter Piston first used the analysis "V7 of IV" in a monograph entitled Principles of Harmonic Analysis.[11] (Notably, Piston's analytical symbol always used the word "of"—e.g. "V7 of IV" rather than the virgule "V7/IV.) In his 1941 book Harmony, Piston used the term "secondary dominant".[12] At around the same time (1946–48), Arnold Schoenberg created the expression "artificial dominant" to describe the same phenomenon, in his posthumously published book Structural Functions of Harmony.[13]

In the fifth edition of Walter Piston's Harmony, a passage from the last movement of Mozart's Piano Sonata K. 283 in G major serves as one illustration of secondary dominants.[14] This passage has three secondary dominants. The final four chords form a circle of fifths progression, ending in a standard dominant-tonic cadence, which concludes the phrase.

 

In jazz and popular music edit

 
Measure 2 shows a bebop cliché arpeggio upwards from the third to the ninth of A79, which is the secondary dominant of D minor, the ii chord in the key of C (V/ii).[15]
 
Secondary dominant in "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" (1971), mm. 1–8[16]

In jazz harmony, a secondary dominant is any dominant seventh chord on a weak beat[citation needed] and resolves downward by a perfect fifth. Thus, a chord is a secondary dominant when it functions as the dominant of some harmonic element other than the key's tonic and resolves to that element. This is slightly different from the traditional use of the term, where a secondary dominant does not have to be a seventh chord, occur on a weak beat, or resolve downward. If a non-diatonic dominant chord is used on a strong beat, it is considered an extended dominant. If it doesn't resolve downward, it may be a borrowed chord.[citation needed]

Secondary dominants are used in jazz harmony in the bebop blues and other blues progression variations, as are substitute dominants and turnarounds.[15] In some jazz tunes, all or almost all of the chords that are used are dominant chords. For example, in the standard jazz chord progression ii–V–I, which would normally be Dm–G7–C in the key of C major, some tunes will use D7–G7–C7. Since jazz tunes are often based on the circle of fifths, this creates long sequences of secondary dominants.[citation needed]

Secondary dominants are also used in popular music. Examples include II7 (V7/V) in Bob Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" and III7 (V7/vi) in Betty Everett's "The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)".[17] "Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue" features chains of secondary dominants.[18] "Sweet Georgia Brown" opens with V/V/V–V/V–V–I. Play

Extended dominant edit

 
 
A diatonic I–vi–ii–V turnaround[19] and a progression with secondary dominants: I–V/V/V–V/V–V–I

An extended dominant chord is a secondary dominant seventh chord that resolves down by a fifth to another dominant seventh chord. A series of extended dominant chords continues to resolve downwards by the circle of fifths until it reaches the tonic chord. The most common extended dominant chord is the tertiary dominant,[citation needed] which resolves to a secondary dominant. For example, V/V/V (in C major, A(7)) resolves to V/V (D(7)), which resolves to V (G(7)), which resolves to I. Note that V/V/V is the same chord as V/ii, but differs in its resolution to a major dominant rather than a minor chord.

Quaternary dominants are rarer, but an example is the bridge section of the rhythm changes, which starts from V/V/V/V (in C major, E(7)). The example below from Chopin's Polonaises, Op. 26, No. 1 (1835)[20] has a quaternary dominant in the second beat (V/ii = V/V/V, V/vi = V/V/V/V).

 

Secondary leading-tone edit

 
A secondary leading-tone half-diminished chord in
Brahms's Intermezzo, op. 119, no. 3 (1893)[20]
 
Three measures from "Easy Living"
showing secondary leading-tone chords.[21]

In music theory, a secondary leading-tone chord is a secondary chord that is rooted on a tone that is a leading-tone of (in short, has a strong affinity to resolve to) a tone just 1 semitone from that root (typically 1 semitone above, though can be below).[22] Like the secondary dominant it can be used as tonicization of only one subsequent chord (which will be rooted in the resolution tone), or the music can continue with other chords/notes in the key of that chord's root for a phrase, or even longer to be considered a modulation to that key. This one-semitone-apart resolution of the secondary leading-tone is in contrast to the secondary dominant which resolves through a wider distance of perfect fifth below or perfect fourth above the chord's root (as per the two distances between dominant and tonic).
While the root of a secondary leading-tone chord needs to be the leading-tone, the other notes may vary and form with it one of: the triad[23] or one of the diminished sevenths (as in seventh scale degree[23] or leading-tone, not necessarily seventh chord) where the type of the diminished seventh is typically related to the type of tonicized triad:

  1. If the tonicized triad is minor, the leading-tone chord is fully diminished seventh chord.
  2. If it is major, the leading-tone chord may be either half-diminished or fully diminished, though fully diminished chords are used more often.[24]

Because of their symmetry, secondary leading-tone diminished seventh chords are also useful for modulation; all four notes may be considered the root of any diminished seventh chord. They may resolve to these major or minor diatonic triads:[22]

In major keys: ii, iii, IV, V, vi
In minor keys: III, iv, V, VI

Especially in four-part writing, the seventh should resolve downwards by step and if possible the lower tritone should resolve appropriately, inwards if a diminished fifth and outwards if an augmented fourth,[25] as the example below[26] shows.

 

Secondary leading-tone chords were not used until the Baroque period and are found more frequently and less conventionally in the Classical period. They are found even more frequently and freely in the Romantic period, but they began to be used less frequently with the breakdown of conventional harmony.

The chord progression viio7/V–V–I is quite common in ragtime music.[22]

Secondary supertonic edit

 
A secondary supertonic chord: ii7/V–V/V–V in C major (a7–D7–G)

The secondary supertonic chord, or secondary second, is a secondary chord that is on the supertonic scale degree. Rather than tonicizing a degree other than the tonic, as does a secondary dominant, it creates a temporary dominant.[23] Examples include ii7/III (Fmin.7, in C major).[27]

Secondary subdominant edit

The secondary subdominant is the subdominant (IV) of the tonicized chord. For example, in C major, the subdominant chord is F major and the IV of IV chord is B major.

Others edit

The other secondary functions are the secondary mediant, the secondary submediant, and the secondary subtonic.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Benward, Bruce and Saker, Marilyn Nadine (2003). Music: In Theory and Practice, Vol. I, seventh edition (McGraw-Hill): p. 275. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  2. ^ a b Kostka, Stefan; Payne, Dorothy (2004). Tonal Harmony (5th ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill. p. 246. ISBN 0072852607. OCLC 51613969.
  3. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), pp. 273–277.
  4. ^ Benward and Saker (2003), p. 269.
  5. ^ Kostka & Payne (2003), p. 250.
  6. ^ Beach, David and McClelland, Ryan C. (2012). Analysis of 18th- and 19th-century Musical Works in the Classical Tradition, p. 32. Routledge. ISBN 9780415806657.
  7. ^ Rawlins, Robert and Nor Eddine Bahha (2005). Jazzology: The Encyclopedia of Jazz Theory for All Musicians, p.59. ISBN 0-634-08678-2.
  8. ^ White, John D. (1976). The Analysis of Music, p.5. ISBN 0-13-033233-X.
  9. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), pp. 201–204.
  10. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), p. 274.
  11. ^ Piston, Walter (1933). Principles of Harmonic Analysis (Boston: E. C. Schirmer). [ISBN unspecified].
  12. ^ Piston, Walter (1941). Harmony (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.), p. 151. [ISBN unspecified]: "These temporary dominant chords have been referred to by theorists as attendant chords, parenthesis chords, borrowed chords, etc. We shall call them secondary dominants, in the belief that the term is slightly more descriptive of their function."
  13. ^ Schoenberg, Arnold (1954). Structural Functions of Harmony, edited by Humphrey Searle (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.): 15–29, 197. The term "artificial", however, appears to refer to the alteration by which a chord changes into another: "By substituting for [altering] the third in minor triads, they produce 'artificial' major triads and 'artificial' dominant seventh chords. Substituting for [altering] the fifth changes minor triads to 'artificial' diminished triads, commonly used with an added seventh, and changes major triads to augmented. Artificial dominants, artificial dominant seventh chords, and artificial diminished seventh chords are normally used in progressions according to the models V–I, V—VI and V—IV. (p. 16.)
  14. ^ Piston, Walter (1987). Harmony. Revised by Mark Devoto (5th ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. p. 257. ISBN 978-0-393-95480-7.
  15. ^ a b Spitzer, Peter (2001). Jazz Theory Handbook, p. 62. ISBN 0-7866-5328-0.
  16. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), p. 277.
  17. ^ Everett, Walter (2009). The Foundations of Rock, p. 198. ISBN 978-0-19-531023-8. Everett notates major-minor sevenths Xm7.
  18. ^ Shepherd, John (2003). Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World: Volume II: Performance and Production, Volume 11, p. 10. A&C Black. ISBN 9780826463227.
  19. ^ Boyd, Bill (1997). Jazz Chord Progressions, p. 43. ISBN 0-7935-7038-7.
  20. ^ a b Benward & Saker (2003), p. 276.
  21. ^ Richard Lawn, Jeffrey L. Hellmer (1996). Jazz: Theory and Practice, pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-0-88284-722-1.
  22. ^ a b c Benward & Saker (2003), p. 271
  23. ^ a b c Blatter, Alfred (2007). Revisiting Music Theory: A Guide to the Practice, pp. 132–133. ISBN 0-415-97440-2.
  24. ^ Kostka & Payne (2004). p. 263
  25. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), p. 272
  26. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), p. 270.
  27. ^ Russo, William (1961/2015). Composing for the Jazz Orchestra, p.80. University of Chicago. ISBN 978-0-226-73209-1.

Further reading edit

  • Nettles, Barrie & Graf, Richard (1997). The Chord Scale Theory and Jazz Harmony. Advance Music, ISBN 3-89221-056-X
  • Thompson, David M. (1980). A History of Harmonic Theory in the United States. Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press.

secondary, chord, confused, with, secondary, triad, subsidiary, chord, secondary, chord, analytical, label, specific, harmonic, device, that, prevalent, tonal, idiom, western, music, beginning, common, practice, period, diatonic, functions, tonicization, sourc. Not to be confused with Secondary triad or Subsidiary chord A secondary chord is an analytical label for a specific harmonic device that is prevalent in the tonal idiom of Western music beginning in the common practice period the use of diatonic functions for tonicization source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Secondary chords in Mozart s Fantasia in C minor K 475 1 Secondary chords are a type of altered or borrowed chord chords that are not part of the music piece s key They are the most common sort of altered chord in tonal music 2 Secondary chords are referred to by the function they have and the key or chord in which they function Conventionally they are written with the notation function key Thus the most common secondary chord the dominant of the dominant is written V V and read as five of five or the dominant of the dominant The major or minor triad on any diatonic scale degree may have any secondary function applied to it secondary functions may even be applied to diminished triads in some special circumstances Secondary chords were not used until the Baroque period and are found more frequently and freely in the Classical period even more so in the Romantic period Composers began to use them less frequently with the breakdown of conventional harmony in modern classical music but secondary dominants are a cornerstone of popular music and jazz in the 20th century 3 Contents 1 Secondary dominant 1 1 Definition 1 2 History 1 3 In jazz and popular music 1 4 Extended dominant 2 Secondary leading tone 3 Secondary supertonic 4 Secondary subdominant 5 Others 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingSecondary dominant edit V V redirects here For other uses see VV disambiguation nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file V7 of V in C four part harmony 4 A secondary dominant also applied dominant artificial dominant or borrowed dominant is a major triad or dominant seventh chord built and set to resolve to a scale degree other than the tonic with the dominant of the dominant written as V V or V of V being the most frequently encountered 5 The chord that the secondary dominant is the dominant of is said to be a temporarily tonicized chord The secondary dominant is normally though not always followed by the tonicized chord Tonicizations that last longer than a phrase are generally regarded as modulations to a new key or new tonic According to music theorists David Beach and Ryan C McClelland t he purpose of the secondary dominant is to place emphasis on a chord within the diatonic progression 6 The secondary dominant terminology is still usually applied even if the chord resolution is nonfunctional For example the V ii label is still used even if the V ii chord is not followed by ii 7 Definition edit The major scale contains seven basic chords which are named with Roman numeral analysis in ascending order Because tonic triads are either major or minor one would not expect to find diminished chords either the viio in major or the iio in minor tonicized by a secondary dominant 2 It would also not make sense for the tonic of the key itself to be tonicized In the key of C major the five remaining chords are nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Of these chords the V chord G major is said to be the dominant of C major However each of the chords from ii to vi also has its own dominant For example V G major has a D major triad as its dominant These extra dominant chords are not part of the key of C major as such because they include notes that are not part of the C major scale Instead they are secondary dominants The notation below shows the secondary dominant chords for C major Each chord is accompanied by its standard number in harmonic notation In this notation a secondary dominant is usually labeled with the formula V of dominant chord of thus V of ii stands for the dominant of the ii chord V of iii for the dominant of iii and so on A shorter notation used below is V ii V iii etc nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Like most chords secondary dominants may be seventh chords or chords with other upper extensions Dominant seventh chords are commonly used as secondary dominants The notation below shows the same secondary dominants as above but with dominant seventh chords nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Note that the triad V IV is the same as the I triad When a seventh is added V7 IV it becomes an altered chord because the seventh is not a diatonic pitch Beethoven s Symphony No 1 begins with a V7 IV chord 8 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file According to the principles exposed above in fact V7 IV which means the C7 chord i e the dominant seventh chord on the F major scale C E G B does not represent the tonic because it contains a B which isn t included in the main key as Beethoven s Symphony No 1 is written in the key of C major The chord then resolves on the natural IV F major and in the following bar the V7 i e G7 dominant seventh chord on the C major key is presented Chromatic mediants for example VI is also a secondary dominant of ii V ii and III is V vi are distinguished from secondary dominants with context and analysis revealing the distinction 9 History edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Secondary dominants in Beethoven s Piano Sonata No 10 op 14 no 2 mvmt II 10 Before the 20th century in the music of J S Bach Mozart Beethoven and Brahms a secondary dominant along with its chord of resolution was considered a modulation citation needed Since this was a rather self contradictory description theorists in the early 1900s such as Hugo Riemann who used the term Zwischendominante intermediary dominant still the usual German term for a secondary dominant searched for a better description of the phenomenon citation needed Walter Piston first used the analysis V7 of IV in a monograph entitled Principles of Harmonic Analysis 11 Notably Piston s analytical symbol always used the word of e g V7 of IV rather than the virgule V7 IV In his 1941 book Harmony Piston used the term secondary dominant 12 At around the same time 1946 48 Arnold Schoenberg created the expression artificial dominant to describe the same phenomenon in his posthumously published book Structural Functions of Harmony 13 In the fifth edition of Walter Piston s Harmony a passage from the last movement of Mozart s Piano Sonata K 283 in G major serves as one illustration of secondary dominants 14 This passage has three secondary dominants The final four chords form a circle of fifths progression ending in a standard dominant tonic cadence which concludes the phrase nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In jazz and popular music edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Measure 2 shows a bebop cliche arpeggio upwards from the third to the ninth of A7 9 which is the secondary dominant of D minor the ii chord in the key of C V ii 15 nbsp Secondary dominant in I d Like to Teach the World to Sing 1971 mm 1 8 16 source source source In jazz harmony a secondary dominant is any dominant seventh chord on a weak beat citation needed and resolves downward by a perfect fifth Thus a chord is a secondary dominant when it functions as the dominant of some harmonic element other than the key s tonic and resolves to that element This is slightly different from the traditional use of the term where a secondary dominant does not have to be a seventh chord occur on a weak beat or resolve downward If a non diatonic dominant chord is used on a strong beat it is considered an extended dominant If it doesn t resolve downward it may be a borrowed chord citation needed Secondary dominants are used in jazz harmony in the bebop blues and other blues progression variations as are substitute dominants and turnarounds 15 In some jazz tunes all or almost all of the chords that are used are dominant chords For example in the standard jazz chord progression ii V I which would normally be Dm G7 C in the key of C major some tunes will use D7 G7 C7 Since jazz tunes are often based on the circle of fifths this creates long sequences of secondary dominants citation needed Secondary dominants are also used in popular music Examples include II7 V7 V in Bob Dylan s Don t Think Twice It s All Right and III7 V7 vi in Betty Everett s The Shoop Shoop Song It s in His Kiss 17 Five Foot Two Eyes of Blue features chains of secondary dominants 18 Sweet Georgia Brown opens with V V V V V V I Play Extended dominant edit For a chord with extensions past the seventh see Extended chord nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A diatonic I vi ii V turnaround 19 and a progression with secondary dominants I V V V V V V I An extended dominant chord is a secondary dominant seventh chord that resolves down by a fifth to another dominant seventh chord A series of extended dominant chords continues to resolve downwards by the circle of fifths until it reaches the tonic chord The most common extended dominant chord is the tertiary dominant citation needed which resolves to a secondary dominant For example V V V in C major A 7 resolves to V V D 7 which resolves to V G 7 which resolves to I Note that V V V is the same chord as V ii but differs in its resolution to a major dominant rather than a minor chord Quaternary dominants are rarer but an example is the bridge section of the rhythm changes which starts from V V V V in C major E 7 The example below from Chopin s Polonaises Op 26 No 1 1835 20 has a quaternary dominant in the second beat V ii V V V V vi V V V V nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Secondary leading tone edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A secondary leading tone half diminished chord inBrahms s Intermezzo op 119 no 3 1893 20 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Three measures from Easy Living showing secondary leading tone chords 21 In music theory a secondary leading tone chord is a secondary chord that is rooted on a tone that is a leading tone of in short has a strong affinity to resolve to a tone just 1 semitone from that root typically 1 semitone above though can be below 22 Like the secondary dominant it can be used as tonicization of only one subsequent chord which will be rooted in the resolution tone or the music can continue with other chords notes in the key of that chord s root for a phrase or even longer to be considered a modulation to that key This one semitone apart resolution of the secondary leading tone is in contrast to the secondary dominant which resolves through a wider distance of perfect fifth below or perfect fourth above the chord s root as per the two distances between dominant and tonic While the root of a secondary leading tone chord needs to be the leading tone the other notes may vary and form with it one of the triad 23 or one of the diminished sevenths as in seventh scale degree 23 or leading tone not necessarily seventh chord where the type of the diminished seventh is typically related to the type of tonicized triad If the tonicized triad is minor the leading tone chord is fully diminished seventh chord If it is major the leading tone chord may be either half diminished or fully diminished though fully diminished chords are used more often 24 Because of their symmetry secondary leading tone diminished seventh chords are also useful for modulation all four notes may be considered the root of any diminished seventh chord They may resolve to these major or minor diatonic triads 22 In major keys ii iii IV V vi In minor keys III iv V VIEspecially in four part writing the seventh should resolve downwards by step and if possible the lower tritone should resolve appropriately inwards if a diminished fifth and outwards if an augmented fourth 25 as the example below 26 shows nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Secondary leading tone chords were not used until the Baroque period and are found more frequently and less conventionally in the Classical period They are found even more frequently and freely in the Romantic period but they began to be used less frequently with the breakdown of conventional harmony The chord progression viio 7 V V I is quite common in ragtime music 22 Secondary supertonic edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A secondary supertonic chord ii7 V V V V in C major a7 D7 G The secondary supertonic chord or secondary second is a secondary chord that is on the supertonic scale degree Rather than tonicizing a degree other than the tonic as does a secondary dominant it creates a temporary dominant 23 Examples include ii7 III F min 7 in C major 27 Secondary subdominant editThe secondary subdominant is the subdominant IV of the tonicized chord For example in C major the subdominant chord is F major and the IV of IV chord is B major Others editThe other secondary functions are the secondary mediant the secondary submediant and the secondary subtonic See also editBarbershop seventh chord Backdoor progression Circle progression Common tone diminished seventh chord ii V I progression Secondary development SubtonicReferences edit Benward Bruce and Saker Marilyn Nadine 2003 Music In Theory and Practice Vol I seventh edition McGraw Hill p 275 ISBN 978 0 07 294262 0 a b Kostka Stefan Payne Dorothy 2004 Tonal Harmony 5th ed Boston McGraw Hill p 246 ISBN 0072852607 OCLC 51613969 Benward amp Saker 2003 pp 273 277 Benward and Saker 2003 p 269 Kostka amp Payne 2003 p 250 Beach David and McClelland Ryan C 2012 Analysis of 18th and 19th century Musical Works in the Classical Tradition p 32 Routledge ISBN 9780415806657 Rawlins Robert and Nor Eddine Bahha 2005 Jazzology The Encyclopedia of Jazz Theory for All Musicians p 59 ISBN 0 634 08678 2 White John D 1976 The Analysis of Music p 5 ISBN 0 13 033233 X Benward amp Saker 2003 pp 201 204 Benward amp Saker 2003 p 274 Piston Walter 1933 Principles of Harmonic Analysis Boston E C Schirmer ISBN unspecified Piston Walter 1941 Harmony New York W W Norton amp Company Inc p 151 ISBN unspecified These temporary dominant chords have been referred to by theorists as attendant chords parenthesis chords borrowed chords etc We shall call them secondary dominants in the belief that the term is slightly more descriptive of their function Schoenberg Arnold 1954 Structural Functions of Harmony edited by Humphrey Searle New York W W Norton amp Company Inc 15 29 197 The term artificial however appears to refer to the alteration by which a chord changes into another By substituting for altering the third in minor triads they produce artificial major triads and artificial dominant seventh chords Substituting for altering the fifth changes minor triads to artificial diminished triads commonly used with an added seventh and changes major triads to augmented Artificial dominants artificial dominant seventh chords and artificial diminished seventh chords are normally used in progressions according to the models V I V VI and V IV p 16 Piston Walter 1987 Harmony Revised by Mark Devoto 5th ed New York W W Norton amp Company Inc p 257 ISBN 978 0 393 95480 7 a b Spitzer Peter 2001 Jazz Theory Handbook p 62 ISBN 0 7866 5328 0 Benward amp Saker 2003 p 277 Everett Walter 2009 The Foundations of Rock p 198 ISBN 978 0 19 531023 8 Everett notates major minor sevenths Xm7 Shepherd John 2003 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume II Performance and Production Volume 11 p 10 A amp C Black ISBN 9780826463227 Boyd Bill 1997 Jazz Chord Progressions p 43 ISBN 0 7935 7038 7 a b Benward amp Saker 2003 p 276 Richard Lawn Jeffrey L Hellmer 1996 Jazz Theory and Practice pp 97 98 ISBN 978 0 88284 722 1 a b c Benward amp Saker 2003 p 271 a b c Blatter Alfred 2007 Revisiting Music Theory A Guide to the Practice pp 132 133 ISBN 0 415 97440 2 Kostka amp Payne 2004 p 263 Benward amp Saker 2003 p 272 Benward amp Saker 2003 p 270 Russo William 1961 2015 Composing for the Jazz Orchestra p 80 University of Chicago ISBN 978 0 226 73209 1 Further reading editNettles Barrie amp Graf Richard 1997 The Chord Scale Theory and Jazz Harmony Advance Music ISBN 3 89221 056 X Thompson David M 1980 A History of Harmonic Theory in the United States Kent Ohio The Kent State University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Secondary chord amp oldid 1096024384 Secondary dominant, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.