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Tetrachord

In music theory, a tetrachord (Greek: τετράχορδoν; Latin: tetrachordum) is a series of four notes separated by three intervals. In traditional music theory, a tetrachord always spanned the interval of a perfect fourth, a 4:3 frequency proportion (approx. 498 cents)—but in modern use it means any four-note segment of a scale or tone row, not necessarily related to a particular tuning system.

History Edit

The name comes from tetra (from Greek—"four of something") and chord (from Greek chordon—"string" or "note"). In ancient Greek music theory, tetrachord signified a segment of the greater and lesser perfect systems bounded by immovable notes (Greek: ἑστῶτες); the notes between these were movable (Greek: κινούμενοι). It literally means four strings, originally in reference to harp-like instruments such as the lyre or the kithara, with the implicit understanding that the four strings produced adjacent (i.e., conjunct) notes.

Modern music theory uses the octave as the basic unit for determining tuning, where ancient Greeks used the tetrachord. Ancient Greek theorists recognized that the octave is a fundamental interval but saw it as built from two tetrachords and a whole tone.[1]

Ancient Greek music theory Edit

Ancient Greek music theory distinguishes three genera (singular: genus) of tetrachords. These genera are characterized by the largest of the three intervals of the tetrachord:

Diatonic
A diatonic tetrachord has a characteristic interval that is less than or equal to half the total interval of the tetrachord (or approximately 249 cents). This characteristic interval is usually slightly smaller (approximately 200 cents), becoming a whole tone. Classically, the diatonic tetrachord consists of two intervals of a tone and one of a semitone, e.g. A–G–F–E.
Chromatic
A chromatic tetrachord has a characteristic interval that is greater than about half the total interval of the tetrachord, yet not as great as four-fifths of the interval (between about 249 and 398 cents). Classically, the characteristic interval is a minor third (approximately 300 cents), and the two smaller intervals are equal semitones, e.g. A–G–F–E.
Enharmonic
 
Two Greek tetrachords in the enharmonic genus, forming an enharmonic Dorian scale
An enharmonic tetrachord has a characteristic interval that is greater than about four-fifths the total tetrachord interval. Classically, the characteristic interval is a ditone or a major third,[2] and the two smaller intervals are quarter tones, e.g. A–G –F –E.

When the composite of the two smaller intervals is less than the remaining (incomposite) interval, the three-note group is called the pyknón (from pyknós, meaning "compressed"). This is the case for the chromatic and enharmonic tetrachords, but not the diatonic (meaning "stretched out") tetrachord.

Whatever the tuning of the tetrachord, its four degrees are named, in ascending order, hypate, parhypate, lichanos (or hypermese), and mese and, for the second tetrachord in the construction of the system, paramese, trite, paranete, and nete. The hypate and mese, and the paramese and nete are fixed, and a perfect fourth apart, while the position of the parhypate and lichanos, or trite and paranete, are movable.

As the three genera simply represent ranges of possible intervals within the tetrachord, various shades (chroai) with specific tunings were specified. Once the genus and shade of tetrachord are specified, their arrangement can produce three main types of scales, depending on which note of the tetrachord is taken as the first note of the scale. The tetrachords themselves remain independent of the scales that they produce, and were never named after these scales by Greek theorists.[3]

Dorian scale
The first note of the tetrachord is also the first note of the scale.
Diatonic: E–D–C–B | A–G–F–E
Chromatic: E–D–C–B | A–G–F–E
Enharmonic: E–D –C –B │ A–G –F –E
Phrygian scale
The second note of the tetrachord (in descending order) is the first of the scale.
Diatonic: D–C–B | A–G–F–E | D
Chromatic: D–C–B | A–G–F–E | D
Enharmonic: D –C –B | A–G –F –E | D 
Lydian scale
The third note of the tetrachord (in descending order) is the first of the scale.
Diatonic: C–B | A–G–F–E | D–C
Chromatic: C–B | A–G–F–E | D–C
Enharmonic: C –B | A–G –F –E | D –C 

In all cases, the extreme notes of the tetrachords, E – B, and A – E, remain fixed, while the notes in between are different depending on the genus.

Pythagorean tunings Edit

Here are the traditional Pythagorean tunings of the diatonic and chromatic tetrachords:

Diatonic
hypate     parhypate           lichanos           mese
4/3 81/64 9/8 1/1
256/243 9/8 9/8
−498¢ −408¢ −204¢ 0¢
Chromatic
hypate     parhypate     lichanos               mese
4/3 81/64 32/27 1/1
256/243 2187/2048 32/27
−498¢ −408¢ −294¢ 0¢

Here is a representative Pythagorean tuning of the enharmonic genus attributed to Archytas:

Enharmonic
hypate parhypate lichanos                   mese
4/3 9/7 5/4 1/1
28/27 36/35 5/4
−498¢ −435¢ −386¢ 0¢

The number of strings on the classical lyre varied at different epochs, and possibly in different localities – four, seven and ten having been favorite numbers. Larger scales are constructed from conjunct or disjunct tetrachords. Conjunct tetrachords share a note, while disjunct tetrachords are separated by a disjunctive tone of 9/8 (a Pythagorean major second). Alternating conjunct and disjunct tetrachords form a scale that repeats in octaves (as in the familiar diatonic scale, created in such a manner from the diatonic genus), but this was not the only arrangement.

The Greeks analyzed genera using various terms, including diatonic, enharmonic, and chromatic. Scales are constructed from conjunct or disjunct tetrachords.

Didymos’ chromatic tetrachord 4:3 (6:5) 10:9 (25:24) 16:15 (16:15) 1:1
Eratosthenes’ chromatic tetrachord 4:3 (6:5) 10:9 (19:18) 20:19 (20:19) 1:1
Ptolemy’s soft chromatic 4:3 (6:5) 10:9 (15:14) 28:27 (28:27) 1:1
Ptolemy’s intense chromatic 4:3 (7:6) 8:7 (12:11) 22:21 (22:21) 1:1
Archytas’ enharmonic 4:3 (5:4) 9:7 (36:35) 28:27 (28:27) 1:1

This is a partial table of the superparticular divisions by Chalmers after Hofmann.[who?][4]

Variations Edit

Romantic era Edit

 
Descending tetrachord in the modern B Locrian (also known as the upper minor tetrachord):      (b–a–g–f). This tetrachord spans a tritone instead of a perfect fourth.
 
The Phrygian progression creates a descending tetrachord[5][unreliable source?] bassline:     . Phrygian half cadence: i–v6–iv6–V in C minor (bassline: c–b–a–g)

Tetrachords based upon equal temperament tuning were used to explain common heptatonic scales. Given the following vocabulary of tetrachords (the digits give the number of semitones in consecutive intervals of the tetrachord, adding to five):

Tetrachord Halfstep String
Major 2 2 1
Minor 2 1 2
Harmonic 1 3 1
Upper Minor 1 2 2

the following scales could be derived by joining two tetrachords with a whole step (2) between:[6][7]

Component tetrachords Halfstep string Resulting scale
Major + major 2 2 1 : 2 : 2 2 1 Diatonic major
Minor + upper minor 2 1 2 : 2 : 1 2 2 Natural minor
Major + harmonic 2 2 1 : 2 : 1 3 1 Harmonic major
Minor + harmonic 2 1 2 : 2 : 1 3 1 Harmonic minor
Harmonic + harmonic 1 3 1 : 2 : 1 3 1 Double harmonic scale[8][9] or Gypsy major[10]
Major + upper minor 2 2 1 : 2 : 1 2 2 Melodic major
Minor + major 2 1 2 : 2 : 2 2 1 Melodic minor
Upper minor + harmonic 1 2 2 : 2 : 1 3 1 Neapolitan minor

All these scales are formed by two complete disjunct tetrachords: contrarily to Greek and Medieval theory, the tetrachords change here from scale to scale (i.e., the C major tetrachord would be C–D–E–F, the D major one D–E–F–G, the C minor one C–D–E–F, etc.). The 19th-century theorists of ancient Greek music believed that this had also been the case in Antiquity, and imagined that there had existed Dorian, Phrygian or Lydian tetrachords. This misconception was denounced in Otto Gombosi's thesis (1939).[11]

20th-century analysis Edit

Theorists of the later 20th century often use the term "tetrachord" to describe any four-note set when analysing music of a variety of styles and historical periods.[12] The expression "chromatic tetrachord" may be used in two different senses: to describe the special case consisting of a four-note segment of the chromatic scale,[13] or, in a more historically oriented context, to refer to the six chromatic notes used to fill the interval of a perfect fourth, usually found in descending bass lines.[14] It may also be used to describes sets of fewer than four notes, when used in scale-like fashion to span the interval of a perfect fourth.[15]

Atonal usage Edit

Allen Forte occasionally uses the term tetrachord to mean what he elsewhere calls a tetrad or simply a "4-element set" – a set of any four pitches or pitch classes.[16] In twelve-tone theory, the term may have the special sense of any consecutive four notes of a twelve-tone row.[17]

Non-Western scales Edit

Tetrachords based upon equal-tempered tuning were also used to approximate common heptatonic scales in use in Indian, Hungarian, Arabian and Greek musics. Western theorists of the 19th and 20th centuries, convinced that any scale should consist of two tetrachords and a tone, described various combinations supposed to correspond to a variety of exotic scales. For instance, the following diatonic intervals of one, two or three semitones, always totaling five semitones, produce 36 combinations when joined by whole step:[18]

Lower tetrachords Upper tetrachords
3 1 1 3 1 1
2 2 1 2 2 1
1 3 1 1 3 1
2 1 2 2 1 2
1 2 2 1 2 2
1 1 3 1 1 3

Indian-specific tetrachord system Edit

Tetrachords separated by a halfstep are said to also appear particularly in Indian music. In this case, the lower "tetrachord" totals six semitones (a tritone). The following elements produce 36 combinations when joined by halfstep.[18] These 36 combinations together with the 36 combinations described above produce the so-called "72 karnatic modes".[19]

Lower tetrachords Upper tetrachords
3 2 1 3 1 1
3 1 2 2 2 1
2 2 2 1 3 1
1 3 2 2 1 2
2 1 3 1 2 2
1 2 3 1 1 3

Persian Edit

Persian music divides the interval of a fourth differently than the Greek. For example, Al-Farabi describes four genres of the division of the fourth:[20]

  • The first genre, corresponding to the Greek diatonic, is composed of a tone, a tone and a semitone, as G–A–B–C.
  • The second genre is composed of a tone, three quarter tones and three quarter tones, as G–A–B –C.
  • The third genre has a tone and a quarter, three quarter tones and a semitone, as G–A –B–C.
  • The fourth genre, corresponding to the Greek chromatic, has a tone and a half, a semitone and a semitone, as G–A–B–C.

He continues with four other possible genres "dividing the tone in quarters, eighths, thirds, half thirds, quarter thirds, and combining them in diverse manners".[21] Later, he presents possible positions of the frets on the lute, producing ten intervals dividing the interval of a fourth between the strings:[22]

Ratio: 1/1 256/243 18/17 162/149 54/49 9/8 32/27 81/68 27/22 81/64 4/3
Note name: C C C C  C  D E E E  E F
Cents: 0 90 99 145 168 204 294 303 355 408 498

If one considers that the interval of a fourth between the strings of the lute (Oud) corresponds to a tetrachord, and that there are two tetrachords and a major tone in an octave, this would create a 25-tone scale. A more inclusive description (where Ottoman, Persian and Arabic overlap), of the scale divisions is that of 24 quarter tones (see also Arabian maqam). It should be mentioned that Al-Farabi's, among other Islamic treatises, also contained additional division schemes as well as providing a gloss of the Greek system as Aristoxenian doctrines were often included.[23]

Compositional forms Edit

The tetrachord, a fundamentally incomplete fragment, is the basis of two compositional forms constructed upon repetition of that fragment: the complaint and the litany.

The descending tetrachord from tonic to dominant, typically in minor (e.g. A–G–F–E in A minor), had been used since the Renaissance to denote a lamentation. Well-known cases include the ostinato bass of Dido's aria When I am laid in earth in Henry Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, the Crucifixus in Johann Sebastian Bach's Mass in B minor, BWV 232, or the Qui tollis in Mozart's Mass in C minor, KV 427, etc.[24] This tetrachord, known as lamento ("complaint", "lamentation"), has been used until today. A variant form, the full chromatic descent (e.g. A–G–G–F–F–E in A minor), has been known as Passus duriusculus in the Baroque Figurenlehre.[full citation needed]

There exists a short, free musical form of the Romantic Era, called complaint or complainte (Fr.) or lament.[25] It is typically a set of harmonic variations in homophonic texture, wherein the bass descends through some tetrachord, possibly that of the previous paragraph, but usually one suggesting a minor mode. This tetrachord, treated as a very short ground bass, is repeated again and again over the length of the composition.

Another musical form, of the same time period, is the litany or litanie (Fr.), or lytanie (OE spur).[26] It is also a set of harmonic variations in homophonic texture, but in contrast to the lament, here the tetrachordal fragment – ascending or descending and possibly reordered – is set in the upper voice in the manner of a chorale prelude. Because of the extreme brevity of the theme and number of repetitions required, and free of the binding of chord progression to tetrachord in the lament, the breadth of the harmonic excursion in litany is usually notable.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Mathiesen, Thomas J. (2001). "Greece §I: Ancient". In Sadie, S.; Tyrrell, J. (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (second ed.). London, UK: Macmillan. 6 Music Theory, (iii) Aristoxenian Tradition, (d) Scales.
  2. ^ Chalmers 1993, p. 8.
  3. ^ Chalmers 1993, p. 103.
  4. ^ Chalmers 1993, p. 11.
  5. ^ "Phrygian Progression", Classical Music Blog. 2011-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Marcel Dupré, Cours Complet d'Improvisation a l'Orgue, 2 vols., translated by John Fenstermaker. Paris: Alphonse Leduc, 1962, 2:35. ASIN: B0006CNH8E.
  7. ^ Joseph Schillinger, The Schillinger System of Musical Composition, 2 vols. (New York: Carl Fischer, 1941), 1:112–114. ISBN 978-0306775215.
  8. ^ Joshua Craig Podolsky, Advanced Lead Guitar Concepts (Pacific, Missouri: Mel Bay, 2010): 111. ISBN 978-0-7866-8236-2.
  9. ^ . docs.solfege.org. Archived from the original on 2015-06-18. Retrieved 2015-04-12.
  10. ^ Jonathan Bellman, The "Style hongrois" in the Music of Western Europe (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1993): 120. ISBN 1-55553-169-5.
  11. ^ Otto Johannes Gombosi, Tonarten und Stimmungen der Antiken Musik, Kopenhagen, Ejnar Munksgaard, 1939.
  12. ^ Benedict Taylor, "Modal Four-Note Pitch Collections in the Music of Dvořák's American Period", Music Theory Spectrum 32, no. 1 (Spring 2010): 44–59; Steven Block and Jack Douthett, "Vector Products and Intervallic Weighting", Journal of Music Theory 38, no. 1 (Spring 1994): 21–41; Ian Quinn, "Listening to Similarity Relations", Perspectives of New Music 39, no. 2 (Summer 2001): 108–158; Joseph N. Straus, "Stravinsky's 'Construction of Twelve Verticals': An Aspect of Harmony in the Serial Music", Music Theory Spectrum 21, no. 1 (Spring 1999): 43–73; Tuire Kuusi, "Subset-Class Relation, Common Pitches, and Common Interval Structure Guiding Estimations of Similarity", Music Perception 25, no. 1 (September 2007): 1–11; Joshua B. Mailman, "An Imagined Drama of Competitive Opposition in Carter's Scrivo in Vento, With Notes on Narrative, Symmetry, Quantitative Flux and Heraclitus", Music Analysis 28, no. 2/3 (July–October 2009): 373–422; John Harbison and Eleanor Cory, "Martin Boykan: String Quartet (1967): Two Views", Perspectives of New Music 11, no. 2 (Spring–Summer 1973): 204–209; Milton Babbitt, "Edgard Varèse: A Few Observations of His Music", Perspectives of New Music 4, no. 2 (Spring–Summer 1966): 14–22; Annie K. Yih, "Analysing Debussy: Tonality, Motivic Sets and the Referential Pitch-Class Specific Collection", Music Analysis 19, no. 2 (July 2000): 203–229; J. K. Randall, "Godfrey Winham's Composition for Orchestra", Perspectives of New Music 2, no. 1 (Autumn–Winter 1963): 102–113.
  13. ^ Brent Auerbach, "Tiered Polyphony and Its Determinative Role in the Piano Music of Johannes Brahms", Journal of Music Theory 52, no. 2 (Fall 2008): 273–320.
  14. ^ Robert Gauldin, "Beethoven's Interrupted Tetrachord and the Seventh Symphony", Intégral 5 (1991): 77–100.
  15. ^ Nors S. Josephson, "On Some Apparent Sketches for Sibelius's Eighth Symphony", Archiv für Musikwissenschaft 61, no. 1 (2004): 54–67.
  16. ^ Allen Forte (1973). The Structure of Atonal Music, pp. 1, 18, 68, 70, 73, 87, 88, 21, 119, 123, 124, 125, 138, 143, 171, 174, and 223. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-01610-7 (cloth) ISBN 0-300-02120-8 (pbk). Allen Forte (1985). "Pitch-Class Set Analysis Today". Music Analysis 4, nos. 1 & 2 (March–July: Special Issue: King's College London Music Analysis Conference 1984): 29–58, citations on 48–51, 53.
  17. ^ Reynold Simpson, "New Sketches, Old Fragments, and Schoenberg's Third String Quartet, Op. 30", Theory and Practice 17, In Celebration of Arnold Schoenberg (1) (1992): 85–101.
  18. ^ a b Marcel Dupré, Cours Complet d'Improvisation a l'Orgue, 2 vols., translated by John Fenstermaker (Paris: Alphonse Leduc, 1962): 2:35. ASIN: B0006CNH8E.
  19. ^ Joanny Grosset, "Inde. Histoire de la musique depuis l'origine jusqu'à nos jours", Encyclopédie de la musique et Dictionnaire du Conservatoire, vol. 1, Paris, Delagrave, 1914, p. 325.
  20. ^ Al-Farabi 2001, pp. 56–57.
  21. ^ Al-Farabi 2001, p. 58.
  22. ^ Al-Farabi 2001, pp. 165–179; Liberty Manik, Das Arabische Tonsystem im Mittelalter (Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1969): 42; Habib Hassan Touma, The Music of the Arabs, translated by Laurie Schwartz. (Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press, 1996): 19. ISBN 0-931340-88-8.
  23. ^ Chalmers 1993, p. 20.
  24. ^ Ellen Rosand, "The Descending Tetrachord: An Emblem of Lament", The Musical Quarterly 65, no. 3 (1979): 346–59.
  25. ^ Marcel Dupré, Cours complet d'improvisation a l'orgue: Exercices preparées, 2 vols., translated by John Fenstermaker. Paris: Alphonse Leduc, 1937): 1:14.
  26. ^ Marcel Dupré, (1962). Cours complet d'improvisation a l'orgue, 2 vols., translated by John Fenstermaker (Paris: Alphonse Leduc, 1962): 2:110.

Sources

  • Al-Farabi (2001) [1930]. Kitābu l-mūsīqī al-kabīr [La musique arabe] (reprint) (in French). Translated by Rodolphe d'Erlanger. Paris: Geuthner.
  • Chalmers, John H. Jr (1993). Larry Polansky; Carter Scholz (eds.). Divisions of the Tetrachord: A Prolegomenon [introduction] to the Construction of Musical Scales. foreword by Lou Harrison. Hanover, New Hampshire: Frog Peak Music. ISBN 0-945996-04-7.

Further reading Edit

tetrachord, music, theory, tetrachord, greek, τετράχορδoν, latin, tetrachordum, series, four, notes, separated, three, intervals, traditional, music, theory, tetrachord, always, spanned, interval, perfect, fourth, frequency, proportion, approx, cents, modern, . In music theory a tetrachord Greek tetraxordon Latin tetrachordum is a series of four notes separated by three intervals In traditional music theory a tetrachord always spanned the interval of a perfect fourth a 4 3 frequency proportion approx 498 cents but in modern use it means any four note segment of a scale or tone row not necessarily related to a particular tuning system Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient Greek music theory 1 2 Pythagorean tunings 2 Variations 2 1 Romantic era 2 2 20th century analysis 2 3 Atonal usage 3 Non Western scales 3 1 Indian specific tetrachord system 3 2 Persian 4 Compositional forms 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingHistory EditThe name comes from tetra from Greek four of something and chord from Greek chordon string or note In ancient Greek music theory tetrachord signified a segment of the greater and lesser perfect systems bounded by immovable notes Greek ἑstῶtes the notes between these were movable Greek kinoymenoi It literally means four strings originally in reference to harp like instruments such as the lyre or the kithara with the implicit understanding that the four strings produced adjacent i e conjunct notes Modern music theory uses the octave as the basic unit for determining tuning where ancient Greeks used the tetrachord Ancient Greek theorists recognized that the octave is a fundamental interval but saw it as built from two tetrachords and a whole tone 1 Ancient Greek music theory Edit Main article Genus music Ancient Greek music theory distinguishes three genera singular genus of tetrachords These genera are characterized by the largest of the three intervals of the tetrachord Diatonic A diatonic tetrachord has a characteristic interval that is less than or equal to half the total interval of the tetrachord or approximately 249 cents This characteristic interval is usually slightly smaller approximately 200 cents becoming a whole tone Classically the diatonic tetrachord consists of two intervals of a tone and one of a semitone e g A G F E Chromatic A chromatic tetrachord has a characteristic interval that is greater than about half the total interval of the tetrachord yet not as great as four fifths of the interval between about 249 and 398 cents Classically the characteristic interval is a minor third approximately 300 cents and the two smaller intervals are equal semitones e g A G F E Enharmonic Two Greek tetrachords in the enharmonic genus forming an enharmonic Dorian scaleAn enharmonic tetrachord has a characteristic interval that is greater than about four fifths the total tetrachord interval Classically the characteristic interval is a ditone or a major third 2 and the two smaller intervals are quarter tones e g A G F E When the composite of the two smaller intervals is less than the remaining incomposite interval the three note group is called the pyknon from pyknos meaning compressed This is the case for the chromatic and enharmonic tetrachords but not the diatonic meaning stretched out tetrachord Whatever the tuning of the tetrachord its four degrees are named in ascending order hypate parhypate lichanos or hypermese and mese and for the second tetrachord in the construction of the system paramese trite paranete and nete The hypate and mese and the paramese and nete are fixed and a perfect fourth apart while the position of the parhypate and lichanos or trite and paranete are movable As the three genera simply represent ranges of possible intervals within the tetrachord various shades chroai with specific tunings were specified Once the genus and shade of tetrachord are specified their arrangement can produce three main types of scales depending on which note of the tetrachord is taken as the first note of the scale The tetrachords themselves remain independent of the scales that they produce and were never named after these scales by Greek theorists 3 Dorian scale The first note of the tetrachord is also the first note of the scale Diatonic E D C B A G F E Chromatic E D C B A G F E Enharmonic E D C B A G F EPhrygian scale The second note of the tetrachord in descending order is the first of the scale Diatonic D C B A G F E D Chromatic D C B A G F E D Enharmonic D C B A G F E D Lydian scale The third note of the tetrachord in descending order is the first of the scale Diatonic C B A G F E D C Chromatic C B A G F E D C Enharmonic C B A G F E D C In all cases the extreme notes of the tetrachords E B and A E remain fixed while the notes in between are different depending on the genus Pythagorean tunings Edit Here are the traditional Pythagorean tunings of the diatonic and chromatic tetrachords Diatonichypate parhypate lichanos mese4 3 81 64 9 8 1 1 256 243 9 8 9 8 498 408 204 0 Diatonic tetrachord pythagorean tuning source source source Problems playing this file See media help Chromatichypate parhypate lichanos mese4 3 81 64 32 27 1 1 256 243 2187 2048 32 27 498 408 294 0 Chromatic tetrachord pythagorean tuning source source source Here is a representative Pythagorean tuning of the enharmonic genus attributed to Archytas Enharmonichypate parhypate lichanos mese4 3 9 7 5 4 1 1 28 27 36 35 5 4 498 435 386 0 Enharmonic tetrachord pythagorean tuning source source source The number of strings on the classical lyre varied at different epochs and possibly in different localities four seven and ten having been favorite numbers Larger scales are constructed from conjunct or disjunct tetrachords Conjunct tetrachords share a note while disjunct tetrachords are separated by a disjunctive tone of 9 8 a Pythagorean major second Alternating conjunct and disjunct tetrachords form a scale that repeats in octaves as in the familiar diatonic scale created in such a manner from the diatonic genus but this was not the only arrangement The Greeks analyzed genera using various terms including diatonic enharmonic and chromatic Scales are constructed from conjunct or disjunct tetrachords Didymos chromatic tetrachord 4 3 6 5 10 9 25 24 16 15 16 15 1 1 source source source Eratosthenes chromatic tetrachord 4 3 6 5 10 9 19 18 20 19 20 19 1 1 source source source Ptolemy s soft chromatic 4 3 6 5 10 9 15 14 28 27 28 27 1 1 source source source Ptolemy s intense chromatic 4 3 7 6 8 7 12 11 22 21 22 21 1 1 source source source Archytas enharmonic 4 3 5 4 9 7 36 35 28 27 28 27 1 1 source source source This is a partial table of the superparticular divisions by Chalmers after Hofmann who 4 Variations EditRomantic era Edit Descending tetrachord in the modern B Locrian also known as the upper minor tetrachord b a g f This tetrachord spans a tritone instead of a perfect fourth source source source The Phrygian progression creates a descending tetrachord 5 unreliable source bassline Phrygian half cadence i v6 iv6 V in C minor bassline c b a g source source source Tetrachords based upon equal temperament tuning were used to explain common heptatonic scales Given the following vocabulary of tetrachords the digits give the number of semitones in consecutive intervals of the tetrachord adding to five Tetrachord Halfstep StringMajor 2 2 1Minor 2 1 2Harmonic 1 3 1Upper Minor 1 2 2the following scales could be derived by joining two tetrachords with a whole step 2 between 6 7 Component tetrachords Halfstep string Resulting scaleMajor major 2 2 1 2 2 2 1 Diatonic majorMinor upper minor 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 Natural minorMajor harmonic 2 2 1 2 1 3 1 Harmonic majorMinor harmonic 2 1 2 2 1 3 1 Harmonic minorHarmonic harmonic 1 3 1 2 1 3 1 Double harmonic scale 8 9 or Gypsy major 10 Major upper minor 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 Melodic majorMinor major 2 1 2 2 2 2 1 Melodic minorUpper minor harmonic 1 2 2 2 1 3 1 Neapolitan minorAll these scales are formed by two complete disjunct tetrachords contrarily to Greek and Medieval theory the tetrachords change here from scale to scale i e the C major tetrachord would be C D E F the D major one D E F G the C minor one C D E F etc The 19th century theorists of ancient Greek music believed that this had also been the case in Antiquity and imagined that there had existed Dorian Phrygian or Lydian tetrachords This misconception was denounced in Otto Gombosi s thesis 1939 11 20th century analysis Edit Theorists of the later 20th century often use the term tetrachord to describe any four note set when analysing music of a variety of styles and historical periods 12 The expression chromatic tetrachord may be used in two different senses to describe the special case consisting of a four note segment of the chromatic scale 13 or in a more historically oriented context to refer to the six chromatic notes used to fill the interval of a perfect fourth usually found in descending bass lines 14 It may also be used to describes sets of fewer than four notes when used in scale like fashion to span the interval of a perfect fourth 15 Atonal usage Edit Allen Forte occasionally uses the term tetrachord to mean what he elsewhere calls a tetrad or simply a 4 element set a set of any four pitches or pitch classes 16 In twelve tone theory the term may have the special sense of any consecutive four notes of a twelve tone row 17 Non Western scales EditTetrachords based upon equal tempered tuning were also used to approximate common heptatonic scales in use in Indian Hungarian Arabian and Greek musics Western theorists of the 19th and 20th centuries convinced that any scale should consist of two tetrachords and a tone described various combinations supposed to correspond to a variety of exotic scales For instance the following diatonic intervals of one two or three semitones always totaling five semitones produce 36 combinations when joined by whole step 18 Lower tetrachords Upper tetrachords3 1 1 3 1 12 2 1 2 2 11 3 1 1 3 12 1 2 2 1 21 2 2 1 2 21 1 3 1 1 3Indian specific tetrachord system Edit See also Carnatic raga and Hindustani classical music Tetrachords separated by a halfstep are said to also appear particularly in Indian music In this case the lower tetrachord totals six semitones a tritone The following elements produce 36 combinations when joined by halfstep 18 These 36 combinations together with the 36 combinations described above produce the so called 72 karnatic modes 19 Lower tetrachords Upper tetrachords3 2 1 3 1 13 1 2 2 2 12 2 2 1 3 11 3 2 2 1 22 1 3 1 2 21 2 3 1 1 3Persian Edit Persian music divides the interval of a fourth differently than the Greek For example Al Farabi describes four genres of the division of the fourth 20 The first genre corresponding to the Greek diatonic is composed of a tone a tone and a semitone as G A B C The second genre is composed of a tone three quarter tones and three quarter tones as G A B C The third genre has a tone and a quarter three quarter tones and a semitone as G A B C The fourth genre corresponding to the Greek chromatic has a tone and a half a semitone and a semitone as G A B C He continues with four other possible genres dividing the tone in quarters eighths thirds half thirds quarter thirds and combining them in diverse manners 21 Later he presents possible positions of the frets on the lute producing ten intervals dividing the interval of a fourth between the strings 22 Ratio 1 1 256 243 18 17 162 149 54 49 9 8 32 27 81 68 27 22 81 64 4 3Note name C C C C C D E E E E FCents 0 90 99 145 168 204 294 303 355 408 498If one considers that the interval of a fourth between the strings of the lute Oud corresponds to a tetrachord and that there are two tetrachords and a major tone in an octave this would create a 25 tone scale A more inclusive description where Ottoman Persian and Arabic overlap of the scale divisions is that of 24 quarter tones see also Arabian maqam It should be mentioned that Al Farabi s among other Islamic treatises also contained additional division schemes as well as providing a gloss of the Greek system as Aristoxenian doctrines were often included 23 Compositional forms EditThe tetrachord a fundamentally incomplete fragment is the basis of two compositional forms constructed upon repetition of that fragment the complaint and the litany The descending tetrachord from tonic to dominant typically in minor e g A G F E in A minor had been used since the Renaissance to denote a lamentation Well known cases include the ostinato bass of Dido s aria When I am laid in earth in Henry Purcell s Dido and Aeneas the Crucifixus in Johann Sebastian Bach s Mass in B minor BWV 232 or the Qui tollis in Mozart s Mass in C minor KV 427 etc 24 This tetrachord known as lamento complaint lamentation has been used until today A variant form the full chromatic descent e g A G G F F E in A minor has been known as Passus duriusculus in the Baroque Figurenlehre full citation needed There exists a short free musical form of the Romantic Era called complaint or complainte Fr or lament 25 It is typically a set of harmonic variations in homophonic texture wherein the bass descends through some tetrachord possibly that of the previous paragraph but usually one suggesting a minor mode This tetrachord treated as a very short ground bass is repeated again and again over the length of the composition Another musical form of the same time period is the litany or litanie Fr or lytanie OE spur 26 It is also a set of harmonic variations in homophonic texture but in contrast to the lament here the tetrachordal fragment ascending or descending and possibly reordered is set in the upper voice in the manner of a chorale prelude Because of the extreme brevity of the theme and number of repetitions required and free of the binding of chord progression to tetrachord in the lament the breadth of the harmonic excursion in litany is usually notable See also EditAll interval tetrachord Diatonic and chromatic Jins Lament bass Tetrad Tetratonic scaleReferences Edit Mathiesen Thomas J 2001 Greece I Ancient In Sadie S Tyrrell J eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second ed London UK Macmillan 6 Music Theory iii Aristoxenian Tradition d Scales Chalmers 1993 p 8 Chalmers 1993 p 103 Chalmers 1993 p 11 Phrygian Progression Classical Music Blog Archived 2011 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Marcel Dupre Cours Complet d Improvisation a l Orgue 2 vols translated by John Fenstermaker Paris Alphonse Leduc 1962 2 35 ASIN B0006CNH8E Joseph Schillinger The Schillinger System of Musical Composition 2 vols New York Carl Fischer 1941 1 112 114 ISBN 978 0306775215 Joshua Craig Podolsky Advanced Lead Guitar Concepts Pacific Missouri Mel Bay 2010 111 ISBN 978 0 7866 8236 2 Double harmonic scale and its modes docs solfege org Archived from the original on 2015 06 18 Retrieved 2015 04 12 Jonathan Bellman The Style hongrois in the Music of Western Europe Boston Northeastern University Press 1993 120 ISBN 1 55553 169 5 Otto Johannes Gombosi Tonarten und Stimmungen der Antiken Musik Kopenhagen Ejnar Munksgaard 1939 Benedict Taylor Modal Four Note Pitch Collections in the Music of Dvorak s American Period Music Theory Spectrum 32 no 1 Spring 2010 44 59 Steven Block and Jack Douthett Vector Products and Intervallic Weighting Journal of Music Theory 38 no 1 Spring 1994 21 41 Ian Quinn Listening to Similarity Relations Perspectives of New Music 39 no 2 Summer 2001 108 158 Joseph N Straus Stravinsky s Construction of Twelve Verticals An Aspect of Harmony in the Serial Music Music Theory Spectrum 21 no 1 Spring 1999 43 73 Tuire Kuusi Subset Class Relation Common Pitches and Common Interval Structure Guiding Estimations of Similarity Music Perception 25 no 1 September 2007 1 11 Joshua B Mailman An Imagined Drama of Competitive Opposition in Carter s Scrivo in Vento With Notes on Narrative Symmetry Quantitative Flux and Heraclitus Music Analysis 28 no 2 3 July October 2009 373 422 John Harbison and Eleanor Cory Martin Boykan String Quartet 1967 Two Views Perspectives of New Music 11 no 2 Spring Summer 1973 204 209 Milton Babbitt Edgard Varese A Few Observations of His Music Perspectives of New Music 4 no 2 Spring Summer 1966 14 22 Annie K Yih Analysing Debussy Tonality Motivic Sets and the Referential Pitch Class Specific Collection Music Analysis 19 no 2 July 2000 203 229 J K Randall Godfrey Winham s Composition for Orchestra Perspectives of New Music 2 no 1 Autumn Winter 1963 102 113 Brent Auerbach Tiered Polyphony and Its Determinative Role in the Piano Music of Johannes Brahms Journal of Music Theory 52 no 2 Fall 2008 273 320 Robert Gauldin Beethoven s Interrupted Tetrachord and the Seventh Symphony Integral 5 1991 77 100 Nors S Josephson On Some Apparent Sketches for Sibelius s Eighth Symphony Archiv fur Musikwissenschaft 61 no 1 2004 54 67 Allen Forte 1973 The Structure of Atonal Music pp 1 18 68 70 73 87 88 21 119 123 124 125 138 143 171 174 and 223 New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 01610 7 cloth ISBN 0 300 02120 8 pbk Allen Forte 1985 Pitch Class Set Analysis Today Music Analysis 4 nos 1 amp 2 March July Special Issue King s College London Music Analysis Conference 1984 29 58 citations on 48 51 53 Reynold Simpson New Sketches Old Fragments and Schoenberg s Third String Quartet Op 30 Theory and Practice 17 In Celebration of Arnold Schoenberg 1 1992 85 101 a b Marcel Dupre Cours Complet d Improvisation a l Orgue 2 vols translated by John Fenstermaker Paris Alphonse Leduc 1962 2 35 ASIN B0006CNH8E Joanny Grosset Inde Histoire de la musique depuis l origine jusqu a nos jours Encyclopedie de la musique et Dictionnaire du Conservatoire vol 1 Paris Delagrave 1914 p 325 Al Farabi 2001 pp 56 57 Al Farabi 2001 p 58 Al Farabi 2001 pp 165 179 Liberty Manik Das Arabische Tonsystem im Mittelalter Leiden E J Brill 1969 42 Habib Hassan Touma The Music of the Arabs translated by Laurie Schwartz Portland Oregon Amadeus Press 1996 19 ISBN 0 931340 88 8 Chalmers 1993 p 20 Ellen Rosand The Descending Tetrachord An Emblem of Lament The Musical Quarterly 65 no 3 1979 346 59 Marcel Dupre Cours complet d improvisation a l orgue Exercices preparees 2 vols translated by John Fenstermaker Paris Alphonse Leduc 1937 1 14 Marcel Dupre 1962 Cours complet d improvisation a l orgue 2 vols translated by John Fenstermaker Paris Alphonse Leduc 1962 2 110 Sources Al Farabi 2001 1930 Kitabu l musiqi al kabir La musique arabe reprint in French Translated by Rodolphe d Erlanger Paris Geuthner Chalmers John H Jr 1993 Larry Polansky Carter Scholz eds Divisions of the Tetrachord A Prolegomenon introduction to the Construction of Musical Scales foreword by Lou Harrison Hanover New Hampshire Frog Peak Music ISBN 0 945996 04 7 Further reading EditAnonymous 2001 Tetrachord The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Rahn John 1980 Basic Atonal Theory Longman Music Series New York and London Longman Inc ISBN 0 582 28117 2 Roeder John 2001 Set ii The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tetrachord amp oldid 1155565580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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