Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
In this article I develop of a model for understanding chromatic harmonies beyond mixture and tonicisation as extensions of common‐practice procedures by emphasising the symbiosis between the vertical presence of fundamental dissonances (the tritone and diminished seventh) and their linear behaviour in resolving to consonances under dominant conditions. I describe how sonorities such as the major‐minor and half‐diminished seventh both carry historically engrained default tonal expectations but also contain latent fundamental dissonances in the form of the major sixth/minor third and tritone intervals, which permits extended enharmonic reinterpretation as chromatic variants of viio7$^{{\sf o}7}$ chords. Because these alterations of viio7$^{{\sf o}7}$ sound like traditional tonal sonorities, I speculate that Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss manipulate conventional common‐practice chords to behave anachronistically with respect to the expectations associated with their sonority, exploiting a subtle tension between those phenomenological expectations and the resolutions that coalesce. By emphasising the mechanics of functional dissonance resolution as a parameter that anchors these chromatic progressions in common‐practice tonal idioms, this approach suggests that these progressions, previously considered tonally disjunct, can also be described in functional terms through appeals to their voice‐leading behaviour, which in turn allows greater nuance in assessing the historiography of tonality in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, especially as it pertains to the notion of modernism.
Music Analysis – Wiley
Published: Mar 1, 2022
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.