Dictionary Definition
tonality n : any of 24 major or minor diatonic
scales that provide the tonal framework for a piece of music [syn:
key] [ant: atonality]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
tonality (plural tonalities)Extensive Definition
Tonality is a system of music in which certain hierarchical pitch
relationships are based on a key "center"
or tonic. The
term tonalité originated with
Alexandre-Étienne Choron (1810) and was borrowed by
François-Joseph Fétis in 1840 (Reti, 1958; Simms 1975, 119;
Judd, 1998; Dahlhaus 1990). Although Fétis used it as a general
term for a system of musical organization and spoke of types de
tonalités rather than a single system, today the term is most often
used to refer to Major-Minor
tonality (also called diatonic tonality or functional tonality),
the system of musical organization of the common
practice period and most popular music in much of the world
today.
History
Theories of tonal music are generally dated from
Jean-Philippe
Rameau's Treatise on Harmony (1722), where he describes music
written through chord progressions, cadences and structure. He
claims that his work represents "the practice of the last 40 years
[1682-1722]", however, this is probably not the case. Rameau's
work, initially controversial, was introduced to Germany by
Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg (1757) and adopted by him in his
explanation of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach (Marpurg
1753–54). The vocabulary of describing notes in relationship to the
tonic note, and the use of harmonic progressions and cadences
becomes absorbed into the practice of Bach. Essential to this
version of tonal theory are the chorales harmonizations of Bach,
and the method by which a church melody is given a four part
harmony by assigning cadences, and then creating a "natural",
meaning in this case the most direct, thoroughbass and then
filling in the middle voices.
In 1821 Castil-Blaze used tonalité for what he
called cordes tonales (today primary
triads), the tonic, fourth (subdominant), and fifth (dominant).
All other chords were cordes melodiques. Hugo Riemann
defined tonality as, "the special meaning [functions] that chords
receive through their relationship to a fundamental sonority, the
tonic triad."
Fétis (1844) defined tonality, specifically
tonalité moderne as the, "set of relationships, simultaneous or
successive, among the tones of the scale," allowing for other types
de tonalités among different cultures. Further he considered
tonalité moderne as "trans-tonic order" and tonalité ancienne
"uni-tonic order", trans-tonic meaning simply that the dominant
seventh both establishes the key and allows for modulation to other
keys. He described his earliest example of tonalité moderne: "In
the passage quoted here from Monteverdi's madrigal [Cruda amarilli,
mm.9-19 and 24-30], one sees a tonality determined by the accord
parfait [root position major chord] on the tonic, by the sixth
chord assigned to the third and seventh degrees, by the optional
choice of the accord parfait or the sixth chord on the sixth
degree, and finally, by the accord parfait and, above all, by the
unprepared seventh chord (with major third) on the dominant."
(p.171)
Fétis believed that tonality, tonalité moderne,
was entirely cultural, "For the elements of music, nature provides
nothing but a multitude of tones differing in pitch, duration, and
intensity by the greater or least degree...The conception of the
relationships that exist among them is awakened in the intellect,
and, by the action of sensitivity on the one hand, and will on the
other, the mind coordinates the tones into different series, each
of which corresponds to a particular class of emotions, sentiments,
and ideas. Hence these series become various types of tonalities."
(p.11f) "But one will say, 'What is the principle behind these
scales, and what, if not acoustic phenomena and the laws of
mathematics, has set the order of their tones?' I respond that this
principle is purely metaphysical [anthropological]. We conceive
this order and the melodic and harmonic phenomena that spring from
it out of our conformation and education." (p.249) In contrast,
Hugo Riemann believed tonality, "affinites between tones" or
Tonverwandtschaften, was entirely natural and, following Moritz
Hauptmann (1853), that the major third and perfect fifth were
the only "directly intelligible" intervals, and that I, IV, and V,
the tonic, subdominant, and dominant were related by the perfect
fifths between their roots. (Dahlhaus 1990, p.101-2)
By the 1840s the practice of harmony had expanded
to include more chromatic notes, a wider chord vocabulary,
particularly the more frequent used of the diminished seventh chord
- a four note chord of all minor thirds which could lead to any
other chord. It is in this era that the word "tonality" becomes
more commonly used. At the same time the elaboration of both the
fugue and the sonata form
in terms of key relationships becomes more rigorous, and the study
of harmonic progressions, voice leading and ambiguity of key
becomes more precise.
Theorists such as Edward
Lowinsky, Hugo Riemann, and others pushed the date at which
modern tonality began, and the cadence began to be seen as the
definitive way that a tonality is established in a work of music
(Judd, 1998).
In response Bernhard
Meier instead used a "tonality" and "modality", modern vs
ancient, dichotomy, with Renaissance
music being modal. The term modality has been criticized by
Harold
Powers, among others. However, it is widely used to describe
music whose harmonic function centers on notes rather than on
chords, including some of the music of Bartók,
Stravinsky,
Vaughan
Williams, Charles Ives
and composers of minimalist music. This and other modal music is,
broadly, often considered tonal.
In the early 20th century the vocabulary of tonal
theory is decisively influenced by two theorists: composer Arnold
Schoenberg whose Harmonielehre (Theory of Harmony) describes in
detail chords, chord progressions, vagrant chords, creation of
tonal areas, voice leading in terms of harmony. To Schoenberg,
every note has "structural function" to assert or deny a tonality,
based on its tendency to establish or undermine a single tonic
triad as central. At the same time Heinrich
Schenker was evolving a theory based on expansion of horizontal
relationships. To Schenker the background of every successful tonal
piece is based on a simple cadence, which is then elaborated and
elongated in the middleground and the background. Though adherents
of the two theorists argued back and forth, in the mid-century a
synthesis of their ideas was widely taught as "tonal theory", most
particularly Schenker's use of graphical analysis, and Schoenberg's
emphasis on tonal distance.
The practice of jazz developed its own theory of
tonality, stating that while the cadence is not central to
establishing a tonality—the presence of the I and V chords and
either the IV or ii chord in progression is. This theory emphasized
the play of modal elements against tonal elements, in an effort to
allow improvisation, and inflection of standard melodies. Among
theorists influenced by this view are Meier, Schillinger and the
be-bop school of Jazz.
While many regard the works of Schoenberg post
1911 as "atonal," one
influential school of thought, to which Schoenberg himself
belonged, argued that chromatic composition led to a "new
tonality", this view is argued by George Perle in his works on
"post diatonic tonality". The central idea of this theory is that
music is always perceived as having a center, and even in a fully
chromatic work, composers establish and disintegrate centers in a
manner analogous to traditional harmony. This view is highly
controversial, and remains a topic of intense debate.
However, tonality may be considered generally
with no restrictions as to the date or place at which the music was
produced, or (very little) restriction as to the materials and
methods used. This definition includes much non-western music and
western music before 17th century. By the middle of the twentieth
century, it had become "evident that triadic structure does not
necessarily generate a tone center, that nontriadic harmonic
formations may be made to function as referential elements, and
that the assumption of a twelve-tone complex does not preclude the
existence of tone centers" (Perle 1991, 8). Centric is sometimes
used to describe music which is not traditionally tonal but which
nevertheless has a relatively strong tonal center. See: pitch
center.
In the early 20th century, the tonality which had
prevailed since the 1600s was seen to have reached a crisis or
break down point. Because of the "increased use of ambiguous
chords, the less probable harmonic progressions, and the more
unusual melodic and rhythmic inflections", the syntax of functional
harmony was loosened to the point where "At best, the felt
probabilities of the style system had become obscure; at worst,
they were approaching a uniformity which provided few guides for
either composition or listening" (Meyer 1967, 241). This led to a
series of responses, many of which were considered irreconcilable
with tonal theory or tonality at all. At the same time, other
composers and theorists maintained that tonality had been stretched
but not broken. This led to more technical vocabularies to describe
tonality, including pitch classes, pitch sets, graphical analysis,
and describing works in terms, not of their notes, but of their
dominant intervals.
While tonality is the most common form of
organizing Western
Music, it is not universal, nor is the seven-note scale
universal. However, Alfred Einstein wrote, regarding the ancient
civilizations, that in ancient China "the development from the
non-semitonal pentatonic to the seven-note scale is certainly
traceable, even though the old pentatonic always remained the
foundation of its music" (Einstein 1954, 7). He similarly notes the
same kind of thing regarding ancient Japan, and Java. Much folk
music and the art music of many cultures focus on a pentatonic, or
five-note scale, including Beijing Opera, the folk music of
Hungary, and the musical traditions of Japan.
Pre-classical concert music was largely modal, as is
much folk and some popular music. In the early 20th century many
techniques were developed and applied to tonal music, such as
non-tertian secundal or
quartal music. Some,
such as Benjamin
Boretz, consider tonal theory a specific part of atonal theory or musical
set theory, which is in turn part of a more general theory of
music. Many composers such as Darius
Milhaud and Philip Glass
have been interested in bitonality. While at one
point in the middle of the 20th century classical composers
interested in the twelve
tone technique and serialism declared tonality
dead, many composers have since returned to tonality, including
many minimalists and
older composers such as George
Rochberg. Other composers never abandoned tonality entirely
such as Lou Harrison
who says he has "always composed both modally and chromatically"
(Harrison, 1992) (page#). Much music today that is described as
tonal is nonfunctional tonality such as in that of Claude Debussy,
Steve Reich, Aaron Copland and many others.
Terms
Carl Dahlhaus (1990) lists the characteristic schemata of tonal harmony, "typified in the compositional formulas of the 16th and early 17th centuries," as the "complete cadence" (vollständige Kadenz), I-IV-V-I, I-IV-I-V-I, or even I-ii-V-I; the circle of fifths progression: I-IV-vii-iii-vi-ii-V-I, and the "major-minor parallelism", minor: v-i-VII-III = major: iii-vi-V-I or minor: III-VII-i-v = major: I-V-vi-iii.David Cope
(1997) considers key, consonance
or relaxation and dissonance
or tension, and hierarchical relationships
to be the three most basic concepts in tonality. In describing
these tenets of tonal music, several known terms are used to refer
to various elements of tonal
Tonality
Music is considered to be tonal if it includes
the following five features: (1) it uses a Major or minor
(diatonic) scale system (2) it contains triadic harmonies (three
note chords built from major and minor thirds) (3) it has a tonic
(central tone) (4) it has a leading tone (7th scale degree a
semitone below the tonic) (5) resolution of active tones (that is,
if a chord or note is played that doesn't sound final (like a
leading tone 7th scale degree, in most circumstances), a more
final-sounding chord or tone is played after it (like the tonic) to
resolve the piece)
Since the mid-18th century, tonal music has been
increasingly composed of a 12-note chromatic
scale in a system of equal
temperament. Tonal music makes reference to "scales" of notes
selected as a series of steps from the chromatic scale. Most of
these scales are of 5, 6, or 7 notes with the vast majority of
tonal music pitches conforming to one of four specific seven-note
scales:
major,
natural
minor, melodic
minor, and harmonic
minor.
C major scale:
A natural minor scale:
Other scales or modes are often introduced for
variety within the context of a major-minor tonal system without
disturbing the diatonic
nature of the work. The major scale predominates and the melodic
minor contains nine pitches (seven with two alterable). The seven
basic notes of a scale are notated in the key
signature, and whether the piece is in the major or minor key
is either stated in the title or implied in the piece (there is a
major and minor key for each key signature). While other scales and
modes are used in tonal music, particularly after 1890, these two
scales are the reference point for most tonal music and its
vocabulary.
Other important scales include the other church
modes, the blues scale,
the whole tone
scale used by many Russian composers, pentatonic
scale and the chromatic
scale. Since none of these are the major or minor diatonic
scales, music written exclusively with them is, by the definition
above, not tonal.
Tone-centric music composed in other scale
systems may be microtonal, and while
microtonal music theory may draw from tonal theory, it is generally
treated separately in textbooks and other works on music. However,
within the tonal system, notes "between" the chromatic system are
used in various contexts, including quarter
tones and various effects such as portamento or glissando, where the
instrumentalist moves between established notes of the diatonic
scale. These are usually thought of as being for "colour" rather
than harmonic function, and do not disturb the fundamental
(diatonic) scale being used.
Chords are built from notes of a diatonic scale,
or secondarily on chromatic notes treated as
variations or embellishments of the basic scale. The identity of
the scale is important in that the scale's steps used as roots
determine the system of chord relationships. At any given time one
scale degree is heard as the most important (the "tonic"), and the
chord built on it, always a major or minor triad, is
heard as the most forceful closure.
Roman numerals
In notation, each note or degree of the scale is often designated by a Roman numeral, or, less commonly, solfege:Chords
These numerals also may indicate chords which are built upon the indicated degree. This degree is then known as the root of that chord. Thus "I" describes the tonic chord, the chord built on the tonic note, at a given time. These chords are generally all triads (having three notes, built from thirds, and having a diatonic function).The degree of a scale is both the pitch
(frequency) of that note and that pitch's diatonic function (role),
which is why chords are named by scale degree. Thus the notes of a
chord do not have to be sounded simultaneously, and one to
two notes may function as, or imply, a three (or more) note chord.
Thus a chord described as "V" is based on the fifth note of the
prevailing tonic scale (V-VII-II). In C Major, that would be a
triad based on G, and would be the G Major triad (G-B-D). To
describe a chord
progression, the Roman numerals of the chords are listed. Thus
IV-V-I describes a chord progression of a chord based on the fourth
note of a scale, then one based on the fifth note of the scale, and
then one on the first note of the scale.
Chords are then further named according to their
quality or makeup,
determined by the scale notes which lie a third and fifth (two
thirds) above the degree a chord is built upon. Capital Roman
numerals refer to the major chord, and lower-case Roman numerals
refer to the minor chord. Quality is generally not as important as
the chord's root.
This means that in the traditional major scale,
the ii, iii and vi are minor chords, where as I, IV, V are major.
The chord on the seventh note is a diminished triad and is written
vii with a degree sign. Numbers attached to a chord indicate
additional notes, and one of the most important chords in tonal
harmony is the V7 chord, which is a four note chord that includes
the fourth note of the tonic scale. The "7" refers to a note seven
diatonic steps up from the fundamental note of the chord, not the
seventh note of the tonic scale.
Inversion
A chord's root is determined by which note establishes the chord's relationship to the tonic and not which is in the bass, or the lowest played note. Thus chords are said to be "inverted" when this root note is not sounded as the lowest. For example in C Major C-E-G is the tonic chord. If C is not the lowest note played, it is said to be in "inversion". The first inversion would be E-G-C, and the second inversion would be G-C-E. Since inverted chords are also chords in their own right, in context a chord is sometimes thought to be inverted only when voice leading implies it.Form
The traditional form of tonal music begins and ends on the tonic of the piece, and many tonal works move to a closely related key, such as the dominant of the main tonality (for example sonata form). Establishing a tonality is traditionally accomplished through a cadence which is two chords in succession which give a feeling of completion or rest - the most common being V7-I cadence. Other cadences are considered to be less powerful. The cadences determines the form of a tonal piece of music, and the placement of cadences, their preparation and establishment as cadences, as opposed to simply chord progressions, is central to the theory and practice of tonal music.Harmony
Most tonality uses "functional harmony", which is a term used to describe music where changes in the predominate scale or additional notes to chords are explainable by their place in stabilizing or destabilizing a tonality. This is a complex way of saying that it is possible to explain why a particular note was included, and what that note means in relation to the tonic chord. Harmony with a large number of notes which do not have clear structural function is called "nonfunctional" harmony, which is not to imply "dysfunctional", but merely that the additional notes are not to be played or heard as restricting or advancing the harmonic progression.Consonance and dissonance
In the context of tonal organization a chord or a note is said to be "consonant" when it implies stability, and "dissonant" when it implies instability. This is not the same as the ordinary use of the words consonant and dissonant. A dissonant chord is in tension against the tonic, and implies that the music is distant from that tonic chord. "Resolution" is the process by which the harmonic progression moves from dissonant chords to consonant chords and follows counterpoint or voice leading. Voice leading is a description of the "horizontal" movement of the music, as opposed to chords which are considered the "vertical".Traditional tonal music is described in terms of
a scale of notes. On the notes of that scale are built chords.
Chords in order form a progression. Progressions establish or deny
a particular chord as being the tonic chord. The cadence is held to
be the sequence of chords which establishes one chord as being the
tonic chord; more powerful cadences create a greater sense of
closure and a stronger sense of key. Chords have a function when it
can be explained how they lead the music towards or away from a
particular tonic chord. When the sense of which tonic chord is
changed, the music is said to have "changed key" or "modulated".
Roman numerals and numbers are used to describe the relationship of
a particular chord to the tonic chord.
The techniques of accomplishing this process, are
the subject of tonal music theory
and compositional practice.
Theoretical underpinnings
Tonality allows for a great range of musical
materials, structures, meanings, and understandings. It does this
through establishing a tonic, or central chord based on a pitch
which is the lowest degree of a scale, and a somewhat flexible
network of relations between any pitch or chord and the tonic
similar to perspective
in painting. This is what is meant by tonality having a
hierarchical relationship, one triad, the tonic triad, is the
"center of gravity" to which other chords are supposed to lead.
Changing which chord is felt to be the tonic triad is referred to
as "modulation". As within a musical phrase, interest and tension
may be created through the move from consonance to dissonance and
back, a larger piece will also create interest by moving away from
and back to the tonic and tension by destabilizing and
re-establishing the key. Distantly related pitches and chords may
be considered dissonant in and of themselves since their resolution
to the tonic is implied. Further, temporary secondary tonal centers
may be established by cadences or simply passed through in a
process called modulation, or simultaneous tonal centers may be
established through polytonality. Additionally,
the structure of these features and processes may be linear,
cyclical, or both. This allows for a huge variety of relations to
be expressed through dissonance and consonance, distance or
proximity to the tonic, the establishment of temporary or secondary
tonal centers, and/or ambiguity as to tonal center.
Music notation was created to accommodate tonality and facilitates
interpretation.
The majority of tonal music assumes that notes
spaced over several octaves are perceived the same way as if they
were played in one octave or octave
equivalency. Tonal music also assumes that scales have harmonic
implication or diatonic functionality. This is generally held to
imply that a note which has different places in a chord will be
heard differently, and that therefore there is not enharmonic
equivalency. In tonal music chords which are moved to different
keys, or played with different root notes are not perceived as
being the same, and thus transpositional
equivalency and far less still inversional
equivalency are not generally held to apply.
A successful tonal piece of music, or a
successful performance of one, will give the listener a feeling
that a particular chord — the tonic chord — is
the most stable and final. It will then use musical materials to
tell the musician and the listener how far the music is from that
tonal center, most commonly, though not always, to heighten the
sense of movement and drama as to how the music will resolve the
tonic chord. The means for doing this are described by the rules of
harmony and counterpoint (some influential theorists prefer the
term "thoroughbass" instead of harmony, but the concept is the
same). Counterpoint is the study of linear resolutions of music,
while harmony encompasses the sequences of chords which form a
chord
progression.
Though modulation may occur instantaneously
without indication or preparation, the least ambiguous way to
establish a new tonal center is through a cadence, a succession of two or
more chords which ends a section and/or gives a feeling of closure
or finality, or series of cadences. Traditionally cadences act both
harmonically to establish tonal centers and formally to articulate
the end of sections, just as the tonic triad is harmonically
central, a dominant-tonic cadence will be structurally central. The
more powerful the cadence, the larger the section of music it can
close. The strongest cadence is the perfect authentic cadence,
which moves from the dominant to the tonic, most strongly
establishes tonal center, and ends the most important sections of
tonal pieces, including the final section. This is the basis of the
"dominant-tonic" or "tonic-dominant" relationship. Common practice
placed a great deal of emphasis on the correct use of cadences to
structure music, and cadences were placed precisely to define the
sections of a work. However, such strict use of cadences gradually
gave way to more complex procedures where whole families of chords
were used to imply particular distance from the tonal center.
Composers, beginning in the late 18th Century
began using chords (such as the Neapolitan, French or Italian
Sixth) which temporarily suspended a sense of key, and by freely
changing between the major and minor voicing for the tonic chord,
thereby making the listener unsure whether the music was major or
minor. There was also a gradual increase in the use of notes which
were not part of the basic 7 notes, called chromaticism, culminating
in post-Wagnerian music
such as that by Mahler and
Strauss
and trends such as impressionism
and dodecaphony.
One area of disagreement, going back to the
origin of the term tonality, is whether, and to what degree,
tonality is "natural" or inherent in acoustical phenomena, and
whether, and to what degree, it is inherent in the human nervous
system, or a psychological construct and, if the latter, whether it
is inborn or learned, or some combination of these possibilities
(Meyer 1967, 236). A viewpoint held by many theorists since the
third quarter of the 19th century holds that diatonic scales and
tonality arise from natural overtones (Riemann 1872, 1875, 1882,
1893, 1905, 1914–15; Schenker 1906–35; Hindemith 1937–70),
following the publication in 1862 of the first edition of
Helmholtz's On the Sensation of Tone (Helmholtz 1877).
Effect
Rudolph Réti differentiates between harmonic tonality, of the traditional homophonic kind, and melodic tonality, as in monophonic. He argues that in the progression I-x-V-I (and all progressions), V-I is the only step "which as such produces the effect of tonality," and that all other chord successions, diatonic or not, though being closer or farther from the tonic-dominant, are "the composer's free invention." He describes melodic tonality as being "entirely different from the classical type," wherein, "the whole line is to be understood as a musical unit mainly through its relationship to this basic note [the tonic]," this note not always being the tonic that would be interpreted according to harmonic tonality. His examples are ancient Jewish and Gregorian chant and other Eastern music, and he points out how these melodies often may be interrupted at any point and returned to the tonic, yet harmonically tonal melodies, such as that from Mozart's The Magic Flute below, are actually "strict harmonic-rhythmic pattern[s]," and include many points "from which it is impossible, that is, illogical, unless we want to destroy the innermost sense of the whole line." (Reti, 1958)-
- x = return to tonic near inevitable
- circled x = possible but not inevitable
- circle = impossible
- circled x = possible but not inevitable
-
- (Reti, 1958)
- x = return to tonic near inevitable
Consequently, he argues, melodically tonal
melodies resist harmonization and only reemerge in western music
after, "harmonic tonality was abandoned," as in the music of
Claude
Debussy: "melodic tonality plus modulation is [Debussy's]
modern tonality." (page 23)
External links
- Music Fundamentals: Tonal Music PDF
- Tonal Harmony Reference Materials for the Undergraduate Theory Student
- Tonality, Modality, and Atonality by Larry Solomon
- Basic guide to tonal theory
- The Tonal Centre "explains and demonstrates some of the key concepts of tonality"
- Algebra of Tonal Functions.
References
- Beswick, Delbert Meacham. 1951. "The Problem of Tonality in Seventeenth-Century Music." Ph.D. diss. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina.
- Jim Samson (1977) suggests the following discussions of tonality as defined by Fétis, Helmholtz, Riemann, D'Indy, Adler, Yasser, and others:
- Shirlaw, Matthew (1955/1969). Theory of Harmony. ISBN 0-306-71658-5.
Sources
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- Choron, Alexandre. 1810. "Sommaire de l'histoire de la musique." In vol. 1 of François Fayolle and Alexandre Choron, Dictionnaire historique de musiciens. 2 vols. Paris: Valade et Lenormant, 1810–11.
- Cope, David. 1997. Techniques of the Contemporary Composer, p.12. New York, New York: Schirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-864737-8.
- Dahlhaus, Carl. 1990. Studies in the Origin of Harmonic
Tonality. Translated by Robert O. Gjerdingen. Princeton University
Press. ISBN 0-691-09135-8.
- Castile-Blaze. 1821. Dictionnaire de musique moderne. Paris: Au magazin de musique de la Lyre moderne.
- Fétis, Joseph. 1722. Traité complet de la théorie et de la pratique de l'harmonie contenant la doctrine de la science et de l'art, 2d ed., p.166. Brussels and Paris.
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- Rameau, Jean-Philippe. 1737. Génération harmonique, ou Traité de musique théorique et pratique. Paris.
- Riemann, Hugo; cited in Gurlitt, W. (1950). "Hugo Riemann (1849-1919)".
- Einstein, Alfred. 1954. A Short History of Music, fourth American edition, revised. New York: Vintage Books.
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- Helmholtz, Hermann von. 1877. Die Lehre von den Tonempfindungen als physiologische Grundlage für die Theorie der Musik. Fourth edition. Braunschweig: F. Vieweg. English, as On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music. 2d English ed. translated, thoroughly rev. and corrected, rendered conformal to the 4th (and last) German ed. of 1877, with numerous additional notes and a new additional appendix bringing down information to 1885, and especially adapted to the use of music students, by Alexander J. Ellis. With a new introd. (1954) by Henry Margenau. New York, Dover Publications, 1954.
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tonality in Czech: Tonalita
tonality in German: Tonalität (Musik)
tonality in Estonian: Tonaalsus
tonality in Spanish: Tonalidad
tonality in Esperanto: Tonaleco
tonality in Persian: مایه (موسیقی)
tonality in French: Système tonal
tonality in Hebrew: טונאליות
tonality in Georgian: ტონალობა
tonality in Latvian: Tonalitāte
tonality in Dutch: Tonaliteit
tonality in Japanese: 調性音楽
tonality in Polish: System tonalny
tonality in Portuguese: Tonalidade
tonality in Russian: Тональность
tonality in Simple English: Tonality
tonality in Finnish: Tonaalisuus
tonality in Swedish: Tonalitet
tonality in Turkish: Tonalite
tonality in Ukrainian: Тональність
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
French pitch, Klangfarbe, arc lighting,
black and white, chiaroscuro, clang color,
classical pitch, color,
coloring, contrast, decorative lighting,
depth, direct lighting,
dominant, dulcetness, electric
lighting, enlightenment, festoon
lighting, floodlighting, fluorescent
lighting, gaslighting, glow lighting,
height, high pitch,
highlights, illumination, incandescent
lighting, indirect lighting, irradiation, key, key signature, keynote, light and shade,
lighting, low pitch,
major, major key, mediant, mellifluence, mellifluousness,
melodiousness,
melody, minor, musical quality, musical
sound, musicality,
new philharmonic pitch, note, overhead lighting, pedal
point, philharmonic pitch, philosophical pitch, pitch, radiation, register, spot lighting, stage
lighting, standard pitch, strip lighting, subdominant, submediant, subtonic, supertonic, sweetness, timbre, tone, tone color, tone quality,
tonic, tonic key, tune, tunefulness