Tonality is the
character of
music written with
hierarchical relationships of
pitches,
rhythms, and
chords to a "center" or
tonic. Tonic is sometimes used
interchangeably with
key. The term tonalité was
borrowed from
Castil-Blaze (1821,
François Henri Joseph Blaze) by
François-Joseph Fétis in 1840 (Reti,
1958; Judd, 1998; Dahlhaus).
Tonality, then, may be defined in various ways:
- One is through reference to pre-existing
music of a specific time period and location which is assumed to
be tonal, such as that of the
common practice period.
- Analysis of the above music may be used to
define tonal music from the similarities and restrictions
inferred from analysis. This includes the use of the
major scale or
minor scale, their
triadic chords and
diatonic functions, and the
compositional techniques,
procedures, and materials used.
- A definition may be formed from observations
or assumptions of the characteristics of sound,
organization/order, or perception, possibly combined with
aspects of the above analysis, that considers tonality a
practice correctly based on physical or psychological constants.
- Tonal music may simply be contrasted with
atonal music, music which does
not feel as if it has a center.
Jim Samson (1977) clarifies between "the
principle of tonality", "the requirement that all the events in a
musical group should be co-ordinated by, and experienced in
relation to, a central point of reference," and "tonality" as "the
specific language of 'classical tonality'--the major-minor key
system of the Classical and Romantic periods."
Vocabulary of Tonal Organization
Many of the terms and symbols necessary to
analyze tonal organization follow below.
In the vast majority of tonal music pitches
generally conform to one of four specific seven note
scales:
major,
natural minor,
melodic minor, and
harmonic minor. The major scale
predominates and melodic minor contains nine pitches (seven with
two alterable). The basic seven notes of a scale are notated in
the
key signature, and whether the
piece is in the major or minor is either stated in the title, or
implied in the piece. While other scales and modes are used in
tonal music, particularly after 1890, these two are the scales
which are considered the most normal. In
notation, each note or
degree of the scale is often
designated by a Roman numeral, or less commonly
solfege:
Thus "I" describes the tonic chord at a given
time.
Chords, all
triads, are also built upon, in a
tertian manner, and named by the
scale degree which acts as their
root.
The degree of a scale is both the pitch of that
note and that pitch's diatonic function, 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 a three or more note chord. Thus a chord
described as "V" is based on the fifth note of the prevailing
tonic scale. In C Major, that would be a triad based on G, and
would be the G Major triad. 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. Numbers attached to a chord indicate additional notes, 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.
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.
Establishing a tonality is traditionally accomplished through a
cadence which is two chords in
succession - 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.
Most tonality is "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.
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".
In the common forms of tonal organization, since
a chord has a relationship to the tonic, which note is its
fundamental note is set, not by which note is played lower than
the others, but by which note establishes the chord's relationship
to the tonic. This means that chords are said to be "inverted"
when this fundamental note is not sounded 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.
To summarize, traditional tonal music is
described in terms of a scale of notes. On 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". The vocabulary of Roman numerals and numbers is 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.
Theory of Tonal Music
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, though some influential theorists prefer the term
"through-bass" instead of harmony, 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 music, and whether, and to
what degree, it is constructed by the composer, performer and
listener. The arguments involved are too complex to summarize, and
it is difficult to draw clear lines. There is also a disagreement
as to how "natural" the practice of Western tonal harmony is
versus other forms of harmony, and what grounds would prove or
disprove this hypothesis. Since these arguments are often centered
around what kind of music should be performed and taught, they
often assume a vehemence or dogmatism which goes beyond the
nominal issue of hearing and perception.
History of the Term
Theories of tonal music are generally dated from
Jean-Philippe Rameau's
Treatise on Harmony, where he describes music written through
chord progressions, cadences and structure. He claims that his
work represents "the practice of the last 40 years", however, this
is probably not the case. Rameau's work, initially controversial,
was adopted by
Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg
(1718-1795) in his explanation of the music of Johann Sebastian
Bach. 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,
through bass and then filling in
the middle voices.
In 1821 Castil-Blaze used tonalité for
what he called cordes tonales, 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 anciennce "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, tonalite
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 principal 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
tonverwandtshaften, was entirely natural and, following
Moritz Hauptmann (1853), that the
major third and perfect fifth where the only "directly
intelligible" intervals, and that I, IV, and V, the tonic,
subdominant, and dominant where related by the perfect fifths
between their roots. (Dahlhaus 1990, p.101-2)
By the 1840's 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 triads 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
Bartok,
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 work "Harmonielehre"
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 is 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
middle ground 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 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.
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
- (Reti, 1958)
Audio example
Which may be compared with
Media:MOZART1.mp3 in which the
melody returns to the tonic after the first circle, and
Media:MOZART2.mp3 which returns
after the second.
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)
While many regard the works of Scheonberg post
1911 as "atonal", see
atonality, one influential school
of thought, to which Schoenberg himself belonged, argued that
chromatic composition lead 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. In fact, many people, including
Anton Webern, consider all music
to be tonal in that music is always perceived as
having a center. Centric is sometimes used to describe
music which is not traditionally tonal in that it used triads of a
diatonic scale but which nevertheless has relatively strong tonal
center. Other terms which have been used in an attempt to clarify
are tonical and tonicality, as in "possessing a
tonic," and
Igor Stravinsky used the term
polar. See:
pitch center.
A distinction is commonly made between
functional tonality, or sometimes narrative tonality, and
other (nonfunctional) tonality such as the
pandiatonicism of
Aaron Copland or
Steve Reich which often consists
of tonal or tonal added tone chords (trouves or "finds" as Aaron
Copland described some of his own nonfunctional tonality) in
nontonal successions.
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" (vollstandige 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.
General
In the early 20th century, the definition of
tonality which was held to have prevailed since the 1600's was
felt to reach a crisis or break down point. The belief was that
tonality had "snapped" because of expansion of vocabulary,
decreased functionality, increased use of
leading tones,
alterations,
modulations,
tonicization, the increased
importance of
subsidiary key areas, use of
non-diatonic hierarchical methods, and/or
symmetry in
interval cycles. This "crisis"
lead 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 lead 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, many folk musics
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 where
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)
Much music today that is described as tonal is nonfunctional
tonality such as in Claude Debussy, Steve Reich, Aaron Copland and
many others.
Extended tonality
"has been used to describe the incorporation of complex harmonic
phenomena within a single tonal region, as in much of the music of
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries." (Samson 1977)