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3.3: Harmonic Syntax - The Idealized Phrase

  • Page ID
    61960
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    Harmonic syntax concerns the norms or principles according to which harmonies (chords) are placed into meaningful successions. These norms include progressions that are more or less common than others. Those norms generate expectations for listeners familiar with the style: if IV–V is more common than IV–VI, the appearance of a IV chord generates an expectation that the next chord is more likely to be V than it is to be VI.

    In Western classical music, harmonies generally group into three harmonic functions — tonic (T), subdominant (S), and dominant (D) — and these functions group together chords that progress to and from other chords in similar ways. For example, since II and IV are both subdominant chords, they will participate in many of the same kinds of chord progressions, and at times can be substituted for each other with only a minimal change to the musical effect.

    On a local level (chord-to-chord progressions), we can summarize the tendencies of these functions with the cycle T–S–D–T. That is, harmonies tend to progress through a cyclical progression of those three functions:

    T → S → D → T → and so on . . .

    That does not rule out T progressing to D, D progressing to S, etc. But it does mean that those progressions tend to be less common, at least in classical music.

    Higher-level musical structures also impact the norms according to which these harmonic functions progress. For now, we will consider one higher-level structure that influences chord-progression tendencies — the phrase — and we will limit our study to isolated, complete, self-sufficient phrases. This is an idealized, oversimplified setting — like strict voice-leading — that is useful for learning the basics. Some such phrases even exist in real music! But most of the time there are a number of competing factors that influence the chord-progression strategies employed by a composer at any given moment. However, the idealized phrase is a helpful starting point. Future study will explore how classical composers employ harmonic progressions in larger musical works that combine multiple phrases (which are not self-sufficient) into larger themes and movements.

    The idealized phrase

    The idealized phrase (also called the phrase model) is a single musical phrase that progresses through an entire cycle of harmonic functions, beginning and ending on tonic. (Strict voice-leading exercises are such phrases.) These phrases begin with a point of stability (tonic), move away from that stable point, and then eventually lead to a point of high tension and resolution (an authentic cadence). This pattern of stability–instability–stability, or rest–motion–rest, with a single goal at the end, should be familiar both from species counterpoint and from strict keyboard-style voice-leading. (This pattern also governs large-scale formal structures in classical music.)

    The simplest phrase that exhibits this complete harmonic cycle is a tonic-dominant-tonic progression: I–V–I. This phrase begins and ends with the most stable harmony (I), and includes an authentic cadence (V–I). The V is the high point of instability, containing the tendency tone (ti) that most strongly points to the final point of arrival (do, or tonic).

    This harmonic cycle can be expanded by inserting a subdominant chord, a destabilized tonic chord, or both, as in the following examples:

    I IV V I
    I II V I
    I VI V I
    I VI II V I

    In functional bass terms, any harmonic progression that follows the pattern

    T1 → (S_) → D5 → T1

    can serve as the basis for a complete idealized phrase. (Harmonies in parentheses are optional.)

    Phrases are seldom 3–5 chords long, however, and a harmonic function can be expressed by more than a single chord. Thus we can understand the harmonic functions not simply as chords, but as zones of varying length in a phrase, which can be created by a number of chords or short chord progressions. More generally, then, our idealized musical phrase contains a single progression of functional zones T → (S) → D → T, begins with T1, and ends with an authentic cadence (D5–T1), as seen in the example below.

    Triggering and prolonging harmonic functions in an idealized phrase

    To establish, or trigger, a harmonic functional zone, composers tend to use a fixed scale degree in the bass. In other words, tonic tends to be triggered by T1 (always I), subdominant by S2 or S4 (including a variety of II and IV chords, in in root position or inversions, with and without sevenths), and dominant by D5 (V, with or without a seventh, or a compound cadence). These four categories of chords — T1, S2, S4, and D5 — are called functional chords (because they trigger the function) or cadential chords (because they can participate in a cadence).

    Other chords are often called contrapuntal chords or embellishing chords, and are typically used to prolong a function throughout the zone.

    Functional prolongations are shown in a harmonic analysis by writing/typing T, S, or D underneath the individual chord labels (Roman numerals or functional bass) and extending a line from the beginning of the functional zone to the end.

    The following excerpt is from Mozart’s Piano Sonata in A Major, K. 331, I., mm. 1–4, with a harmonic reduction and analysis provided below the original score. Such an analysis is called an interpreted harmonic analysis, because the harmonies are interpreted according to the way they behave in the phrase, rather than merely labeled. In this phrase, note the following:

    • The tonic zone is triggered by a root-position tonic triad (I or T1).
    • Contrapuntal dominant chords (D7 — first-inversion dominant chords) create a passing bass motion between the opening I chord, the vi in m. 3, and the return of I in m. 4.
    • The cadential progression begins in m. 4 with the move from I to ii6 (S4) and then to the cadential six-four and dominant triad (D5). Note that the entirety of the cadential progression in m. 4 is made up of cadential chords — chords with fixed scale degrees in the bass.
    • In contrast, the entire tonic-prolongation zone is made up of contrapuntal chords — variable scale degrees in the bass — with the exception of the I chord that triggered the tonic function.
    • The vi chord is a root-position chord, but still an embellishing chord, while the ii6 is an inverted chord, but still a functional/cadential chord. The difference is not the inversion, but the scale degree of the bass.

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    Not all classical phrases as neatly fit the general trends outlined in this resource. As discussed in Style and tendency, the principles of harmonic syntax are both reliable and bendable/breakable, and it is often the music that bends/breaks the “rules” in interesting ways that we care about the most. So in your own analyses, keep these principles in mind as general principles, and simultaneously look for where composers meet these expectations as well as where they break them.

    For more details on the triggering and prolonging of harmonic functions in a classical phrase, see Harmonic syntax – prolongation.


    This page titled 3.3: Harmonic Syntax - The Idealized Phrase is shared under a CC BY-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Robin Wharton and Kris Shaffer eds. (Hybrid Pedagogy Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.

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