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13.4: Escape Tone

  • Page ID
    258553
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    The escape tone is abbreviated with a lowercase "e" or "e" and "t" in parenthesis and looks like: (e) or (et). It can also be abbreviated with "esc" in parenthesis and look like: (esc.).

    Key FeaturesSauce pot with steam

    • An escape tone is approached by a step and left by a leap in the opposite direction
    • Appoggiaturas and escape tones are generally described as being "incomplete neighbors"
    • Escape tones are usually submetrical, unaccented, and diatonic
    • The tone steps up and then quickly "escapes" the dissonance by leaping to the next chord tone. We might think about the dissonance as our hand touching something hot and the leap being how we would naturally pull our hand away quickly

    Examples

    In this example, there are three different escape tones. In the first measure, we find two escape tones. The overall chord on beats one an two in this measure is a tonic chord in the first inversion. This A major chord is made up of: A, C-sharp, and E. Though the G-sharp could temporarily make this triad into a seventh chord, this is not functioning like a seventh chord and the length of the note is only a sixteenth note. The non-chord tone is approached by a step and then left by a leap in the opposite direction. This is a submetrical, diatonic, escape tone.

    The second example in the first measure comes at the end of beat two. When we left our first escape tone, we ended up on a C-sharp. This non-chord tone is approached by going up a step from the C-sharp to a D that does not belong to our chord. It is then left by a leap in the opposite direction. This is a submetrical, diatonic, escape tone.

    Three measures in key of A major with two escape tones in the first measure and one in the second

    The third example in the second measure again happens while we have an A major chord. The A major chord is made up of: A, C-sharp, and E. On this second beat, we move from the chord tone A up a step to B. B does not belong in this triad and is considered to be an embellishment, or non-chord tone. We leave this brief dissonance by a leap in the opposite direction. This is a submetrical, diatonic, escape tone.

    Attribution: Pot image by Republica from Pixabay


    This page titled 13.4: Escape Tone is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.

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