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22.4: Identifying Secondary Dominants

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    258613
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    Identifying by Sight

    The easiest way to identify a secondary dominant is by scanning the music and seeing an accidental. We can go through this process with some common accidentals:

    Secondary Dominant Identification
    Accidental identified Raised 6th or 7th scale degree Raised 4th scale degree Something else
    What is the key of this piece? Minor key Major or minor key Major or minor key
    Additional information to check Is this harmonic minor? Melodic minor? Does this resolve up a step to the 5th scale degree?

    Is this a chromatic embellishment?

    Does it make a major triad or a dominant seventh that resolves to the chord that is a fifth below the root?

    Result Not a secondary dominant Secondary dominant May or may not be a secondary dominant. Further investigation is necessary.

    Identifying by Sound

    The purpose of a secondary dominant is to briefly tonicize a chord that is not the tonic. Adding the dominant of the dominant creates a momentary cadence that is borrowed from a different key without modulating to that key. What our ear will identify when we hear a secondary dominant is that there is a new piece of information that we have not heard previously (the accidental) and a V-I progression that might sound like a cadence in the wrong place.

    The note that is the accidental (fi) will still resolve up by a step just as our leading tone (ti) resolves up a step to tonic (do).

    Listen to this melody and follow along. Listen to it again and try and identify where you hear the raised fourth scale degree.

    QR code for the link above

    Selection from "Let There Be Peace on Earth" by Jill Jackson and Sy Miller

    Partial melody of Let There Be Peace on Earth with a raised 4th scale degree


    This page titled 22.4: Identifying Secondary Dominants 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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