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Easy
Music Theory
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Note Number: |
Technical name: |
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TONIC |
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SUPERTONIC |
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MEDIANT |
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SUBDOMINANT |
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DOMINANT |
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SUBMEDIANT |
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LEADING TONE |
When we speak of a note in a scale, we can refer to it by its number- 'G' is note number 1 of a G-major scale- or by its technical name- 'G' is the tonic note in a G-major scale. A technical name not only identifies a note, but can also give us information as to the function of a note within a scale. Further, we can build chords on all of the various notes in a scale, and identify those chords by the technical name. (i.e., a tonic chord)
In this lesson, we are only going to deal with tonic and dominant chords. This is because tonic and dominant chords form the basic backbone of much of what we call 'tonal music'. First we need to learn a couple of important definitions:
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Chord: |
The simultaneous sounding of three or more notes. |
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Triad: |
A three-note chord in which one note is identified as the root, another as the 3rd and the other as the 5th. |
A chord can be any three or more notes
played together, but a triad has a particular structure. If
we are in the key of A-major, this would be the tonic
note: If
we build a triad on top of this note, according to the
definition of a triad given above, it would look like
this:
This
is a three-note chord in which the bottom note is acting as
the root, the middle one is the 3rd, and the
top note is the 5th. Any chord with this structure
(root-3rd-5th) is called a triad. The numbers 3rd and 5th
refer to the intervals above the root. Those notes can
appear in any order in the triad, but this lesson will deal
with triads where the root is on the bottom.
We say that the triad shown above,
built on the note 'A', is a tonic triad because it
has been built on the tonic note of the key we're in-
A-major. It is traditional to indicate the triad by using a
Roman numeral. Since we have just built a triad on the first
note of the scale, we place the Roman numeral for '1'
underneath it:
The procedure we just followed to create a tonic triad is the same for any key. Here are several keys, with tonic triads:
(It is traditional in most schools of
theory to indicate major triads with an upper-case 'I', and
minor triads with a lower-case 'i'.) These are tonic
triads because they are chords built on the tonic note. They
are triads because the structure of the chord is
1-3-5. (Root-3rd-5th)
Dominant triads are built in similar fashion as tonic
triads. In other words, simply go to the dominant note of
the scale, and build a 1-3-5 triad. Let's take a good look
at the structure of a dominant triad. Note this one, in
D-major::
We put the number ' V ' underneath it because it is a triad that has been built on the fifth note of the scale. Further, it is called a dominant triad, because the fifth note is the dominant note. In a dominant triad, there is always that leading tone, the middle note, that "wants" to move up to the tonic. That's what gives dominant chords their important place in traditional harmony: they help define the tonic chord in that manner.
IMPORTANT: Dominant triads must
always be major, no matter what key you write them
in. Take a look again at the V-chord above. You will see
that the bottom note is the dominant note of the key. The
middle note is the leading tone of the key. (i.e., C# is the
leading tone in D-major.) This is important. Dominant
chords must always have the leading tone present. But
look at this V-chord in A-minor: A
leading tone is always a semitone, but you can see that the
leading tone in this triad (the middle note) is a whole
tone away from 'A'. So we have to raise the 'G' to
become 'G#':
The
simple way to remember this is to remember this rule: "All
dominant chords must be major. If you are in a minor key,
you must raise the third (middle) of the chord to make it
major." The G# is called an accidental. An
accidental is a sharp or flat symbol placed in the music
that does not normally belong to the given key.
Here are some more dominant triads, in various keys:
The V-chords in the minor keys above had their middle notes (the 3rd) raised by using an accidental in order to create a leading tone to the tonic. For example, the 2nd chord has an E# because E# is a leading tone for the tonic (F#).
The quiz for this lesson mainly requires you to be able to build triads on either the tonic note or the dominant. The most important thing to remember is that if you are building dominant triads, they must always be major (in order to have a leading tone present).
To take the quiz, click "Quiz" above, then print the resulting page and complete it.
Grand Staff
Durations, Pt.2
Key Signatures
Minor Scales
Key Identification
Key Transposition
Other Clefs
Notes
Measures
Intervals
Time Signatures
Triads
Triad Inversions
Score Formats
Keyboard
Small Intervals
Interval Inversions
Measure Completion
Octave Transposition
Cadences
Secondary Dominant Triads
Durations, Pt.1
Major Scales
Dbl Sharps- Dbl Flats
Tonic & Dominant Triads
Triplets & Other "Tuplets"
Modes
Confused? Baffled?
Bewildered? If you've got a music theory-related question that you
need answered, post it at the
"Easy
Music Theory" Forum.
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©1999-2000, Gary
Ewer, B.Mus
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