Bi - Tonal Quartal Harmony in Theory and Practice
Bi - Tonal Quartal Harmony in Theory and Practice
Bi - Tonal Quartal Harmony in Theory and Practice
notably in the use of vox principalis and organalis in parallel organum at the end of
the ninth century. Since that time, quartal and quintal harmonies have been
chords built on perfect fourths or fifths form unordered subsets of the diatonic
major scale (example 1), these sonorities typically support a diatonic tonal center
within a functional chord progression. The exception to this rule typically occurs
when chords built on fourths or fifths move in parallel motion in a process called
planing.
1
Earlier
versions
of
this
paper
were
presented
at
the
2014
Joint
Regional
Conference
of
the
College
Music
Society
Mid-Atlantic
and
Southern
Chapters.
A
recording
of
the
Paris
Prludes,
Book
I,
which
use
illustrate
theoretical
principles
described
in
this
article,
is
in
preparation
for
release
on
the
PnOVA
recordings
label.
B
-
E
-
A
-
D
-
G
C
F
the Modernist and Post-Modern periods few composers have used quartal
expands the intervallic vocabulary considerably, and allows for the use of non-
quartal harmony.
pitch vocabulary can contrast significantly from that found in music constructed
from diatonic major and minor scales, bi-tonal quartal harmony extends the
principles of diatonic harmony into a more complex, multi-dimensional, vis a vis bi-
diatonic scales. Bi-tonal quartal harmony extends diatonic pitch vocabulary rather
than departs from it. The co-existence of two harmonic layers creates a bi-tonal
element not found in normal diatonic relations. Most importantly, the bi-tonal
layers occur simultaneously. Both layers are comprised solely of perfect fourths. In
simplest form, the upper (treble) layer contains three notes a perfect fourth apart
and the lower (bass) layer contains two notes a perfect fourth apart.
A single chord may contain up to five notes. If pitches are duplicated in both
layers a vertical sonority may actually have as few as three different pitches. The
total combination of three treble chord tones and two bass chord tones comprise a
complete chord, which then forms part of a chord progression not unlike one found
in tonal harmony.
This theory also codifies the precise relationship between the two
simultaneous layers of harmony into chord classes defined first through greater or
scale
ranging
from
most
consonant
(class
I)
to
most
dissonant
(class
VI)
based
on
chord
interval
content.
Collections
belonging
to
the
same
diatonic
major/natural
minor scale with similar interval vector reside in the same chord class.
formed by the top note of the bass chord in comparison with the top note of the
Contrary to root-based diatonic theory, where the lowest note in a chord is the bass
and the lowest note of a root position chord is named the root, bi-tonal quartal
harmony refers to the top note of each layer as the chord root in any discussion of
chord relations and classification. The reason for this is simply that a construction of
fourths places the most stable note on the top. One might look at this in another
way. By rearranging the tones of each layer in fifths, the root of each layer would
reside as the lowest note, much as the root of a diatonic triad. The choice of stacking
the chords soley as fourths or soley as fifths is immaterial and does not alter the
show a bass chord (one perfect fourth) and a treble chord (two perfect fourths).
Rarely does a pitch exhibit the tendencies of a diatonic root, unless the chord is a
subset of the diatonic scale. Thus a root position chord does not have the
numeral, would be considered a unison root relation because the top note (root) of
each chord layer is Eb. Other class I chords include the major second, perfect fourth
and perfect fifth relations between chord roots. All chords in class I are pentatonic,
and consequently reside in a subset of the diatonic major and natural minor scales.
All class I chords containing the same bass chord root fit into the same diatonic
major scale and all but the major second root relation belong to the same pentatonic
scale. The major second root relation forms a complete pentatonic scale that is
but is a subset of the same diatonic major scale as chords of class I when both
classes share the same bass chord. Neither class I nor class II contains a tritone.
Class III (minor seventh and minor third relation) is pentatonic and derives
from a different major scale than classes I and II if all three share the same bass
chord: the diatonic scale a major second below. Class III introduces one new pitch
to the pitch universe, in the case of the minor seventh root relation, or two new
class III chord with the same bass chord causes a modulation, if that is what
modulatory class in this sense. The term modulation does not necessarily mean the
music has modulated in a tonal sense where tonic dominant relations have been
transposed
to
a
new
level.
Rather,
modulation
indicates
movement
from
one
scale
area
to
another
when
all
sonorities
share
a
lower
layer
root.
This
point
is
I and II)..
contains one semitone causing it to be more dissonant than class III. Class IV, like
class III, is modulatory to the key a minor third above the scale of class I and II given
Class V (major third root relation and minor second root relation) is a subset
of the diatonic scale, transposed a perfect fifth higher in the case of the major third
root relation and a major second lower in the case of the minor second root relation.
Both chords in class V contain two semitones so class V is more dissonant than
Class VI (major seventh root relation and tritone root relation) is not a subset
of the diatonic scale. Both chords in this class contain three semitones, two of which
occur in immediate succession. These are the most dissonant class of chords.
The chord class table assumes the treble chord and bass chord share the
same root but, practically speaking, music composition may or may not proceed
with chords sharing the same bass chord. The system of classification presented
here relies on chords sharing the same bass chord root because it is the simplest of
all relations when viewing the entire catalog of possible chords constructed in bi-
another if the bass chord root is shared. One might consider the idea of chord
case, a musician might substitute a submediant (vi) chord for the tonic (I). In the
same way, a mediant (iii) chord might substitute for the submediant (vi); a leading
tone (viio) chord might also substitute for the dominant (V). Chords within a given
bi-tonal quartal class share characteristics, which make them ideal as substitutions
when a given class needs to be prolonged in the music. Chords residing within the
same chord class share abundant common notes, just as 3rd-relation chords in
diatonic music.
interval vectors) shared by chords. In all but one case, chords sharing inversional
equivalence reside in the same chord class. The exception, chord classes II and IV,
share the same interval vector but their pitch catalog is diatonically unrelated. Class
sonorities in these two classes are derived from different diatonic scales.
leading tone (scale degree 7 1), and the intervallic resolution of the tritone to the
minor or major sixth (in the dominant tonic harmonic progression), remain
relation extends traditional intervallic harmonic motion into the principle that two
chords residing in separate layers can now form a leading tone or tritonal
relationship
with
one
another.
The
relationship
between
two
dissonant
tones,
such
as
form
an
augmented
fourth
or
major
seventh,
can
now
be
extended
to
include
two
dissonant chords in a tritonal and major seventh relationship (class VI), which
tone heard beneath a simultaneous independently moving harmony, since the 17th-
century. The theory described herein extends the principle of harmonic dissonance
from being defined as a single note (pedal tone) to being defined as a dyad (bass
chord). While a pedal tone may exist very temporarily in a compositon from the
common practice period, the bass chord is omnipresent in order to maintain the two
All other things being equal, the bass chord of a bi-tonal quartal sonority
similar to the bass note of a diatonic progression, the upper note of the bass chord
has the capacity to serve as an anchor as a harmonic bass. While the term key is
not being used here, as it would confuse the term with its meaning in a diatonic
context, the use of the word tonality suggests a pitch center. In fact, the bass chord
serves as a tonal anchor against which the treble chord moves, creating changes in
class. When the bass chord remains constant, movement through respective chord
classes is all the more obvious to the ear. When the bass chord changes, it can
context.
While
the
bass
chord
serves
as
harmonic
anchor,
the
two
(treble
and
bass)
layers do not merge together the way tertiary chords combine to support a common
root. On the contrary, despite the sense that a bass chord may anchor the harmony
around a particular pitch center or tonality, the two layers continue to function
conceptually, at least, independently. This bi-tonal context causes the bass chord to
be heard as a separate tonality. Thus the bass chord is used in a context that
highlights its independence from the treble chord. This principle flies contrary to
a single entity, and voice leading which presents varying levels of consonance and
Musical examples from the authors Paris Prludes, Book One may help to
bear this principle out. The compositional process begins with the formation of a
chord progression. Interval relationships between treble and bass chords are noted
between
staves.
Numbers
above
the
top
staff
indicate
the
relative
position
of
each
chord
in
the
progression.
This
labeling
helps
one
keep
track
of
the
chord
Nevertheless, most listeners will likely hear the progression of a class II chord (M6)
motion from a class II chord (M6) to class IV (m6) to class I chord (U) as moving
conveys a sense of ebb and flow created by the control of consonance and
increased dramatically by using chords found in the more dissonant chord classes V
and VI.
extracted from the chord progression in order to assist with melodic pathways. This
also reveals notes which may facilitate smooth harmonic modulations from chord to
chord. Without a sense of leading tones in a diatonic harmonic sense, the voice
leading is largely based on the needs of the musical situation and the composers
Example 7 illustrates the treble and bass chords, composite pitch collection
drawn from the sum of those chords, and music from measures 43-49 of the
authors Paris Prludes, Book 1 no. 12. The example illustrates the correct use of
For example, notes in the music (staves 2 and 3) are clearly drawn from the
notes in the source chords (staves 1 and 4) except for the repeated F in the top staff
of the music. Here the composer elected to use the F as a repeated tone, sometimes
as a chord tone (mm. 43, 48 and 49) and sometimes as a non-chord tone suspension
(mm. 44, 45, 46, 47). In the treble clef of m. 47, the B-natural also appears as a
notes in the treble clef anticipate the chord change in the following measure.
The example also illustrates the registral separation of the treble and bass
chords. The treble clef only shares notes drawn from the bass chord in m. 44 (Gb),
m. 48 (F) and m. 49 (Bb). The bass chord freely draws from notes in both treble and
apparent that liberties, in order to achieve smooth voice leading, have been taken
regarding note choice. Most obviously, the A root from the treble chord is repeated
throughout the measure. In addition, the top voice in the music jumps directly from
a note in chord 1 to a note in chord 3. The top voice then uses notes from chord 4
while the bass voice advances through notes drawn from chords 3 and 4. The bass
voice then repeats a note drawn from chord 5 while the top voice moves to chord 6.
in diatonic harmony. Yet the decision for note choices, especially on important
While diatonic harmony uses a prevailing scale for the most fundamental of
note choice decisions, bi-tonal quartal harmony has no scale other than the
composite notes drawn from the two layers. Music composed during the common
practice
period
derived
non-chord
tones
based
on
the
scale
being
expressed
at
any
given
moment.
No
such
structure
is
available
in
bi-tonal
quartal
harmony
unless
one
uses the scale superset of the chord class currently implied by the composite tones
of the two chord layers. Rather than implying a diatonic scale, the composite scale
tones offer a set of chord tones against which notes outside the composite scale can
be chosen as non-chord tones. The relationship between chord tones within the
composite scale and non-chord tones outside the composite scale thus establishes a
basic and important tension that helps propel the music forward from consonance
examples in this article are meant to illustrate a few of the practical applications of
this theory. It is beyond the scope of this article to propose a practice derived from
bi-tonal quartal harmony but one can hope that composers interested in such a
harmonic system can define how valuable, malleable and expressive it will be in the
future.