1. Why this book 2. Basics 3. Principles of coherence and continuity 4. Principles of movement, interest and of variety

5. Transitions between various types of Harmony

6. Harmony and Texture; Orchestration and Harmony

7. Criteria for evaluating harmony

8. Pedagogy

 

Why this book

Of all musical disciplines, harmony is probably the most written about. Textbooks abound, from the summary to the encyclopedic. Why add to the existing plethora of resources? While we will survey some of this material below, one thing is lacking in all of them: None convincingly connects traditional harmony to contemporary practice. Although some of these books contain a chapter or two about more recent techniques, these are usually described in summary or superficial ways, and few or no connections are made with older practice.

Harmonic relationships can be divided into three categories: those which are immediately audible; those which become audible through attentive listening, and those which can never be heard, given the limitations of the human ear and memory. In this book we will explore the first two types, and systematically exclude the third. It cannot be sufficiently emphasized that not all harmonic relationships are equally important: Their location in the piece, and, especially, their relative salience must be considered in the light of the limits of human perception in order to judge their importance

As in the other books in this series, our approach here will be to focus on principles rather than on styles. We contend that there are common principles in operation across various harmonic styles, and that understanding these principles - which arise more from how we hear than from stylistic conventions - can help the composer of today to find a personal harmonic language which makes audible sense.

Finally, we make no pretense here of explaining all harmonic languages. Our goal is more modest: we wish to outline some powerful concepts which are relevant to both classical and more recent harmony.

Discussion of other approaches

Before starting our search for such general principles of harmony, let us list and briefly comment on the most common traditional pedagogical methods.

To summarize, what is missing in all these methods are links between tonal and other approaches. And yet such links abound. For example, while some of the specific methods of creating direction and coherence in tonal harmony cannot be transferred intact to other harmonic styles, often the principles underlying these specific solutions can be generalized. For example, as we shall see below, the principles of voice-leading are strongly grounded in the way human hearing works, and therefore, appropriately formulated, remain relevant to any harmonic style.

A final inadequacy of most current approaches to harmony is that they often ignore the interaction of harmony, counterpoint, orchestration and form. However, these categories are mere pedagogical conveniences, and not realistic descriptions of the way the musical ear breaks down information. For example, voice leading cannot be separated from counterpoint, and detailed examination of the way a chord is spaced quickly leads to questions of orchestration. For this reason, in our discussions of musical examples, often we will need to refer to several different aspects of the music in order to adequately explain what is happening. (This also underlines the importance of these examples, since they show the interconnection between various notions in ways that may not always be evident in the text.)

Limits of our discussion

A new approach to understanding harmony

Since mankind's evolutionary capacities and limitations for hearing and understanding relationships between tones have clearly not changed in a very long time, it follows that there must be connections in the way we hear "old" and "new" music. Recent works by Bergman (Auditory Scene Analysis), Deutsch (Ear and Brain), and Snyder (Music and Memory), shed significant, new light on these basic auditory/cognitive systems. Combined with what musicians already know and intuit about how music works, they provide a useful starting point for a more general understanding of harmony and other musical disciplines.

The main theories which will prove useful to us are those which refer to the most easily heard phenomena. (Incidentally, the aspects of cognition we take for granted are often the most complex.) The disdain with which "salience" is referred to in some current (music) theoretical literature is entirely at odds with the practical needs of the composer.

For example, some of the assumptions behind current ideas of pitch structure need to be reexamined. Recent psycho-acoustical research, as well as practical experience, lead to the conclusion that some of these notions are conventions with only limited usefulness, focussing on connections that are often quite obscure to the ear. Worse, they often do not explain what is actually heard, by even the most trained and attentive listener, and can thus lead the analyst or the aspiring composer to ignore factors much more relevant to the sonic result.

We may draw a parallel here to the exaggerated attention to chord roots which characterized harmonic theory before Schenker's ideas became widely known. Schenker`s thinking engendered a corrective attention to the fact that in most situations the sounding bass line has more effect on the sense of harmonic direction than any theoretical root. Here a widely accepted theory (that of chord roots and inversions) often led to ignoring or undervaluing direct musical experience.

Similarly, the vast literature about pitch class sets and series often veers into the musical equivalent of numerology. Overemphasis on the importance of subtle intervallic relationships, especially over long stretches of time, where their aural perception is often impossible, easily leads to inadequate emphasis on relationships that are audible even to the uninitiated , and consequent misjudgment of the work's effect. Salient events are always the best pillars supporting musical architecture.

An example of a common basic assumption that needs to be mitigated is that of octave equivalence. While in the middle register C3 and C4 are clearly in some sense equivalent, comparing C1 and C7 is quite another matter. In the extreme registers, pitch discrimination is very inexact and dependant on many factors, including orchestration, duration, etc.

N.B.: Musical examples © Alan Belkin, 2007. Unless otherwise indicated, all the musical examples are for piano solo.

The two chords in this example include the same four pitch classes. However, in terms of perception, what does it mean to speak of them as being "identical"? The exact pitches in the first chord are quite difficult to distinguish due to their extreme register, and their short duration makes this harder still. Most important, the differences in register and spacing between the two chords have the effect of thrusting the common pitches into the perceptual background. Even if we concede that, played one right after the other, careful listening might recognize these common pitches, what if the chords are separated by several bars of other music? In this case the similarity between the two chords is a surely at best a refinement, compared to their surface contrast. Except in the case where the two are placed side by side for comparison or otherwise "pointed out" to the listener, the pitch similarity between them is thus relatively unimportant. Note that to make the listener's job easier I have used the same pitch classes. Imagine if I had also transposed the chords (at an interval other than the octave), requiring the listener to compare intervals rather than just pitch classes.

In this example, the first chord is the same as the second one from the previous example. The second chord here contains two new pitches, and different intervals as well. And yet the two chords seem much more similar than the pair in the previous example, because they are in the same register, share two common tones, and each contains a sharp dissonance in the middle, with richer intervals surrounding it.

These examples raise two critical issues: how can a composer make pitch identity elationships clear to the listener, and when should other types of relationship (as in the second example) be considered more important? These questions are largely ignored in the literature, despite their vital importance for understanding musical form - which, after all, works mainly through association and memory, both of which strongly depend on surface salience. A good deal of our discussion here will therefore focus on the ways composers can create and differentiate realistically audible harmonic relationships, to fulfill various formal functions.


© Alan Belkin, 2003. Legal proof of copyright exists. The material may be used free of charge provided that the author's name is included.