Quartal

Quartal harmony examples

Quartal harmony examples

At the very least, it involves two notes separated by fourths. For example, playing C and F together produces a sound that characterizes quartal harmony. If you stack another fourth (Bb) on top of the C and F, you get a typical quartal harmony voicing.

  1. What is quartal harmony in music?
  2. What is a quartal scale?
  3. What is a quartal voicing?
  4. What is the effect of quartal harmony?

What is quartal harmony in music?

In music, quartal harmony is the building of harmonic structures built from the intervals of the perfect fourth, the augmented fourth and the diminished fourth. For instance, a three-note quartal chord on C can be built by stacking perfect fourths, C–F–B♭.

What is a quartal scale?

The Quartal is a Source Structure which has 3 possible modes. It is composed of 3 notes and can be transposed without repeating notes, into 12 different keys. This structure does not present any transpositional symmetry. This structure is not a bi-triadic hexatonic.

What is a quartal voicing?

The term “quartal” in music refers to the interval of a fourth. When musicians refer to quartal voicings they are referring to chords that are built using intervals of a fourth (as opposed to intervals of a third, like major or minor triads, which are referred to as “tertian”).

What is the effect of quartal harmony?

Quartal harmony has a rich colourful texture that can work well in compositions. Chords that feature quartal harmony often sound unresolved and convey tension.

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