The English word chord derives
from Middle English cord, a shortening of accord in the original sense of agreement and later,
harmonious sound. A sequence of chords is known as a chord progression or
harmonic progression. These are frequently used in Western music. A chord
progression "aims for a definite goal" of establishing (or
contradicting) a tonality founded on a key, root or tonic chord. The study of
harmony involves chords and chord progressions, and the principles of connection
that govern them.
Ottó Károlyi writes that,
"Two or more notes sounded simultaneously are known as a chord,"
though, since instances of any given note in different octaves may be taken as
the same note, it is more precise for the purposes of analysis to speak of
distinct pitch classes. Furthermore, as three notes are needed to define any
common chord, three is often taken as the minimum number of notes that form a
definite chord. Hence Andrew Surmani, for example, (2004, p. 72) states,
"When three or more notes are sounded together, the combination is called
a chord." George T. Jones (1994, p. 43) agrees: "Two tones sounding
together are usually termed an interval, while three or mores tones are called
a chord." According to Monath (1984, p. 37); "A chord is a
combination of three or more tones sounded simultaneously," and the
distances between the tones are called intervals. However sonorities of two
pitches, or even single-note melodies, are commonly heard as implying chords.
Since a chord may be understood as
such even when all its notes are not simultaneously audible, there has been
some academic discussion regarding the point at which a group of notes may be
called a chord. Jean-Jacques Nattiez (1990, p. 218) explains that, "We can
encounter 'pure chords' in a musical work," such as in the Promenade of
Modest Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition but, "Often, we must go from
a textual given to a more abstract representation of the chords being
used," as in Claude Debussy's Première Arabesque.
Upper stave: Claude Debussy's
Première Arabesque. The chords on the lower stave are constructed from the notes
in the actual piece, shown on the upper stave. About this sound Play
In the medieval era, early
Christian hymns featured organum (which used the simultaneous perfect intervals
of a fourth, a fifth, and an octave), with chord progressions and harmony an
incidental result of the emphasis on melodic lines during the medieval and then
Renaissance (15-17th centuries).
The Baroque period, the 17th and
18th centuries, began to feature the major and minor scale based tonal system
and harmony, including chord progressions and circle progressions. It was in
the Baroque period that the accompaniment of melodies with chords was developed,
as in figured bass, and the familiar cadences (perfect authentic, etc.). In the
Renaissance, certain dissonant sonorities that suggest the dominant seventh
occurred with frequency. In the Baroque period the dominant seventh proper was
introduced, and was in constant use in the Classical and Romantic periods. The
leading-tone seventh appeared in the Baroque period and remains in use.
Composers began to use nondominant seventh chords in the Baroque period. They
became frequent in the Classical period, gave way to altered dominants in the
Romantic period, and underwent a resurgence in the Post-Romantic and
Impressionistic period.
The Romantic period, the 19th
century, featured increased chromaticism. Composers began to use secondary
dominants in the Baroque, and they became common in the Romantic period. Many
contemporary popular Western genres continue to rely on simple diatonic
harmony, though far from universally: notable exceptions include the music of
film scores, which often use chromatic, atonal or post-tonal harmony, and
modern jazz (especially circa 1960), in which chords may include up to seven notes
(and occasionally more).
Triads consist of three notes; the
root or first note, the third, and the fifth. For example the C major scale
consists of the notes C D E F G A B:
a triad can be constructed on any note of such a major scale, and all are minor
or major except the triad on the seventh or leading-tone, which is a diminished
chord. A triad formed using the note C itself consists of C (the root note), E (the third note of the scale) and G (the fifth note of the scale). The interval from C to E is of four semitones, a major third, and so this triad is called C Major. A triad formed upon the same scale but with D as the root note, D
(root), F (third), A (fifth), on the other hand, has only
three semitones between the root and third and is called D minor, a minor triad.
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