1 / 8

Voice Leading in Four-Part Chorale Writing

Voice Leading in Four-Part Chorale Writing. Chapter 9. What is Four-part Chorale Writing?. 18 th and 19 th century baroque style Chorale Congregational hymn in German protestant church Sung in the vernacular, not Latin

kirsi
Télécharger la présentation

Voice Leading in Four-Part Chorale Writing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Voice Leading in Four-Part Chorale Writing Chapter 9

  2. What is Four-part Chorale Writing? • 18th and 19th century baroque style • Chorale • Congregational hymn in German protestant church • Sung in the vernacular, not Latin • J.S. Bach used chorale melodies in many of his compositions – considered the “best” in this style of liturgical writing • Highlights the interaction of harmony and melody • Soprano sings melody • Bass generates the harmony • Alto and tenor fill in the chords

  3. First Inversion Triads • Smooth bass lines • Allow for melodic motion in bass lines

  4. Second Inversion Triads • Cadential • I⁶₄ used as a decoration of V at the cadence • Passing Bass • I⁶₄ used as a passing tone between IV and IV⁶ • Arpeggiated Bass • I I⁶ I⁶₄ • Pedal Bass • Placed between two root positions of the same triad • I IV⁶₄ I

  5. Stylistic Practices • When both chords are in root position and the roots are a P4 or P5 apart • 1. Keep the common tone. • 2. When you cannot keep the common tone, move all three upper voices in similar motion. • When both chords are in root position and the roots are a 3rd apart • 3. Keep both common tones. • When both chords are in root position and the roots are a 2nd apart • 4. Move the three upper voices in contrary motion to the bass. • When chords are repeated • 5. Maintain proper range and order of voices

  6. Stylistic Practices • When one chord is in 1st inversion • 6. Double the soprano (first choice) or bass (second choice) • When using the vii°⁶ triad • 7. Double the bass • When using the ii˚⁶ triad • 8. Double the bass • When using 2nd inversion chords • 9. Double the bass

  7. Exceptions to Stylistic Practices • When you cannot follow stylistic practices, use the following guidelines. • Never: • 1. Write parallel P8, P5, and P1 • 2. Double the leading tone of the scale • 3. Write pitches out of range • 4. Write a melodic A2 or A4 in any voice

  8. Exceptions to Stylistic Practices • Observe these guidelines carefully unless you have no other alternative: • 5. Avoid crossing voices (in one chord) • 6. Spacing between two adjacent voices should not be more than a P8 (Exception: tenor and bass spacing can be up to two octaves) • 7. Avoid overlap of voices (in two adjacent chords) • 8. Do not move in the same direction to perfect intervals in soprano and bass • 9. Unequal 5ths (P5 to d5) can be used sparingly • 10. Use the melodic d5 sparingly • 11. Leading tone of the scale should progress upward to tonic when written in soprano or bass

More Related