Brian110687
Red Sox Hateologist
can anyone explain to me what this is? I hear the term used alot. I have somewhat of an idea, but i am not 100% sure.
brisk said:Cadence *
The cadence is a component of the syntactic structure. It is made up of the chord progression which ends the complete musical phrase. This progression is normally chord V to I. Each of these chords may be elaborated in some way, for instance by the cadential 6 4 appoggiatura chord or static harmony. These expand the V and I chords into the dominant prolongation and static coda.
In the true plagal cadence the chord V is replaced by chord IV. However, most so called plagal cadences are in reality I - [IV] - I static codas which elaborate the chord I of the V - I cadence. See static coda.
An imperfect cadence (e.g. chord II to V) is created when the final I of the cadence is missing so that the phrase is left incomplete, usually to be completed on a subsequent repetition or by a subsequent phrase.
Sometimes the tonic chord of the cadence overlaps with the static harmony of the next phrase.
The interrupted cadence occurs when a dominant chord is followed by a gamma progression (V - VI) or beta progression (V - III) rather than the normal alpha progression (V - I) which could form the syntactic cadence. The interrupted cadence is not a true cadence in syntactic terms as it serves only to extend the dynamic harmony of the closing section of the phrase.
brisk said:Hey KMC,
I am suprised that actually M-W gives a very good definition of what cadence means when used in music theory.
"a musical chord sequence moving to a harmonic close or point of rest and giving the sense of harmonic completion"
This is pretty much all I want to say about cadence.
Cheers,
kmcguitars said:Thanks' I learned something new. I never knew It apilied to
chord Sequence. I read it 5Xs and I'm still not fully understanding
it. Is there a way you could post a clip demostraiting how it works?
I get the concept,But I'm not hearing it in my head. Thanks![]()