Renaissance period - Harmony and tonality
General characteristics of harmony and tonality in the Renaissance period
- Harmonies in the Renaissance period usually came from the combination of polyphonicInterweaving parts, also known as contrapuntal. melodies.
- The overall tonality of the music was based on modeA mode is neither a major or minor scale and dates back to very early music. Each mode has a different combination of tones and semitones. - types of scales found in the Medieval and Renaissance periods - or major, or minor, scales.
- The chords created by polyphony were mainly major or minor. Occasionally, the final chords had no third and were neither major nor minor.
- dissonantDiscordant music, where notes in a chord do not agree. notes in chords had to be prepared and resolved.
- False relations were used to create harmonic interest.
- droneTwo notes sounded together as an accompaniment, often a 5th apart. were often used as a basic accompaniment.
Harmony from polyphony
In vocal music, chords were formed from the individual melody lines interweaving, or polyphony. These were usually major or minor chords. The score below is from Sicut Cervus by Giovanni Pierlugi da Palestrina. The notes on the first and third beats of the bar form part of a chord in G major - the key of the piece. Also, the dissonance in the soprano line is prepared and resolved by step.
The final chord of Thomas Tallis鈥 If ye love me is an open fifth 鈥 there is no third. This is frequently found in Renaissance music.
False relation
A false relation is a type of dissonance that occurs in Renaissance music. It is a harmonic clash that happens when a note in one part is played or sung at the same or immediately before or after a chromatically altered version of the same note in another part. The example below is from William Byrd鈥檚 Ave verum corpus. The F sharp and F natural are sung very close to each other in the tenor and bass parts.