Baroque period - Harmony and tonality
General characteristics of harmony and tonality in the Baroque period
- Music throughout the early to mid-Baroque was composed using modes. The move to establishing a system of 12 major and minor keys took place within the mid- to late Baroque period. By the end of the Baroque, moving into the early Classical period, composers were writing music in keys not modes.
- Chords were usually diatonicMusic in a conventional major or minor key. - major or minor - with the occasional use of chromaticisms to give added 鈥榗olour鈥 to chords.
- The use of ground bassA bass line which is repeated throughout a piece, around which other parts change. was common in many compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frederick Handel.
Tonality
The development of equal temperamentA tuning system in which the octave is divided into twelve equal semitones. This was developed in the Baroque period. enabled the 12 major and minor keys to be established. This was the most significant thing to happen to the tonality of Baroque music.
Harmony
The chords used in major and minor tonalities were also major or minor - or diatonic.
Ground bass
The use of ground bass was common in the Baroque period. Composers would use a ground bass to structure their music. They made the harmonies above the ground bass change, and the placement of the phrases also varied. One of the most well-known examples of a ground bass is in 鈥淒ido鈥檚 Lament鈥, from Henry Purcell鈥檚 Dido and Aeneas.
Henry Purcell鈥檚 Music for a while also contains a ground bass.
Passacaglia
The passacaglia is a type of composition which contains a ground bass. Bach wrote many such pieces, particularly for organ.
Listen to this musical extract:
Question
Is this in a major or minor key?
Minor key
Listen to this musical extract:
Question
Is this in a major or minor key?
Major key