Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Tuesday TPS: Chords

Last week I explained the basic space of melodic pitches in Fred Lerdahl's Tonal Pitch Space. Today I will look at the chordal level of basic space. Inspired by Riemann's Klangs, Fred arranges chords by proximity in the circle of fifths and by the number of common tones. The circle of fifths is pervasive in tonal theory, Fred briefly mentions the fifth motion prevalent throughout tonal progressions, the psychoacoustic strength of the perfect fifth within the overtone series, and the ability to generate the diatonic scale through fifth motion as reasons for using the circle of fifths to measure chord distance. Each step along the diatonic circle of fifths, either clockwise or counterclockwise, is counted as one step removed in distance. So from our tonic chord of Eb in last week's example, we can move one step up to Bb major (V), two steps up to F minor (ii), or three steps up to C minor (vi). And we can move one step down from Eb to Ab major (IV), two steps down to D diminished (viio), or three steps down to G minor (iii). Note that this is the diatonic circle of fifths, so Ab descends a diminished fifth to D so we stay in the major scale of Eb.

Distance by fifths are only one half of the chord distance measurement. The other half is the number of common tones between the two chords being compared, with the idea that the fewer common tones, the more distant the chords. This isn't simply calculated by saying the two triads have one or two notes in common, but by looking at the number of common tones throughout the five levels of pitch space. Here is the tonic chord from last week:


Level a: Eb










Eb
Level b: Eb





Bb



Eb
Level c: Eb


G

Bb



Eb
Level d: Eb
F
G Ab
Bb
C
D Eb
Level e: Eb E F F# G Ab A Bb B C C# D Eb

Now here is the Dominant chord, Bb major, with all the distinctive pitch classes bolded. Note that levels D and E are the same, but level C now shows the Bb triad, with the root and fifth of that chord at level B, and just the root at level A.


Level a:






Bb





Level b:

F




Bb




Level c:

F




Bb


D

Level d: Eb
F
G Ab
Bb
C
D Eb
Level e: Eb E F F# G Ab A Bb B C C# D Eb

So the total distance between the tonic Eb chord and the dominant Bb chord is 1 (step along the circle of fifths) + 4 (distinctive pitches) = 5. This will be the same distance for all tonic-dominant pairings. The summary of distances from the tonic to each of the other diatonic chords is:
I - ii: 8
I - III: 7
I - IV: 5
I - V: 5
I - vi: 7
I - viio: 8

These distances remain the same regardless of which chord comes first (it is a symmetric function). Distances between other chord pairs can also be calculated, but thankfully the relationships are transpositionally invariant. This means that if I - ii has a distance of 8, ii - iii will also have a distance of 8, as will every pair of sequential chords in the major tonality. So Fred can generalize that moving root motion by a diatonic step is a perceptual distance of 8, moving root motion by a diatonic third is a perceptual distance of 7, and moving root motion by a diatonic fourth is a perceptual distance of 5. Fred realizes this geometrically as a Chordal Space:

VviioiiIVvi
IiiiVviioii
IVviIiiiV
viioiiIVviI
iiiVviioiiIV

The horizontal axis is root motion by thirds, the vertical axis is root motion by fifth. Two dimensionally like this it keeps repeating over and over. It can be wrapped around to make a torus, a three-dimensional doughnut. One of Fred's main rules is to follow the shortest path when connecting two chords, and the length of this path demonstrates the perceptual distance in moving from the first chord to the second.

Thus far we have remained within a single key. Next week we will look at the regional level of TPS, to deal with secondary dominants and modulations.

2 comments:

Jim Plamondon said...

Lerdahl's system can be generalized by
(a) using tonic solfa instead of pitch names (or Roman numerals), and
(b) by defining each tonic solfa name as a point in two-dimensional space, with the two dimensions being the number of periods and the number of generators needed to create that tone in the syntonic temperament (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntonic_temperament).

...which all seems very complicated, until you map those same two dimensions to the axes of a hexagonal grid, resulting in an isomorphic keyboard (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomorphic_keyboard). The resulting keyboard is isomorphic with the the temperament, meaning that any given musical interval has the "same shape" in every octave, key, and tuning.

Such a representation of tonal space enables a generalization of the relationship between the harmonic series and just intonation (http://www.igetitmusic.com/papers/SpectralTools.pdf, published in this Spring's Computer Music Journal). This generalization, in turn, enables:
(a) new tonal effects such as Dynamic Tonality (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_tonality, presented at the South Central CMS annual conference);
(b) new insights into the ultimate source of tonal effects such as cadences (www.igetitmusic.com/papers/Cadences.pdf, a Master's thesis); and
(c) new means of displaying and controlling musical information that could make music theory easier to teach and learn (www.igetitmusic.com/papers/JIMS.pdf, which Dr. K. Anders Ericsson, arguably the world's leading expert on the acquisition of expertise, has called "very exciting").

Point being: there's much more to tonal space than meets the eye (or ear). If generalized, with that generalization captured in the tangible reality of an isomorphic keyboard, then such tonal spaces can lead us to new musical insights, just as Mendeleev's Periodic Table led to the discovery of new elements.

For whatever that's worth. ;-)

Scott said...

Hi Jim, thanks for all the comments. That sounds very interesting. How does your system of displaying musical information compare with Ian Quinn's new method of teaching music theory?