Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chromatic_mediant> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Chromatic_mediant abstract "In music, chromatic mediants, \"are altered mediant and submediant chords.\" A chromatic mediant relationship is a relationship between two sections and/or chords whose roots are related by a major third or minor third, contain one common tone, or share the same quality, i.e. major or minor. For example, in the key of C major the diatonic mediant and submediant are E minor and A minor. Their parallel majors are E major and A major. The mediants of the parallel minor of C major (C minor) are E♭ major and A♭ major, and their parallel minors are E♭ minor and A♭ minor, totaling six chromatic mediants for that key. Thus an E major chord is one of six chromatic mediant chords in C major and the keys of C major and E major share a chromatic mediant relationship.Chromatic mediants are usually in root position, may appear in either major or minor keys, usually provide color and interest while prolonging the tonic harmony, proceed from and to the tonic or less often the dominant, sometimes are preceded or followed by their own secondary dominants, or sometimes create a complete modulation.Some chromatic mediants are equivalent to altered chords, for example ♭VI is also a borrowed chord from the parallel minor, VI is also a secondary dominant of ii (V/ii), and III is V/vi, with context and analysis revealing the distinction.Chromatic mediant chords were rarely used during the baroque and classical periods, though the chromatic mediant relationship was occasionally found between sections, but the chords and relationships became much more common during the romantic period.".
- Chromatic_mediant thumbnail Chromatic_mediants_in_C_major_and_a_minor.png?width=300.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageID "11480167".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageLength "3356".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageRevisionID "652967107".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Altered_chord.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Baroque_music.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Borrowed_chord.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chords.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chromaticism.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Chord_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Classical_period_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Closely_related_key.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Common_tone.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Diatonic_and_chromatic.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Inversion_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Key_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Major_and_minor.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Major_chord.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Major_scale.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Major_third.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Mediant.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Minor_chord.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Minor_third.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Modulation_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Musical_analysis.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Parallel_key.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Prolongation.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Relative_key.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Romantic_music.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Root_(chord).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Secondary_dominant.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Section_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Submediant.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Tonic_(music).
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink Tonic_parallel.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink File:Chromatic_mediant_from_Tchaikovskys_Chant_sans_paroles_mm._43-45.png.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLink File:Chromatic_mediants_in_C_major_and_a_minor.png.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chromatic mediant".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLinkText "E, A".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageWikiLinkText "chromatic mediant".
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Audio.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chords.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chromaticism.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Music.
- Chromatic_mediant wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Chromatic_mediant subject Category:Chords.
- Chromatic_mediant subject Category:Chromaticism.
- Chromatic_mediant hypernym Mediant.
- Chromatic_mediant type Scale.
- Chromatic_mediant type Technique.
- Chromatic_mediant comment "In music, chromatic mediants, \"are altered mediant and submediant chords.\" A chromatic mediant relationship is a relationship between two sections and/or chords whose roots are related by a major third or minor third, contain one common tone, or share the same quality, i.e. major or minor. For example, in the key of C major the diatonic mediant and submediant are E minor and A minor. Their parallel majors are E major and A major.".
- Chromatic_mediant label "Chromatic mediant".
- Chromatic_mediant sameAs Q584920.
- Chromatic_mediant sameAs Cromatismo_de_tercera.
- Chromatic_mediant sameAs m.02rf85l.
- Chromatic_mediant sameAs Q584920.
- Chromatic_mediant wasDerivedFrom Chromatic_mediant?oldid=652967107.
- Chromatic_mediant depiction Chromatic_mediants_in_C_major_and_a_minor.png.
- Chromatic_mediant isPrimaryTopicOf Chromatic_mediant.