| ▲ | jancsika 3 hours ago | |
> The tension arises because the "Seventh" (A) is not a new addition, but a residue of the previous geometric state. That residue in m.2 is common-tone voice leading. It's a technique that was used throughout the common-practice period to avoid tension, not introduce it. I'd bet the progression in m. 1-2 could be found in the figured bass at the beginning of a slow movement by Telemann or another Baroque composer. Speaking of Baroque composers-- in the Coda of the 4th Ballade, Chopin has an exquisite passage of basso continuo plus accompaniment that would be right at home in a minor key aria by Handel. Except that: 1. There's no melody being accompanied. 2. It moves about 4x faster than it would have in the Baroque era. I'd love to see a pianist play that passage by suddenly looking up and frantically nodding cues to an invisible, demonic singer. | ||