Main Page | Alphabetical index | English Encyclopedia

Subdominant

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
In music, the subdominant is the technical name for the fourth degree of the scale. It is called the subdominant because it is the same distance below the tonic that the dominant is above the tonic. In the C major scale (white keys on a piano), the subdominant is the note F; and the subdominant chord uses the notes F, A, and C. In music theory, the subdominant chord is symbolized with the Roman numeral IV if major and iv if minor.

A cadential subdominant chord followed by a tonic chord (the chord of the key of the piece) produces the so-called "plagal"( or "Amen") cadence.

"Subdominant" also refers to a relationship of musical keys. For example, relative to the key of C major, the key of F major is the subdominant. Music which modulates (changes key) often modulates into the subdominant. Modulation into the subdominant key often creates a sense of musical relaxation; as opposed to modulation into dominant (fifth note of the scale), which increases tension.

In sonata form, the subdominant key plays a subordinate though still crucial role: typically, in the recapitulation, there is a section written in the subdominant key, occurring at the point corresponding to the location in the exposition where the music modulated into the dominant key. The use of the subdominant in this location often serves as a way of keeping the rest of recapitulation in the tonic.



Limit search to: Body and Title Deutsche Seiten Path



No Results Found


Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor
Free thumbnail preview by Thumbshots.org

Search for products at amazon.com:
Search:
Keywords:
amazon.com books on 'Subdominant':
Search at Google.com:
Google
WebCalSky.com Encyclopedia

Suchresultate aus unserem günstigen CalSky-Shop