- Chromatic fourth
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For Chromatic tetrachord, see Chromatic genus.
In music, a chromatic fourth, or passus duriusculus[1], is a melody or melodic fragment spanning a perfect fourth with all or almost all chromatic intervals filled in (chromatic line). The quintessential example is in D minor with the tonic and dominant notes as boundaries, Play (help·info):
The chromatic fourth was first used in the madrigals of the 16th Century.[citation needed] The Latin term itself ("suffered somewhat hard") originates in Christoph Bernhard's 17th century Tractatus compositionis augmentatus (1648-49), where it appears to refer to repeated melodic motion by semitone creating consecutive semitones.[1] The term may also relate to the pianto associated with weeping.[1] In the Baroque, Johann Sebastian Bach used it in his choral as well as his instrumental music, in the Well-Tempered Clavier, for example (the chromatic fourth is indicated by a red bracket), Play (help·info):
In operas of the Baroque and Classical, the chromatic fourth was often used in the bass and for woeful arias, often being called a "lament bass". In the penultimate pages of the first movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, the repetitions of the chromatic fourth in the cellos and basses stir up a sense of inevitable tragedy.[citation needed]
This doesn't mean that the chromatic fourth was always used in a sorrowful or foreboding way, or that the boundaries should always be the tonic and dominant notes. One counterexample comes from the Minuet of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's String Quartet in G major, K. 387 (the chromatic fourths are conveniently bracketed by the slurs and set apart with note-to-note dynamics changes), Play (help·info):
Musical works using the chromatic fourth or passus duriusculus
Sources
- ^ a b c d Monelle, Raymond (2000). The Sense of Music: Semiotic Essays, p.73. ISBN 9780691057163.
- ^ Williams, Peter (1998). The Chromatic Fourth: During Four Centuries of Music, p.69. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198165633.
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