Non-chord tones Flashcards
Passing tone
A passing tone is prepared by step and resolves by step in the same direction. (PT)
Neighbor Tone
A neighbor tone is prepared by step and resolves by step in the opposite direction. (NT)
Double Passing Tones
Double passing tones are two passing tones in a row. (DPT)
The first note is prepared by step, then the second passing tone continues in the same direction of the first, also by step, and is then resolved by a chord tone also continuing in the same direction and by step.
Double passing tones may begin on or off the beat, within the same chord, over a chord change.
Double Neighbor Tones
The double neighbor tone figure is made up of four notes: the note of preparation followed by two non-chord tones and then the note of resolution. The note of resolution is the same note as the note of preparation. (DNT)
The first non-chord tone is prepared by step, then leap a third in the opposite direction for the second non-chord tone and then change direction and resolve by step to the original note.
Double neighbor tones are also called neighbor group tones and changing tones.
Suspension
A suspension suspends a chord tone from the previous chord into the harmonic area of the new chord where the note does not belong. It becomes a suspension on a strong beat and resolves on a weaker beat, or it becomes a suspension on a stronger portion of a beat and resolves on a weaker portion of a beat. (sus)
Retardation
As in the suspension, the retardation holds a note over a chord change so that it becomes a non-chord tone. However, rather than resolving down by step like the suspension, retardations resolve up by step to a consonant chord tone. (R)
Anticipation
An anticipation moves by step to become a non-chord tone before the chord changes. Once the chord changes that same note is now a chord tone. (ant)
Pedal Tone
A pedal tone begins as a chord tone, then the chord changes, once or more than once, and this same note is now a dissonance, a non-chord tone. Eventually the other voice changes to a chord including the same note, so now it is a chord tone again. (PedTn)
Appoggiatura
An appoggiatura is prepared by leap and resolved by step in the opposite direction. It may be prepared and resolved within the same harmony or it can occur over a chord change. (App)
Hint: You may remember this one as “leap-step.”
Escape Tone
An escape tone is prepared by step and resolved by leap in the opposite direction. (ET)
Hint: You may remember this one as “step-leap.”
Cambiata
Prepare for the first note of the cambiata by step, then leap a third in the same direction to the second non-chord tone, and then resolve by step in the opposite direction of the leap. (C)