三全音替换
Tritone Substitutions

原始链接: https://johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com/2024/07/27/tritone-substitutions/

三全音替换是音乐中经常使用的一种技术,用于创造复杂而精致的声音。 它涉及用称为“三全音替代”的不同和弦替换主导七和弦。 简单地解释一下,属和弦由取自大调音阶的四个音符组成,跳过每个第二个音符。 例如,在 C 调中,属和弦将是音符 G、A、B、C、D、E 和 F,只有粗体音符才是属和弦的一部分。 在属七和弦中,有两个音符由于彼此之间存在称为“三全音”的距离而形成对立 - 在给定的示例中以橙色表示。 通过将原始属和弦旋转 180 度,您将获得一个新的和弦 - 称为三全音替代和弦。 使用前面的示例,生成的三全音替换将由音符 C#、F、G# 和 B 组成。 三全音替代中的每个音符对应于主和弦中的一个音符,但升高了一个三全音音程——在五度音圈周围形成镜像。 主导音和三全音替代音之间的其余两个共同音符来自最初相反的一对。 这在原始和弦和变换后的和弦之间产生了相似性,同时仍然在乐曲中提供了多样性。 此外,三全音替换因其独特且不稳定的性质而对古典音乐和爵士音乐流派做出了重大贡献,成为在解决之前制造紧张的强大驱动力。 许多音乐作品都采用了这种技术,包括“来自伊帕内玛的女孩”和无数其他音乐作品。 可以在网上找到演示三全音替换的各种应用的视频,帮助听众欣赏这种复杂的音乐装置。

爵士音乐使用称为 ii7-V7-IM7 的常见和弦进行,它可以通过三全音替换 (ii7-IIb7-IM7) 在低音线中创建半音阶下降。 当伴奏爵士乐时,请重点关注第三音符(大调或小调标识符)和第七音符,因为根音和第五音符通常由贝斯手处理。 由于贝斯手的动作,三全音替换仍然可能发生。 另一个有趣的变化是重复 ii7-IIb7 序列。 著名的例子可以在辛普森的主题曲和披头士乐队的“我是海象”中找到。 申克分析起源于 18 世纪,重点关注旋律而不是和声,尽管它与申克备受争议的右翼政治有关。 虽然申克分析最初与德国有关,但它涵盖了全球旋律缩减方法。 音乐理论文本中描述的理论和技术通常可以应用于创作之前创作的音乐,例如巴赫的托卡塔和D小调赋格。 然而,音乐理论主要是作为一种描述性和比较性的工具,而不是一种规定性的工具。 重要的是要认识到它的发展是为了适应当代风格,并不一定反映作曲家的意图。 数字低音是音乐符号的早期先驱,表示音程而不是和弦,这使其与现代音乐理论截然不同。 此外,“升 I”、“降 II”等指的是和弦,而不是单个音高。 这些术语有助于就一段音乐中的和弦变化进行交流。 最后,与根音略有不同的和弦存在等音,例如“升 IV”与“降 V”。 最终,音乐理论充当指导解释的框架,但创造力仍然至关重要。 它为分析提供了基础,使听众能够欣赏作品的细微差别。
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原文

A ‘tritone substitution’ is a popular trick for making your music sound more sophisticated. I’ll show you a couple of videos with lots of examples. But since I’m mathematician, let me start with the bare-bones basics.

The fifth note of the major scale is called the dominant. In the key of C it’s G.

A dominant seventh chord is a 4-note chord where you start at the dominant and go up the major scale skipping every other note. In the key of C it’s the notes in boldface here:

G A B C D E F

Below I’ve drawn blue edges from G to B, from B to D, and from D to F:

Any dominant seventh chord has two notes that are opposite each other—shown in orange here. We say they’re a tritone apart.

A tritone is very dissonant, so the dominant seventh chord really wants to ‘resolve’ to something more sweet. This tendency is a major driving force in classical music and jazz! There’s a lot more to say about it.

But never mind. What if we take my picture and rotate it 180 degrees? Then we get a new chord! This trick is called a tritone substitution.

Let’s look at it:

Here you see our original dominant seventh chord (with notes connected by blue edges):

G B D F

and its tritone substitution (with notes connected by red edges):

C♯ F G♯ B

Each note in the tritone substitution is a tritone higher than the corresponding note in the dominant seventh chord—so it’s the point on the opposite side of the circle.

But two notes in the dominant seventh were directly opposite each other to begin with: B and F. So these two notes are also in the tritone substitution!

This makes the tritone substitution sound a lot like the original dominant seventh chord.

See the square of notes? Three are in the original dominant seventh, and three are in the tritone substitution. Musicians like such squares of notes, even though they’re quite dissonant. They’re called diminished seventh chords. But let me stop here instead of blasting you with too much information.

Let’s actually listen to some tritone substitutions:

Here David Bennett plays a bunch of songs that use tritone substitutions. I’m very glad to learn that the slippery, suave sound at a certain point of The Girl from Ipanema comes from using a tritone substitution. He also plays a version without the tritone substitution, and you can hear how boring it is by comparison!

Music theorists tend to bombard their audience with more information than nonexperts can swallow in one sitting. David Bennett could have made a nice easy video full of examples where musicians apply a tritone substitution to a dominant seventh chord in its most natural position, where it starts at the 5th note in the major scale. But you can also take a dominant seventh chord and move it up or down, getting a chord called a secondary dominant, and then do a tritone substitution to that. And Bennett feels compelled to show us all the possibilities, and how they get used in fairly well-known tunes.

If you start getting overwhelmed, don’t feel bad. Let me show you another explanation of tritone substitutions:

I really love the friendly, laid-back yet analytical style of Michael Keithson. He’s great at explaining how you could have invented harmony theory on your own starting from a few basic principles. He’s like the music theory teacher I always wish I had.

His pose above is a parody of the sneaky punch that a tritone substitution can pack. Speaking of which, if you want to sound like a hipster, you say tritone sub. Don’t mix this up with the submarine used by the Greek sea god born of Poseidon and Aphrodite: that’s the ‘Triton sub’.

In this video Keithson explains tritone subs. He starts out basic. Then he gets into all the ways you can use a tritone sub. You may want to quit at some point when it gets too complicated. I think it’s better to just zone out and listen to his piano playing. Even if you don’t follow all his words, you’ll get a sense of what tritone subs can do!

Understanding tritone subs well requires understanding dominant chords, and Keithson has a good lesson on those, too:

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