Johann Sebastian Bach’s Contribution to Musical Harmony
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Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750) made a fundamental contribution to the development of musical harmony, defining the path of Western European music for centuries to come. His work with tonal systems, chromaticism, modulations, and the functional relationships between chords created a solid foundation for all subsequent musical practice. The significance of Bach’s innovations extends far beyond the Baroque era.
The harmonic language of the Baroque era before Bach
By the early 18th century, European music was on the threshold of the major-minor tonal system. The modal system that had dominated Renaissance music was gradually giving way to new principles of pitch organization. Composers of previous generations, such as Girolamo Frescobaldi and Dietrich Buxtehude, experimented with harmonic progressions and tonal relationships.
However, the harmonic language of the time remained limited by several factors. The uneven temperament that dominated keyboard instrument tuning made some keys practically unusable. The middle-tone temperament system ensured a clear sound for thirds in the most common keys, but distant keys sounded out of tune.
The theoretical understanding of harmony was also in its infancy. The widely used digital bass system described vertical harmonies but did not explain the logic behind their progression. The concept of functional harmony, where chords are organized around a tonic, dominant, and subdominant note, had not yet been formulated theoretically.
The Well-Tempered Clavier and the Tuning Revolution
Bach’s most famous harmonic achievement was the two volumes of The Well-Tempered Clavier (1722 and 1742). Each volume contains 24 preludes and fugues, one in each major and minor key. This collection demonstrated the potential of a new temperament system that allowed the use of all twelve keys without retuning the instrument.
The title of the piece refers to the tuning system Bach called "good" temperament. This was not equal temperament in the modern sense, which was finally established only in the 20th century. Good temperament represented a compromise between the purity of intervals and the ability to modulate to any key. Each key retained its own distinctive character, its own "coloring."
Modern research shows that Bach tuned his instruments himself and was dissatisfied with the tuning of other musicians. His system allowed for modulation into distant keys almost imperceptibly to listeners. All major thirds in his system were sharper than pure thirds, which was a prerequisite for acceptable sound in all keys.
The Well-Tempered Clavier opened new horizons for harmonic development. Composers were free to use chromatic modulations and enharmonic substitutions. The tonal plane of a work was no longer limited to closely related keys. Bach demonstrated that each key possesses a unique character and can serve expressive purposes.
Development of chromatic harmony
Bach expanded the use of chromatic chords, transforming them from rare, colorful elements into an integral part of the harmonic language. Altered chords, the Neapolitan sixth, and augmented sixth chords — all these devices were systematically employed by him. Chromaticism in Bach’s music serves not merely as an ornament but also as a constructive and expressive function.
The Neapolitan sixth, a major triad on a lowered second degree in first inversion, appears regularly in Bach’s works. This chord creates a special tension due to its lowered degree and usually resolves into the dominant or its inversion. Bach used the Neapolitan sixth not only in minor, where it is most natural, but also in major, creating dramatic harmonic turns.
The composer also made extensive use of augmented sixth chords in three varieties — Italian, French, and German. The characteristic augmented sixth interval between the flatted sixth and raised fourth was resolved outward into an octave on the dominant. These chords allowed for powerful pre-chord constructions and enhanced the pull toward the tonic.
Bach’s chromatic passing and auxiliary notes often form temporary consonances that are perceived as independent chords. The linear movement of the voices generates harmonic complexes that are difficult to explain from the perspective of chord theory. This demonstrates the profound integration of the horizontal and vertical dimensions of music in Bach’s style.
Modulation as a structure-forming principle
Bach’s art of modulation reached unprecedented heights. The transition from one key to another ceased to be a technical device and became a powerful tool of musical dramaturgy. Bach modulated not only to related keys a fifth or a third apart, but also to more distant ones, creating bold harmonic plans.
In his fugues, the modulation plan often coincides with the formative structure. The exposition establishes the main key, the development sections explore secondary keys, and the recapitulation returns the music to its original center. The interludes between the theme’s presentations serve as modulation transitions, where the harmony is most fluid and unstable.
Bach’s modulation technique is distinguished by its naturalness and logic. He employed various types of modulations: gradual through a common chord, enharmonic through a reinterpretation of the consonance, and sudden, unprepared ones. Each type served specific artistic purposes. Gradual modulation created a smooth development, while sudden modulation created the effect of surprise.
The range of tonal relationships in Bach’s music is impressive. He could modulate to a key a tritone away, which was considered extremely unusual for his time. Modulations to the minor dominant, to the parallel major or minor mediant, to the key of the same name — all of these are found in his works. The tonal plane became the architectural foundation of the composition.
Functional harmony and chord progressions
Although the theory of functional harmony was formulated later, in the works of Jean-Philippe Rameau and his followers, it was Bach’s music that demonstrates a mature understanding of functional relationships. The tonic, dominant, and subdominant functions form the basis of his harmonic language. Bach intuitively understood the logic of functional tendencies long before they were theoretically described.
In Bach, the dominant always strives toward the tonic, creating a directional movement. The seventh chord on the fifth degree, with its dissonant tritone, demands resolution. The leading tone gravitates upward a semitone, while the seventh of the chord gravitates downward. Bach used this gravitation to create tension and its resolution, which forms the basis of the musical dramaturgy of tonal music.
The subdominant function, represented by the fourth degree and its substitutes, creates a precursor to the dominant. The classic TSDT sequence, which underlies countless cadences, was given a wide variety of expressions by Bach. He varied this scheme, replacing chords with their substitutes, using inversions, and adding passing harmonies.
Bach made extensive use of interrupted chords, where instead of the expected tonic, a different chord sounds after the dominant. Most often, this was the sixth degree, but the composer also experimented with other variations. The interrupted chord allowed for a prolonged development, avoiding a premature halt on the tonic. It created an effect of frustrated expectation, enriching the musical narrative.
Bach’s chord progressions are often based on sequences. The repetition of the harmonic formula on different degrees created the energy of forward movement. Descending fifth progressions, ascending second progressions, various types of circulations around the circle of fourths — all of this found a place in Bach’s practice.
Chorales and the art of four-part singing
Bach’s approximately 370 chorale arrangements constitute an encyclopedia of Baroque harmonic practice. These four-part harmonizations of Protestant chorales served liturgical purposes, but simultaneously demonstrated the highest mastery of voice leading and harmony. Bach’s chorales became the foundation of harmony instruction for several centuries.
The principles of voice-leading implemented in chorales combine the smoothness of melodic movement with the richness of harmony. Each voice is a meaningful melodic line, not simply a chord filler. Forbidden parallel fifths and octaves are avoided, and the opposite movement of the outer voices is preferred. Leaps are resolved by opposite movement.
The harmonic language of chorales is distinguished by its expressiveness and diversity. Bach employed a wide palette of chords: diatonic triads and seventh chords, chromatic alterations, suspensions, passing and auxiliary harmonies. Each phrase concludes with a cadence, which can be full or half, authentic or plagal. The variety of cadences creates a natural breath of music.
Bach paid particular attention to the connection between harmony and text. Chromatic motifs often illustrate words about suffering, death, or sin. Bold major chords accompany references to joy and salvation. Unexpected harmonic turns highlight important moments in the text. This connection between music and words, known as Figurenlehre, was an important part of the German musical tradition.
A statistical analysis of Bach’s chorales reveals a high frequency of certain harmonic patterns. The most common are DT, SD, and the interrupted cadences D-VI. The frequency of use of various chords is uneven: the tonic and dominant are most common, while the third degree is less common. These patterns reflect the hierarchy of functions in the tonal system.
Counterpoint and harmony in unity
The uniqueness of Bach’s approach to harmony lies in its inseparable connection with counterpoint. Harmony in Bach is born from the polyphonic interplay of voices, not the other way around. Each voice carries its own melodic line, and their simultaneous sound creates harmonic verticals. This fundamentally distinguishes Bach’s style from homophonic-harmonic writing.
In fugues, the horizontal dimension dominates the vertical. Theme, response, counterpoints, interludes — all are primarily melodic formations. However, their combination generates a consistent chord progression. Bach masterfully controlled both dimensions simultaneously, creating music that is flawless both polyphonically and harmonically.
The technique of invertible counterpoint allowed for the interchange of voices without disrupting harmonic correctness. Bach used invertible counterpoint in octaves, duodecimas, and decimals. This required careful planning of the intervallic relationships between voices. Harmonic imperfections in the interchange of voices were eliminated at the compositional stage.
Imitative technique is also linked to harmony. The tonal response in a fugue, transposed by a fifth, creates a modulation to the key of the dominant. The real response preserves the precise intervallic relationships of the theme. The choice between tonal and real response was determined by harmonic considerations: the tonal response maintained tonal stability, while the real response created more distant tonal relationships.
The combination of several themes in double and triple fugues required harmonic compatibility between them. Bach composed themes so that they would form the correct voicings in any combination. This demonstrates his masterful mastery of both the melodic and harmonic aspects of composition.
The Art of Fugue and Harmonic Experiments
"The Art of Fugue," Bach’s final and unfinished work, is the pinnacle of polyphonic art. Fourteen fugues and four canons on a single theme explore all the possibilities of contrapuntal technique. But it is also a remarkable example of harmonic mastery, where the most complex polyphonic constructions do not violate the logic of harmonic development.
The work’s main theme, simple and flexible, allows for a wide variety of harmonizations. In different fugues, it appears in various harmonic contexts. Bach demonstrates how the same melody can support various harmonic functions. The theme can serve as a tonic, a dominant, or a passing harmony.
Mirror fugues, where the music sounds identical when reflected vertically, require special harmonic calculations. Chords must remain correct even when intervals are inverted. A third becoming a sixth, a fifth becoming a fourth — all these transformations must create acceptable harmonies. Bach solved this problem brilliantly.
The harmonic rhythm in "The Art of Fugue" ranges from slow to very fast. In some fugues, chord changes occur once per measure, while in others, they occur several times per measure. The acceleration of the harmonic rhythm creates a growing sense of tension. Before the final cadences, the harmonic rhythm typically quickens, creating a sense of rapid progress toward the goal.
Chromaticism is used particularly sophisticatedly in this piece. Chromatic counterpoints create tart harmonies. Modulations into distant keys are accomplished through chains of chromatic chords. Diminished seventh chords appear at the climaxes, creating intense tension.
"Musical Offering" and the Royal Theme
The "Musical Offering" of 1747, composed on the theme of the Prussian King Frederick the Great, demonstrates another side of Bach’s harmonic mastery. Here, the composer works with a given material, the royal theme, which is itself harmonically unusual. The theme contains chromatic movements and covers a wide range, creating unique harmonic possibilities.
The three-part and six-part fugues on this theme demonstrate different approaches to its harmonization. In the three-part fugue, the harmony is transparent, the functional relationships clear. In the six-part fugue, the dense texture creates rich harmonic complexes. A multitude of passing and auxiliary sounds enrich the harmonic palette.
The canons from "The Musical Offering" explore the harmonic possibilities of imitative technique. The endless canon, where the end connects to the beginning through modulation, is particularly interesting. Each repetition of the theme is performed in a new key, gradually moving away from the original. Then an enharmonic substitution occurs, and the music returns to the beginning.
The Trio Sonata from this cycle demonstrates a galant style with its homophonic texture and transparent harmony. Here, Bach demonstrates his mastery of the musical language of his time. Graceful melodic phrases are supported by simple chord progressions. The harmonic rhythm is more regular, the cadences more predictable.
Instrumental music and harmonic structures
Bach’s keyboard suites, partitas, and concertos demonstrate harmonic principles in various genre contexts. Dance pieces rely on clear harmonic patterns linked to the meter and rhythm of dance. Allemande, courante, sarabande, gigue — each dance has its own distinctive harmonic features.
The sarabande, with its slow tempo, allows for the harmony to unfold over time. Bach utilizes rich chords, suspensions, and chromaticism. The harmonic rhythm slows, allowing all the nuances of the voice to be heard. Sarabandes often feature the most daring harmonic turns of the cycle.
The gigue, with its rapid movement and fugal texture, presents a contrast. Here, the harmony is fluid, the modulations are frequency-sensitive. Imitative polyphony creates a transparent texture, where harmonic functions are clearly discernible. The finale of the cycle typically returns to the main key, asserting the tonic in the final bars.
Concertos for keyboard, violin, and other instruments use harmony to create form. The contrast between tutti and solo is often emphasized by harmonic means. Tutti establishes the tonality with full cadences, while solo modulates into secondary keys. The return of the ritornello brings a return to the main key.
The form of the concert movement is built on the alternation of tonally stable and unstable sections. The exposition establishes the main key, the development explores other keys, and the reprise restores stability. This structure is based on harmonic relationships, on the interplay of stability and instability.
Influence on music theory
Although Bach left no treatises on music theory, his compositional practice had a profound influence on the development of musical theory. Jean-Philippe Rameau, who developed the first systematic theory of harmony, analyzed the music of his contemporaries, including Bach. The concepts of functional harmony, fundamental bass, and chord inversion were developed using Baroque music.
In the 19th century, Heinrich Schenker developed a theory of structural levels, analyzing primarily the music of Bach and Beethoven. Schenker demonstrated that beneath the surface of harmonic progressions lie deeper structures based on the prolongation of the tonic. His theory explains how counterpoint and harmony interact at different levels of composition.
Bach’s chorales have become the foundation for harmony instruction in conservatories worldwide. Analyzing these chorales helps us understand the principles of voice leading, the functional relationships of chords, and cadences. Many harmony textbooks are based on examples from Bach’s chorales.
Computer analysis of Bach’s music revealed patterns that aren’t always obvious to auditory perception. The statistics of chord progressions, modulation frequencies, and the distribution of dissonances were all studied using digital analysis methods. The results confirm the systematic nature of Bach’s harmonic practice.
Impact on composers of later eras
Mozart, having encountered Bach’s music at Baron van Swieten’s home in Vienna, was profoundly moved. He copied Bach’s fugues and studied their structure. Bach’s influence can be heard in Mozart’s late symphonies and quartets, where polyphony takes on greater prominence. The finale of "Jupiter," Symphony No. 41, is a grandiose fugue in five themes.
Beethoven played the Well-Tempered Clavier throughout his life, calling it his musical Bible. His late quartets and sonatas contain fugues that combine polyphonic technique with Romantic harmony. The Grand Fugue for String Quartet, Opus 133, represents an attempt to combine Bach’s counterpoint with Beethoven’s dramatic style.
Chopin studied Bach’s preludes and fugues with his students. His own preludes, opus 28, although written in a romantic style, follow Bach’s principle: one piece in each key. Chopin’s chromatic harmony largely develops Bach’s inventions.
Brahms, one of the greatest masters of variation technique, constantly drew on Bach’s legacy. His "Händel Variations" and "Paganini Variations" demonstrate a mastery of polyphony and harmony in the spirit of Bach. The finale of his Fourth Symphony, the passacaglia, directly references Bach’s polyphonic forms.
In the 20th century, composers of diverse movements acknowledged Bach’s influence. Stravinsky, in his neoclassical period, turned to Bachian models. Schoenberg considered Bach the first composer to think in twelve-tone rows, albeit within the confines of tonality. Paul Hindemith developed a theory of harmony based on the acoustic principles he found in Bach’s music.
Research of Bach’s harmony using modern methods
Modern musicology uses computer methods to analyze Bach’s harmonic language. Databases containing all the notes from hundreds of Bach’s works allow for statistical analysis of patterns. Analysis of chord progressions in chorales has shown that Bach followed certain rules with a high degree of consistency.
Network analysis of harmonic progressions revealed that Bach’s music exhibits the properties of scale invariance characteristic of complex systems. This means that structural patterns are repeated at different levels of organization. Local chord progressions are linked to the global tonal plan of the work.
A study of 1/f fluctuations in Bach’s music revealed that consonance patterns follow universal laws. Bach emerged as the composer whose music exhibits the greatest degree of harmonic order of all the masters studied, confirming his status as the "father of harmony."
Machine learning is being used to automatically harmonize melodies in the style of Bach. Neural networks are trained on Bach’s chorales, learning the rules of voice leading and harmonic progressions. The results show that Bach’s style can be formalized to a degree that allows for its computer imitation. However, the composer’s creative genius remains inimitable.
Organ works and harmonic power
Bach’s organ music presents harmony in its most monumental form. The instrument’s polyphonic texture, register possibilities, and pedal — all of this allowed for the creation of powerful harmonic effects. Toccatas, fantasias, and preludes for organ demonstrate Bach’s mastery of harmonic space.
The Toccata and Fugue in D minor (BWV 565), one of the most famous organ works, begins with a rhetorical gesture — a descending figure that outlines the harmony of the tonic through an arpeggio of a diminished seventh chord. The subsequent development is rich in chromaticism, unexpected modulations, and diminished chords. Harmony serves as a means of creating dramatic tension.
Chorale preludes for organ are arrangements of Protestant chorales. The chorale’s melody is performed by one voice, usually the soprano, while the other voices create the harmonic and contrapuntal environment. Bach wrote around two hundred such preludes, each representing a unique solution to a harmonic problem.
In his "Organ Book" (Orgelbüchlein), Bach systematically explored the possibilities of the chorale prelude. It presents a variety of textural types, from the simplest four-part composition to the most complex polyphonic structures. Harmony serves expressive purposes, illustrating the content of the chorale. Dissonances emphasize the words about suffering, consonances — those of joy.
The Passacaglia in C minor, BWV 582, demonstrates the harmonic possibilities of variation form. The bass theme is repeated twenty times, each time with a new harmonization and textural treatment. Bach’s harmonic ingenuity is astonishing: from the simplest theme, he extracts endless variety. Modulations enrich the form, and the return to the tonic brings a sense of completion.
Vocal music and harmonic drama
Bach’s cantatas, passions, and oratorios use harmony for dramatic purposes. Recitatives, with their free-flowing harmony, reflect the meaning of the text. Unexpected chords emphasize important words. Modulations to distant keys illustrate powerful emotions.
In the St. Matthew Passion, chromatic harmonies accompany moments of supreme sorrow. The chorus "Kommt, ihr Töchter" opens the work with powerful harmonic masses. The dialogue between the two choirs creates a stereophonic effect, enhanced by harmonic means. Chords cascade from one choir to the other, creating spatial depth.
The alto aria "Erbarme dich" (Someone’s Evil) exemplifies profound expressiveness achieved with simple means. The harmony moves slowly, each chord carefully defined. Chromatic passing notes create a tartness. The resolutions are delayed, heightening the tension. The music expresses boundless sorrow.
In his Mass in B minor, Bach utilized the full richness of his harmonic language. From the archaic modal turns of phrase in the Kyrie to the modern, gallant harmonies in some arias, everything finds its place in this grandiose work. Numerical symbolism, theological significance of keys, and rhetorical figures — all are intertwined in a highly complex structure.
The pedagogical significance of Bach’s harmony
The "Inventions" and "Symphony" for piano were conceived as educational pieces for teaching polyphony and harmony. Bach wrote a preface explaining the pedagogical goals: to teach pure two- and three-part harmonies, develop a taste for composition, and achieve a melodious playing style. These works are still used in music education today.
Each invention develops a specific technical and musical challenge. Imitative polyphony is combined with a clear harmonic structure. The student simultaneously masters the principles of counterpoint and harmony. The development of musical thinking occurs through the practical application of Bach’s principles.
The "French Suites," "English Suites," and partitas also served a didactic purpose. Bach systematically taught dance genres, each with its own harmonic characteristics. Students were exposed to a diversity of musical characters, mastered through the study of specific compositions.
A system of music education based on the study of Bach’s music has spread throughout the world. Conservatories use Bach’s works at all stages of education. From the simplest minuets to the Goldberg Variations, a musician’s path leads through mastering Bach’s legacy.
Bach’s Harmony in a Modern Perspective
Contemporary composers continue to draw on Bach’s principles of harmony. The minimalism of Philip Glass and Steve Reich utilizes the principles of drone and slow harmonic movement found in Bach. Jazz musicians study Bach’s harmonic progressions, finding them a source of improvisation.
Neoclassical movements of the 20th century consciously drew on Bach’s models. The concept of "back to Bach" signified a return to the clarity of harmonic functions, the logic of voice leading, and the architectural harmony of form. Following the experiments of the avant-garde, many composers sought support in classical principles.
Electronic music and computer composition also draw on Bach’s legacy. Algorithmic composition relies on the formalization of the rules that Bach applied intuitively. Fractals and self-similar structures found in Bach’s music inspire creators of new music.
Bach’s harmonic language remains vibrant and relevant nearly three centuries after his death. His principles demonstrate universality, applicable to a wide variety of musical styles. The balance of horizontal and vertical dimensions he achieved serves as an ideal for composers of all times.
The bass line as a harmonic foundation
The bass voice plays a special role in Bach’s harmony, serving as the foundation of the entire harmonic structure. Bach inherited the practice of numbered bass (basso continuo), where the bass line defined the harmony, and the numbers indicated the intervals of the upper voices. However, he developed this system to unprecedented perfection, transforming the bass into a fully-fledged melodic voice.
Bach’s bass lines are distinguished by their expressiveness and logical movement. They don’t simply mark the roots of chords, but create their own melodic line, which can be performed independently as a stand-alone composition. Leaps of significant intervals alternate with smooth, stepwise movements. Chromatic movements in the bass create a special expressiveness.
In organ works, the pedal part often contains sustained notes — organ points — above which a complex harmony develops in the upper voices. The tonic organ point establishes the main key, while the dominant creates tension before the resolution. Bach used this technique masterfully, creating large-scale constructions on a single bass note.
Ascending bass progressions are less common than descending ones, due to the acoustic properties of sound. Descending progressions in fifths or fourths sound more natural and create a sense of harmonic logic. Bach understood these patterns and used them to create directional movement in music.
In dance pieces, the bass line often defines the character of the dance. The measured steps of the sarabande, the leaping bass of the bourrée, the smooth movement of the courante — all are expressed in the bass voice’s pattern. Harmony here is closely linked to rhythm and meter, creating unity in the dance image.
Bach and his contemporaries
A comparison of Bach’s harmonic language with that of his contemporaries reveals both common characteristics of the era and individual idiosyncrasies. George Frideric Handel, nearly the same age as Bach, used simpler and more straightforward harmony. His music was aimed at a general audience, which required greater accessibility of harmonic resources.
In his keyboard sonatas, Domenico Scarlatti employed bold harmonic turns that anticipated the Classical era. His modulations are sometimes more unexpected than Bach’s, but less systematic. Scarlatti experimented with harmony intuitively, while Bach relied on a profound understanding of the tonal system.
French harpsichordists François Couperin and Jean-Philippe Rameau developed the galant style with its graceful melodies and transparent harmony. Rameau, a theorist, systematized the principles of harmony that Bach embodied in his compositional practice. French music gravitated toward ornamentation and elegance, while German music gravitated toward polyphonic complexity.
Italian composers such as Antonio Vivaldi and Arcangelo Corelli created the concerto style with its clear harmonic structures. The ritornello form of the concerto is built on the alternation of tonal stable tutti and modulating solos. Bach adopted these principles but imbued them with richer polyphonic content.
Telemann, the most prolific composer of the era, wrote in a variety of national styles. His harmony is more conventional than Bach’s, but is distinguished by its diversity, incorporating French, Italian, and Polish elements. Bach synthesized various national traditions into a single, universal language.
Dissonance and its resolution
Bach’s treatment of dissonance follows the strict rules of counterpoint, but applies these rules with extraordinary ingenuity. Suspensions, one of the main types of dissonance, are used to create harmonic tension. The dissonant sound is prepared in the preceding chord, then suspended during a change of harmony, and then resolved down a step.
Passing dissonances arise from the melodic movement of the voice between chord tones. Bach used not only diatonic but also chromatic passing tones, creating sharp verticals. Smooth voice leading justifies any dissonances if they arise naturally from linear movement.
Subsidiary notes surrounding the fundamental tone, either above or below, also generate dissonance. Double subsidiaries, where two voices simultaneously deviate from the fundamental tones, create particularly complex consonances. Bach boldly used such combinations, relying on the logic of voice leading.
Seventh and ninth chords — dissonant chords by nature — require resolution. The dominant seventh chord resolves to the tonic with a characteristic movement of voices: the third and seventh converge, forming the third of the tonic. The diminished seventh chord can resolve to various chords, making it a versatile modulation tool.
The development and resolution of dissonance creates the temporal direction of music. Dissonance cannot continue indefinitely; it requires resolution into consonance. This creates a dynamic of tension and release that forms the basis of musical dramaturgy. Bach masterfully manipulated this dynamic at all levels of composition.
The rhythmic dimension of harmony
Harmonic rhythm — the frequency of chord changes — is a crucial aspect of Bach’s music. In different parts of the cycle, in different sections of the form, the harmonic rhythm varies, creating a dynamic development. A slow harmonic rhythm characterizes calm sections, while a fast one marks climaxes.
In chorales, the harmony often changes on each beat of the bar, creating a measured movement. However, in the pre-choral constructions, the harmonic rhythm accelerates, the chords flicker more quickly, creating a sense of cadence. This technique heightens the sense of approaching resolution.
In fast fugues, harmony can change relatively slowly, as attention is focused on the polyphonic interplay of themes. Harmonic supports are spaced several bars apart. Intermediate harmonies arise as a result of contrapuntal movement, without forming independent harmonic functions.
Syncopated rhythm can influence the perception of harmony. Accents on weak beats create a sense of instability, which is reinforced by unstable chords. Bach used rhythmic devices to reinforce harmonic effects, creating a synthesis of various musical parameters.
Stops in movement, called fermatas, are usually located at harmonically stable points. Cadences in chorales are marked by fermatas, which allow one to sense the harmonic resolution. Temporal organization is closely linked to harmonic structure.
Tonal painting and affects
The concept of musical rhetorical figures (Figurenlehre) suggested a connection between musical turns of phrase and specific emotions or concepts. Bach systematically used harmonic means to express extra-musical ideas. Chromaticism was associated with suffering, diatonicism with joy and clarity.
Descending chromatic lines traditionally depict grief, lamentation, and death. The passus duriusculus figure — a four-note chromatic progression — is found in mourning contexts. Bach used this figure in his Passion, cantatas based on texts about death and suffering, creating a recognizable symbol of grief.
Ascending sequences depicted ascent, resurrection, and rapture. Bright major chords after minor sections symbolized the transition from darkness to light, from despair to hope. The modulation from minor to parallel major created a sense of enlightenment.
Diminished seventh chords, with their tense sound, were used in moments of extreme tension, terror, and confusion. In passion recitatives, they emphasize dramatic words. The sudden appearance of a diminished seventh chord creates a shocking effect.
Keys also had symbolic meanings. D major was considered a festive, solemn key, while G minor was considered sad and concentrated. Bach took these associations into account when choosing a key for a particular work. The symbolism of keys formed part of the rhetorical system of Baroque music.
Enharmonic transformations
Enharmonics — the reinterpretation of a note or chord in a different key — provided a powerful means for unexpected modulations. A diminished seventh chord, composed of minor thirds, could be interpreted in four different keys. Each note in the chord could be a leading tone, gravitating toward the tonic.
Bach used enharmonics to create modulation chains leading to distant keys. A note written as sharp is reinterpreted as flat, and the music finds itself in a completely new tonal realm. Such transformations created a magical effect, an instantaneous transport to a different harmonic space.
The augmented triad, which divides the octave into three equal parts, also allows for enharmonic interpretations. Each note can be a fifth in the key, separated by a major third. Bach rarely used augmented triads as independent chords, but chromatic alterations created their fleeting appearance.
Enharmonic modulations required good temperament. In the mean-tone temperament system, enharmonically equal notes actually differed in pitch. A sharp note was lower than its corresponding flat note. Bach’s system of good temperament smoothed out these differences, making enharmonics practically feasible.
The theoretical understanding of enharmonics came later, in the works of the 19th century. But Bach used them in practice, relying on auditory experience and intuition. His enharmonic modulations anticipated the harmonic boldness of the Romantics.
Sequences and harmonic patterns
Sequence — the repetition of a musical phrase at a different pitch — is a universal principle of musical development. Bach masterfully used sequences to create energetic forward movement. Harmonic sequences are based on the repetition of a chord progression at different pitches.
A descending fifths sequence, where each chord is the dominant of the next, creates a powerful, directional movement. The sequence can span the entire circle of fifths, gradually returning to the original key. This pattern appears regularly in Bach’s music, especially in developmental sections.
An ascending second-by-second sequence creates a buildup, a rising effect. Each repetition sounds higher than the previous one, accumulating energy. Bach used this type of sequence to create climaxes. Having reached the peak, the music usually resolves downward, releasing the accumulated tension.
Harmonic patterns — standard chord progressions of the Baroque era — served as the basis for improvisation and composition. Romanesque, folia, chaconne, passacaglia — all these patterns represent harmonic schemes upon which variations were built. Bach used traditional patterns, but interpreted them with extraordinary inventiveness.
Ostinato basses — repeating bass lines — define the harmony in variation forms. The Chaconne in D minor for solo violin is based on an eight-bar bass line, repeated with various harmonizations and textural variations. The consistency of the bass line creates unity, while the variations in harmony create variety.
The influence of national styles on harmony
The French style, with its refinement and ornamentation, influenced some of Bach’s works. The French suites contain dances in a galant manner, with transparent harmonies and elegant melodies. Agréments — melody embellishments — affect the perception of harmony, creating melodic dissonances.
The Italian style, with its vibrancy and virtuosity, manifested itself in the concertos and sonatas. Harmony is more straightforward, functional relationships clearer. Chord progressions follow simple patterns, supporting the soloist’s virtuoso playing. Bach adopted the Italian clarity of form and harmonic logic.
The German choral tradition shaped Bach’s approach to harmony in sacred works. The Protestant chorale, with its measured movement and clear, functional harmony, served as the basis for countless adaptations. Bach enriched this tradition with polyphony and chromaticism, while preserving its spirit.
Polish dances — the polonaise and mazurka — are found in Bach’s suites. These dances possess a distinctive harmonic character, linked to their rhythmic features. Characteristic accents influence the placement of harmonic supports, creating the distinctive character of the national dance.
The synthesis of various national styles created a universal musical language that transcended the limitations of individual traditions. Bach combined French sophistication, Italian vibrancy, and German depth into a unified whole. His harmonic language became a model for subsequent eras precisely because of this universality.
Numerical symbolism and harmonic structure
The medieval and Baroque traditions ascribed symbolic meanings to numbers, which manifested themselves in musical structure. The number three symbolized the Trinity, seven perfection, and twelve completeness. Bach consciously employed numerical symbolism in the organization of his works, including harmonic aspects.
The number of modulations, the number of chords in a sequence, and the arrangement of cadences were often governed by symbolic numbers. In chorales based on Trinity texts, the trinity could manifest itself in the harmonic structure. Researchers have discovered numerous numerical correspondences in Bach’s music, although their interpretation remains controversial.
Alphabetic numerology, where each letter corresponds to a number, allowed names to be encoded within musical structures. The name BACH corresponds to the number 14 (B=2, A=1, C=3, H=8), and this number appears in his works with suspicious frequency. Harmonic structures could be organized according to this number.
The golden ratio — a proportion considered perfect — is revealed in the placement of culminations and harmonic turning points. The golden ratio point often coincides with a crucial modulation or harmonic event. This may be the result of an intuitive sense of proportion or conscious calculation.
The symbolic aspects of Bach’s music intertwine with purely musical ones, creating a multi-layered structure of meaning. Harmony serves not only sonic but also intellectual purposes. Music becomes a text that can be read on multiple levels.
Heritage in contemporary musical practice
Jazz harmony, despite its differences from classical harmony, reveals connections to Bachian principles. Voice leading in jazz follows rules that derive from Baroque practice. Second chords, which Bach used as passing harmonies, have become independent chords in jazz. However, the logic of their application remains linked to functional harmony.
Film composers often turn to Bach’s harmonic models. Chorale sequences create a sense of sublimity, while fugues convey intellectual complexity. Soundtracks employ Bach’s principles to create emotional effects relatable to a wide audience.
Rock music and progressive rock actively used Bachian elements. Bands like Yes, Genesis, Emerson, and Lake & Palmer incorporated fugue sections and baroque-style keyboard passages into their music. Harmonic progressions were borrowed from the classical tradition.
Electronic music uses Bach’s algorithms to generate harmonies. The rules of counterpoint are formalized in computer programs that create new music based on Bach’s principles. Artificial intelligence is trained on Bach’s chorales, assimilating the patterns of harmonic language.
Music therapy utilizes Bach’s music for its harmonic order. Research demonstrates the beneficial effects of Bach’s music on mental well-being. Harmonic logic creates a sense of order and stability, which has a therapeutic effect.
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