Anticipation (music)
Anticipation (of Latin anticipare ), also anticipation , referred to in the music where appropriate dissonant anticipation of the next heavy cycle time following (consonant) melody note (as part of a chord). A typical case is the anticipation of the finals in a final cadence .
The following example demonstrates this fact: In the context of a cadenza in G major, the upper part anticipates the final note G in the prelude to the last bar. This anticipation creates a dissonance with the triad d-f sharp-a ( dominant ) that sounds at this point.
See also
literature
- Heinrich Christoph Koch : Art. Anticipation . In: Musical Lexicon . Frankfurt 1802, Sp. 1702-1710 ( online) .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Wieland Ziegenrücker: General music theory with questions and tasks for self-control. German Publishing House for Music, Leipzig 1977; Paperback edition: Wilhelm Goldmann Verlag, and Musikverlag B. Schott's Sons, Mainz 1979, ISBN 3-442-33003-3 , p. 139.