Voice leading (or part writing) is the linear progression of individual melodic lines (
voices or parts) and their interaction with one another to create
harmonies, typically in accordance with the principles of
common-practice harmony and
counterpoint. These principles include voices sounding smooth and independent, generally minimising movement to
common tones as well as
steps to the closest
chord tone possible, therefore minimising leaps where possible. As a result, different
voicings and
inversions of chords may provide smoother voice leading.
Rigorous concern for voice leading is of greatest importance in common-practice music, although
jazz
Jazz is a music genre that originated in the African-American communities of New Orleans, Louisiana, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its roots are in blues, ragtime, European harmony, African rhythmic rituals, spirituals, h ...
and
pop music
Pop music is a genre of popular music that originated in its modern form during the mid-1950s in the United States and the United Kingdom.S. Frith, W. Straw, and J. Street, eds, ''iarchive:cambridgecompani00frit, The Cambridge Companion to Pop ...
also demonstrate attention to voice leading to varying degrees.
The style of voice leading will depend on the performing medium; for example, singing a large leap may be harder than playing it on piano.
Example
The score below shows the first four measures of the
C-major prelude from
J.S. Bach's ''
The Well-Tempered Clavier'', Book 1. Letter (a) presents the original score while (b) and (c) present
reductions (simplified versions) intended to clarify the harmony and implied voice leading, respectively.
:
In (b), the same measures are presented as four
block chords (with two
inverted): I – II – V – I.
In (c), the four measures are presented as five horizontal
voices identified by the direction of the
stems, which are added even though the notes are actually
whole notes, making them look like
half notes. Notice that each voice consists of just ''three'' played notes due to the
ties: from top to bottom, (1) E F — E; (2) C D — C; (3) G A G —; (4) E D — E; (5) C — B C. The ''four'' chords result from the fact that the voices do not move at the same time.
History
Voice leading developed as an independent concept when
Heinrich Schenker stressed its importance in "
free counterpoint", as opposed to
strict counterpoint. He wrote:
He continued:
Schenker indeed did not present the rules of voice leading merely as contrapuntal rules, but showed how they are inseparable from the rules of harmony and how they form one of the most essential aspects of musical composition.
Common-practice conventions and pedagogy
Chord connection
Western musicians have tended to teach voice leading by focusing on connecting adjacent harmonies because that skill is foundational to meeting larger, structural objectives.
Common-practice conventions dictate that melodic lines should be smooth and independent. To be smooth, they should be primarily
conjunct
{{unreferenced, date=August 2024
In linguistics, the term conjunct has three distinct uses:
*A conjunct is an adverbial that adds information to the sentence that is not considered part of the propositional content (or at least not essential) b ...
(stepwise), avoid
leaps that are difficult to sing, approach and follow leaps with movement in the opposite direction, and correctly handle tendency tones (primarily, the
leading-tone, but also the , which often moves down to ). To be independent, they should avoid
parallel fifths and octaves.
Contrapuntal
In music theory, counterpoint is the relationship of two or more simultaneous Part (music), musical lines (also called voices) that are harmonically dependent on each other, yet independent in rhythm and Pitch contour, melodic contour. The term ...
conventions likewise consider permitted or forbidden melodic
intervals in individual parts, intervals between parts, the direction of the movement of the voices with respect to each other, etc. Whether dealing with counterpoint or harmony, these conventions emerge not only from a desire to create easy-to-sing parts but also from the constraints of tonal materials and from the objectives behind writing certain
textures.
These conventions are discussed in more detail below.
Harmonic roles
As the
Renaissance
The Renaissance ( , ) is a Periodization, period of history and a European cultural movement covering the 15th and 16th centuries. It marked the transition from the Middle Ages to modernity and was characterized by an effort to revive and sur ...
gave way to the
Baroque era in the 1600s, part writing reflected the increasing stratification of harmonic roles. This differentiation between outer and inner voices was an outgrowth of both
tonality
Tonality is the arrangement of pitch (music), pitches and / or chord (music), chords of a musical work in a hierarchy of perceived ''relations'', ''stabilities'', ''attractions'', and ''directionality''.
In this hierarchy, the single pitch or ...
and
homophony. In this new Baroque style, the outer voices took a commanding role in determining the flow of the music and tended to move more often by leaps. Inner voices tended to move stepwise or repeat
common tones.
A
Schenkerian analysis perspective on these roles shifts the discussion somewhat from "outer and inner voices" to "upper and bass voices". Although the outer voices still play the dominant, form-defining role in this view, the leading soprano voice is often seen as a composite line that draws on the voice leadings in each of the upper voices of the imaginary
continuo.
Approaching harmony from a non-Schenkerian perspective,
Dmitri Tymoczko nonetheless also demonstrates such "3+1" voice leading, where "three voices articulate a strongly crossing-free voice leading between complete triads
.. while a fourth voice adds doublings," as a feature of tonal writing.
Neo-Riemannian theory examines another facet of this principle. That theory decomposes movements from one chord to another into one or several "parsimonious movements" between
pitch classes instead of actual pitches (i.e., neglecting octave shifts). Such analysis shows the deeper continuity underneath surface disjunctions, as in the Bach example from BWV 941 hereby.
Jazz and pop music
Contemporary styles like jazz and pop treat voice-leading with more mixed importance than common-practice composition. For example, in ''Jazz Theory'', Dariusz Terefenko writes that "
the surface level, jazz voice-leading conventions seem more relaxed than they are in common-practice music." Marc Schonbrun also states that while it is untrue that "popular music has no voice leading in it,
..the largest amount of popular music is simply conceived with chords as blocks of information, and melodies are layered on top of the chords."
Notes
References
Bibliography
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Further reading
* McAdams, S. and Bregman, A. (1979). "Hearing musical streams", in ''
Computer Music Journal'' 3(4): 26–44 and in Roads, C. and Strawn, J., eds. (1985). ''Foundations of Computer Music'', p. 658–698. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
*
Voice Leading Overview, ''Harmony.org.uk''.
* ''Voice Leading: The Science Behind a Musical Art'' by David Huron, 2016, MIT Press
"Mathematical Musick– The Contrapuntal Formula of Dr.
Thomas Campion
Thomas Campion (sometimes spelled Campian; 12 February 1567 – 1 March 1620) was an English composer, poet, and physician. He was born in London, educated at Cambridge, and studied law in Gray's Inn. He wrote over a hundred lute songs, masque ...
" by Jeff Lee, shipbrook.net
{{Voicing (music)
Arrangement
Tonality
Schenkerian analysis