Grove Music Online: Cadence
Grove Music Online: Cadence
Grove Music Online: Cadence
https://doi.org/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.04523
Published in print: 20 January 2001
Published online: 2001
1. Types.
In music of the tonal periods (Baroque, Classical and Romantic), it is
useful to distinguish between cadences on the basis of their varying
degrees of ‘finality’, for example between those whose final chord is
on the tonic and those whose final chord is on some other degree of
the scale, between those whose chords are all in root position and
those which contain at least one inverted chord, and so on. A
number of terms have been borrowed from medieval modal theory
(authentic, plagal, Phrygian), not always on a strictly logical basis;
there are also some cadences to which a number of names have
been applied as a result of the persistence of terms introduced by
theorists from the 18th century or earlier, and the translation of
foreign-language equivalents. The following discussion is intended to
clarify the meaning of the most important of these names as they are
now used.
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 1. Types.: Ex.1 Beethoven:
Sonata in E♭, op.81a, 1st movt
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An ‘imperfect’ or ‘half’ cadence, ‘semi-cadence’ or ‘half close’ (Fr.
cadence suspendue; Ger. Halbschluss; It. cadenza sospesa) ends on
the dominant and may be preceded by any chord. The simple
succession I–V (ex.2) is common; so are II b–V and IV–V. The
expressive qualities of the imperfect cadence are illustrated in ex.3;
within the space of seven bars of an aria there are three imperfect
cadences, each of which is approached by a different chord. In
American usage, ‘imperfect’ is sometimes applied to cadences
ending on the tonic whose chords are not in root position (also
known as ‘medial’ or ‘inverted’ cadences), or whose upper parts do
not end on the tonic; only the terms ‘half cadence’ and ‘semi-
cadence’ have the restricted meaning of an ending on the dominant.
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 1. Types.: Ex.3 Mozart: Die
Zauberflöte, ‘Ach, ich fühl’s’
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 1. Types.: Ex.4 Palestrina:
Jubilate Deo omnis terra (last four bars)
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 1. Types.: Ex.6 Handel:
Fugue in B minor for organ (last seven bars)
2. History.
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were governed entirely by linear considerations, primarily the
descent by step to the final of the prevailing mode, and secondarily
the ascent by step to the final or the octave above the final; often
motion by step was replaced by the leap of a 3rd. In Gregorian chant
the ending most frequently used is descent by step to the final; the
downward leap of a 3rd and ascent by a whole tone are also
common. Ascent by a semitone, although possible in F-mode chants,
is almost never found (the 13th-century Kyrie firmator sancte is
exceptional in this respect), though ascent by a 3rd (d– f) occurs in
rare instances (e.g. in the antiphon Vobis datum est). In the earliest
forms of organum (11th–12th centuries) the primary cadences
consisted of direct or indirect resolution of one perfect interval into
another, namely a 4th or 5th into a unison or octave (ex.8). The
secondary cadences consisted of the resolution of an imperfect
interval into a perfect interval (i.e. the 3rd into a unison and the 6th
into an octave); these became the principal endings in two-part
polyphony in the 13th century. From about 1300 practically all
cadences were based on the descent by step of the tenor, with the
resolution of the other parts dependent on the interval each made
with the tenor: the minor 3rd below normally resolved to the unison,
the major 3rd above to the 5th, and the major 6th above to the
octave (at cadence points, any major 3rds below or minor 3rds and
6ths above would be sharpened in performance; see Musica ficta).
This produced a number of possible cadences in three parts,
including the Phrygian cadence (ex.9a), the so-called ‘double leading
note cadence’ (exx. 9b–c) and a cadence that contained consecutive
5ths (ex.9d); from the mid-14th century the Landini cadence (ex.9e),
whose upper part characteristically falls to the sixth degree before
rising to the octave, became the most important variant of the
‘double leading note cadence’.
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the progression in ex.11 was described by Aaron in Thoscanello de la
musica as a cadence on E. An important contribution to cadence
formation in the Renaissance was the addition of the 3rd in the final
chord; until about 1750 it was normally sharpened in minor-mode
compositions, so that almost all pieces ended on a major triad (see
Tierce de Picardie).
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 2. History.: Ex.13 Haydn:
String Quartet in C op.74 no.1, 1st movt
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 2. History.: Ex.16 Wagner:
Tristan und Isolde, Act 1
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 2. History.: Ex.19 Hindemith:
Flute Sonata, 2nd movt, ending
Schott/Universal, London
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Cadence cadence Kadenz Schluss cadenza 2. History.: Ex.20 Holst, The
Planets, ending of ‘Neptune’ (orchestral parts omitted)
Bibliography
Grove6
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D.M. RANDEL: ‘Emerging Triadic Tonality in the Fifteenth Century’,
MQ, 57 (1971), 73–86
C. THORAU: ‘Der Trugschluss und das Ende der Rhetorik: John Cages
“Lecture on Nothing” aus rhetorischer Sicht’, Zeichen am Weg: eine
Sämmlung von Aufsätzen zum 65. Geburtstag von Heinrich Poos
(Berlin, 1994), 79–86
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