Abstract
We counted trichords in a database of vocal polyphony. In modern terminology, the most common in the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries were major (in semitones: 047), minor (037), suspended (027), unnamed (025, 035), and diminished (036). Prevalence profiles correlated with predictions of simple models of roughness and harmonicity; sometimes also with evenness (pitch-class spacing), but not diatonicity. From the thirteenth to the fifteenth century, 047 and 037 became more relatively prevalent, after which profiles stabilized. Our results imply that today the C/D of trichords depends mainly on familiarity, roughness, and harmonicity. C/D is best understood in an interdisciplinary, psychohistoric approach.
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Parncutt, R., Reisinger, D., Fuchs, A., & Kaiser, F. (2019). Consonance and prevalence of sonorities in Western polyphony: Roughness, harmonicity, familiarity, evenness, diatonicity. Journal of New Music Research, 48(1), 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1080/09298215.2018.1477804
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