Details, Explanation and Meaning About Consonance

Consonance Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Consonance is a stylistic device, often used in poetry. It is the repetition of consonant sounds in a short sequence of words, for example, the "r" sound in "her brown curly hair." Alliteration differs from consonance insofar as alliteration requires the repeated consonant sound to be at the beginning of each word. In half rhyme, the terminal consonant sound is repeated. A special species of consonance is using a series of sibilant sounds (/s/ and /sh/ for example); this is sometimes known simply as sibilance.


In music, a consonance (latin consonare, "sounding together") is a harmony, chord, or interval considered stable, as opposed to a dissonance, which is considered unstable (see dissonance). The strictest definition of consonance may be only those sounds which are pleasant, while the most general definition includes any sounds which are used freely.

Consonance has been defined variously through:

  • Frequency ratios: with ratios of lower simple numbers being more consonant than those which are higher (Pythagoras). Many of these definitions do not require exact integer tunings, only approximation.
    • Coincidence of harmonics: with consonance being a greater coincidence of harmonics or partials (collectively overtones) (Helmholtz, 1877/1954). By this definition consonance is dependent not only on the quality of the interval between two notes, but the partials and thus sound quality (timbre) of those notes themselves.
    • Fusion or pattern matching: fundamentals may be perceived through pattern-matching of the separately analyzed partials to a best-fit exact-harmonic template (Gerson & Goldstein, 1978) or the best-fit subharmonic (Terhardt, 1974). Or harmonics may be perceptually fused into one entity, with consonances being those intervals which are more likely to be mistaken for unisons, the perfect intervals, because of the multiple estimates of fundamentals, at perfect intervals, for one harmonic tone (Terhardt, 1974). By these definitions inharmonic partials of otherwise harmonic spectra are usually processed seperately (Hartmann et al., 1990), unless frequency or amplitude modulated coherently with the harmonic partials (McAdams, 1983). For some of these definitions neural-firing supplies the data for pattern-matching, see directly below (e.g., Moore, 1989; pp.183-187; Srulovicz & Goldstein, 1983).
    • Period length or neural-firing coincidence: with the length of periodic neural-firing created by two or more wave-forms, lower simple numbers creating shorter or common periods or higher coincidence of neural-firing and thus consonance (Patternson, 1986; Boomsliter & Creel, 1961; Meyer, 1898; Roederer, 1973, p.145-149). Pure tones cause neural-firing exactly with the period or some multiple of the pure tone.
  • Critical band: Consonances are pitches father apart than their critical bands.

In what is now called the common practice period consonant intervals include:
  • Perfect consonances:
    • unisons and octaves
    • perfect fourths and perfect fifths
  • Imperfect consonances:
    • major thirds and minor sixths
    • minor thirds and major sixths
This is as would be taught in a beginning music theory class, but intervals such as the perfect fourth and the thirds were once considered forbidden dissonances. Consonances may be used freely and unprepared, occurring on weak or strong beats.

Polyphonic cadences (caesuras), requireing at least two voices, were created by successive dyads, the first an imperfect consonance on a weak beat, the second a perfect consonance on a strong beat, such a major sixth moving to an octave (for instance, the major (imperfect) sixth D-B followed by the perfect octave C-C').

All further information at dissonance.

Table of contents
1 Further reading
2 Source
3 External links

Further reading

  • Tenney, James. (1988). A History of "Consonance" and "Dissonance". White Plains, NY: Excelsior, 1988; New York: Gordon and Breach, 1988.
  • Sethares, W. A. (1993). "Local consonance and the relationship between timbre and scale". Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol. 94, Pt. 1, p. 1218. (A non-technical version of the article is avaialbe at [1])

Source

  • Burns, Edward M. (1999). "Intervals, Scales, and Tuning", The Psychology of Music second edition. Deutsch, Diana, ed. San Diego: Academic Press. ISBN 0122135644.

External links


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