Voice Leading Basics
Motion Types
Perfect Intervals
Tendency Tones and Resolutions
Practical Voice Leading
100

Define "voice leading" in four-part harmony

The manner in which each of the four voices moves from one chord to the next; how notes/intervals move to form smooth melodic lines

100

Name the five basic types of motion between two voices

Contrary, Parallel, Similar, Oblique, Stationary

100

What is forbidden when approaching perfect intervals in two voices?

Approaching a perfect interval in parallel motion is forbidden

100

What is the leading tone in a major scale and which direction should it move?

The seventh scale degree (leading tone) and it must resolve upward to the tonic

100

What is the maximum interval a voice can jump?

No intervals greater than a 6th

200

In four-part writing, how many separate melodic lines are created and what are they commonly called?

(Hint: Think about choir)

Four voices: soprano, alto, tenor, bass

200

Give a short definition of oblique motion

One voice remains on the same note while the other moves up or down

200

What are "parallel octaves" and why are they considered poor voice leading?

Two voices moving in parallel to octaves; they weaken independence between parts

200

What is the rule for chordal sevenths' resolution?

Chordal sevenths always resolve downwards

200

What type of intervals do we avoid in voice leading? (Major, minor, Augmented or Diminished)

Augmented intervals should be avoided!

300

List two rules for the three upper voices when it comes to moving between chords?
(Where can my voices go?)

Usually stay on the same note or move by a step or third; never use leaps greater than a sixth

300

What is the difference between parallel and similar motion?

Parallel motion: voices move same direction and same interval size

Similar motion: same direction but different interval sizes

300

In the key of C major what are the notes in a V7 chord in root position and indicate which note is the chordal seventh and its typical resolution

a V7 chord in C is G, B, D, F and the chordal 7th is F

300

What other type motion should we avoid with octaves?

Similar motion should be avoided with octaves!

400

What melodic leaps should be avoided in the bass line?

Leaps greater than a seventh or an octave should be avoided

400

Why is contrary motion often preferred when approaching perfect intervals between outer voices?

It avoids creating perfect octaves or fifths and preserves independent voice-leading

400

In the key of Db minor name the notes for the V7 (DOMINANTE) chord and identify the chordal 7th

(Dont forget you have to think about the minor key and what we do to the 7th in a minor key!)

Ab, C, Eb, Gb

400

What are the two most important rules in voice leading?

1. DO NOT HAVE PARALLE OCTAVES OR FIFTHS

2. TREATMENT OF TENDENCY TONE, Leading tones go up and Chordal sevenths go down!

500

Explain what a "chord skip" is?

When a chord repeats or is sustained and there are melodic leaps in one or more upper voices

500

Describe stationary motion

Both voices remain on the same note

500

In the key of G minor name the notes in the V7 (DOMANINT) chord and name the leading tone for G minor. 

(Dont forget you have to think about the minor key and what we do to the 7th in a minor key!)

Leading tone - F#

V7 chord is - D, F#, A, C

500

Provide a short checklist (4 items) you should follow when writing four-part harmony to avoid common voice-leading errors?

1) Avoid parallel octaves/fifths/unisons between any two voices

 2) Resolve leading tones up to tonic and chordal sevenths down by step

3) Keep upper voices moving primarily by step or small thirds (no leaps >6th)

 4) Use contrary or oblique motion for outer voices when approaching perfect intervals; avoid hidden perfects

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