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Author Topic: iii, III or both???  (Read 5802 times)

Offline elio

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Re: iii, III or both???
« Reply #20 on: April 24, 2008, 05:42:17 AM »
For the original poster - when to use a iii and when a III?

One possibly helpful way is to think in terms of "tension" and "release". As you are playing, you build up tension (say V7) and then you resolve (release) it (V7->I). The way I think of it, "release" chords are chords you can "rest" on, and spend a beat or two on. "Tension" chords are the ones you want to resolve straight away.

So, at least for me, the iii is usually a rest/release chord, the III (most ofter III#5#9) is a tension chord, which you usually want to move away from, to go to the vi (which is the relative fourth).

Example:
"Rest iii" - beginning of "Anointing, Fall on Me"
E/BDG Anoin  iii - rest - note how you spend two beats here
A/ACE ting vi - rest

"Tension III" - beginning of "As the Deer"
CG/CEG As the I - rest
BEb/ADG deer VII#5#9 - tension - one beat and resolve to the relative fourth (III)
EAb/CE pan.. III#5 - tension - one beat and resolve to the relative fourth (vi)
/D teth
AEA/C for... vi - release

Of course you can mix this up as much as you want.
Hope this is helpful.

Offline musallio

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Re: iii, III or both???
« Reply #21 on: April 24, 2008, 07:45:42 AM »
For the original poster - when to use a iii and when a III?

One possibly helpful way is to think in terms of "tension" and "release". As you are playing, you build up tension (say V7) and then you resolve (release) it (V7->I). The way I think of it, "release" chords are chords you can "rest" on, and spend a beat or two on. "Tension" chords are the ones you want to resolve straight away.

So, at least for me, the iii is usually a rest/release chord, the III (most ofter III#5#9) is a tension chord, which you usually want to move away from, to go to the vi (which is the relative fourth).

Example:
"Rest iii" - beginning of "Anointing, Fall on Me"
E/BDG Anoin  iii - rest - note how you spend two beats here
A/ACE ting vi - rest

"Tension III" - beginning of "As the Deer"
CG/CEG As the I - rest
BEb/ADG deer VII#5#9 - tension - one beat and resolve to the relative fourth (III)
EAb/CE pan.. III#5 - tension - one beat and resolve to the relative fourth (vi)
/D teth
AEA/C for... vi - release

Of course you can mix this up as much as you want.
Hope this is helpful.



Very neat elio
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Offline Maestro87

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Re: iii, III or both???
« Reply #22 on: April 25, 2008, 12:55:19 AM »
Just a word of caution here.  The above is reasonably true of triads, once you get in chords of 4 or more notes, the idea of inversion gets a little trickier.

For example, the notes C E G A,  is it a C6 chord or an Am7 in first inversion?  Or the notes G B D E,  is it G6 or Em7 in first inversion?  The question actually becomes "which is the true root of the chord?"  This actually gets down to how the chord functions (and that to can be a bit gray).

Another one from the old theory days is the "Tonic six-four (I chord in second inversion)/Dominant" progression.  Is the Tonic actually a 2nd inversion I (G C E) or is it an incomplete V13 (G [B D F A] C E) with the C and E are embellishments of the B and D?  Try this, play the progression as triads:

G / G C E
G / G B D
C / E G C.

Now simply add an F (the 7th) to the left hand:
G F / G C E
G F / G B D
C /  E G A C.

It's a little spicier, but otherwise does not affect the overall effect or character of the progression, yet the G - F bass makes it decidedly some form of Gx7 [an interval of a 7th above the bass pretty well establishes the bass as the root] as opposed to some form of C chord.

One other instance that might show that all is not what it seems. Try this:

C E  / G B D F#  [note, the C - E is best as a 10th (an octave and a 3rd)]
C E / G B C E
B G / F# B D

Now try it again with G D in place of the B G of the last chord.

Is the first chord a CMaj7 #11 (C E G B D F#) or a D13 (D F# [A] C E G B) in 3rd inversion?

Now, Change the L.H. C E to D C (add the A if you like).  This time there is no denial that it is some form of Dx7.

Dx7 to G is a natural V - I progression.  In the first one above, with C as root we have a IV - I plagal progression (which is entirely valid  - the "Amen" progression) but with it containing the same notes as the D13, it is a bit ambiguous, particularly since it has a stronger pull to I than a normal IV - I.  It is sort of a cross between the two.  (it would also make a great choral "Amen" in 6 part harmony).

I will say, if I were to write it in chord symbols, I would opt for CMaj#11 - C Maj7 - G Maj 7 as opposed to D13/C ... since it is clearer to read.  But because it has a bit of the V effect, I realize that it may be possible as a substitute for a V - I cadence in certain instances and for certain effects.

I bring this up to just caution against stating too many "absolutes" in music.  Not all is as it sometimes seems.  And some "absolutes" become a source of confusion, particularly when often, so little music fits into the "rule".  I remember when first being taught about "Sonata Form" and all of the parts that a sonata has and how they are put together.  In 40 years, I don't think that I have ever played a sonata that fit the "Sonata Form."  In fact, the rules as the had been taught in the past would actually deny most of the Sonatas of Mozart, Haydn, and Beethoven as actually being Sonatas!  You mean these guys didn't know how to write a sonata?
And then there were the classes on "Fugue Form" (fugue is not a form -- it's a way of writing music) and if one were to follow those rules, one would have to say that Bach maybe wrote one or two fugues since most of them don't fit the description!

But that is the beauty of music.  When you realize that we have only 12 possible roots upon which to build the entire harmonic system and a finite number of possibilities to combine the notes above the roots into harmonies, and only 12 notes upon which to build melodies, it is almost mind boggling to realize how much music of such variety has been created in the western world over nearly 1 1/2 millenniums, and that so much music has been built on the same basic harmonic system that was in practice before Bach, nearly 400 years ago.

The best advice I have ever heard about music theory is.



Music theory is what music is, except when it isn't.
"Stay Fly, Stay Fresh, God Bless"
Dameron Growe

Offline rspindy

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Re: iii, III or both???
« Reply #23 on: April 25, 2008, 11:07:56 AM »
Music theory is what music is, except when it isn't.


You Said it Maestro

Offline T-Block

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Re: iii, III or both???
« Reply #24 on: April 25, 2008, 01:31:28 PM »
The best advice I have ever heard about music theory is.



Music theory is what music is, except when it isn't.

WOW, I like that!!!  :D
Real musicians play in every key!!!
Music Theory, da numbers work!

Offline musallio

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Re: iii, III or both???
« Reply #25 on: April 26, 2008, 06:41:03 AM »
Music theory is what music is, except when it isn't.


You Said it Maestro

Indeed!!!

Good 1..(I shuld memorize that & say it whenever appropriate 8)

Which also makes me think of starting a thread of "Who Said That?!" here on LGM..this will be the 1st 1 ;D
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