Modulation
Modulation
MODULATION1
Definition:
Modulation is the process of changing keys or the result of the change in keys.
Modulation takes places within a composition or a movement of a composition.
A modulation requires that the new key is established (i.e., the old key does not return right
away; usually more than a phrase in length). There needs to be a cadence in the new key.2
Background:
Modulation became practical with the advent of the equal temperament system of tuning.
Modulation requires the ability of the listener to remember the old key and be able to compare
it with the current key.
KEY RELATIONSHIPS:
Parallel Keys:
A change between major and minor modes with the same tonic.
Since the tonic has not changed, no modulation has taken place. This is called a change of
mode.
Relative Keys:
A change of key between major and minor keys with the same key signature.
Since the tonic has changed, this is called a modulation.
1 Information for this handout was taken from: "Modulation," The New Harvard Dictionary of Music , Don Randel
ed., Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1986, 503-505; "Chapter 14: Harmony:
Modulation," Benward, Bruce and Gary White. Music in Theory and Practice, 5th ed. Vol 1, Madison, WI:
Brown and Benchmark Publishers, 1993, 275-301, Chapter 18-19 of Kostka, Stefan and Dorothy Payne. Tonal
Harmony with an Introduction to Twentieth-Century Music, 2nd ed. New York: Alfred A Knopf, 1989, 289-
322.
2 A "modulation" that occurs within a phrase is called a tonicization; a modulation a phrase in length is called a false
or intermediate modulation.
Given a major key (think of this key as I / tonic), the closely related keys can be thought
of as ii, iii, IV, V, vi.
Given a minor key (think of the given key as vi of a major key), the closely related keys
can be thought of as V, IV, iii, ii, I of the major key.
The most common modulations that occur are from a major key to its dominant (I-V) and
from a minor key to its relative major (i-III).
Foreign Keys:
All key relationships that are not enharmonic, parallel, relative, or closely related are called
foreign relationships. Such key relationships are usually distantly related.
TYPES OF MODULATION:
This type of modulation is accomplished by means of a chord that is spelled the same in
both the old and new keys but has one function in the old key and another function in
the new key -- the common chord or pivot chord.
The pivot chord is usually the chord prior to the first chromatic alteration indicating the
new key.
Chord Search:
A chord search can be used to list all the possible ways a given chord can function as a
pivot chord.
To perform a chord search:
1. Determine the quality of the given chord.
2. List all the functions of that quality of chord in both major and minor keys.
3. Determine the keys in which the given chord would have these functions.
Sample chord searches for each quality triad are shown below.
Sequential Modulation:
A modulation that comes about through the use of a sequence (def: a repetition of melodic,
harmonic, or rhythmic material at a different pitch level).
May be analyzed with a common chord, but the sequence is equally important in
establishing the new key.
Many sequential modulations are short and so can be thought of as tonicizations.
Chromatic Modulation:
A chromatic modulation is a change of key brought about through a chromatic alteration
of a note between two chords.
In a chromatic alteration, there is no pivot chord; neither the chord without or with the
chromatic alteration can be analyzed in both the old and the new key.
Chromatic modulation are used when the two keys involved are not closely related (i.e.,
remote keys).