What are Antecedent & Consequent Phrases in Music?Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?Able to recall music in its correct key, but don't have perfect pitch — what is it called?What are the benefits of determining form before composing?What are the terms for beats and a set of beats in a dance?What is a coldplay?What are “sweeping phrases”?What does “in position” mean when referring to scored music?Terminology for determining form and harmonic structure when there are no apparent chords?What are some other basic forms besides ABA and ABACA?What is the difference between 'chorus' and 'refrain'?What does “function” actually mean in music?

Must a warlock replace spells with new spells of exactly their Pact Magic spell slot level?

Can a character with the War Caster feat call a bolt with Call Lightning instead of making an opportunity attack?

Writing style before Elements of Style

Can you output map values in visualforce inline using a string key?

Is it legal to have an abortion in another state or abroad?

Why did Theresa May offer a vote on a second Brexit referendum?

Is keeping the forking link on a true fork necessary (Github/GPL)?

Are black holes spherical during merger?

How do I disable login of user?

Freedom of Speech and Assembly in China

My players want to grind XP but we're using landmark advancement

What does kpsewhich stand for?

便利な工具 what does な means

Manager questioning my time estimates for a project

How to politely tell someone they did not hit "reply to all" in an email?

Which European Languages are not Indo-European?

Why would a rational buyer offer to buy with no conditions precedent?

Why did Jon Snow do this immoral act if he is so honorable?

Testing using real data of the customer

“Quand même” to mean “anyway”

What could a self-sustaining lunar colony slowly lose that would ultimately prove fatal?

Why haven't we yet tried accelerating a space station with people inside to a near light speed?

Did 20% of US soldiers in Vietnam use heroin, 95% of whom quit afterwards?

How to let other coworkers know that I don't share my coworker's political views?



What are Antecedent & Consequent Phrases in Music?


Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?Able to recall music in its correct key, but don't have perfect pitch — what is it called?What are the benefits of determining form before composing?What are the terms for beats and a set of beats in a dance?What is a coldplay?What are “sweeping phrases”?What does “in position” mean when referring to scored music?Terminology for determining form and harmonic structure when there are no apparent chords?What are some other basic forms besides ABA and ABACA?What is the difference between 'chorus' and 'refrain'?What does “function” actually mean in music?













5















I've never heard the terms before:



Antecedent and consequent phrases



they seem to be elements of a period. It seems to be evident that I am not the only one ...










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    We're a bit like scientists and mathematicians. Why use ordinary words when you can baffle brains with unusual esoteric ones instead..?

    – Tim
    5 hours ago











  • I think it's the wrong attempt to make music more "scientificial". in German it's called Vordersatz and Nachsatz.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    5 hours ago











  • Might be so, but German often uses long words!

    – Tim
    5 hours ago















5















I've never heard the terms before:



Antecedent and consequent phrases



they seem to be elements of a period. It seems to be evident that I am not the only one ...










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    We're a bit like scientists and mathematicians. Why use ordinary words when you can baffle brains with unusual esoteric ones instead..?

    – Tim
    5 hours ago











  • I think it's the wrong attempt to make music more "scientificial". in German it's called Vordersatz and Nachsatz.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    5 hours ago











  • Might be so, but German often uses long words!

    – Tim
    5 hours ago













5












5








5








I've never heard the terms before:



Antecedent and consequent phrases



they seem to be elements of a period. It seems to be evident that I am not the only one ...










share|improve this question
















I've never heard the terms before:



Antecedent and consequent phrases



they seem to be elements of a period. It seems to be evident that I am not the only one ...







terminology musical-forms






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









Richard

47.4k7114201




47.4k7114201










asked 5 hours ago









Albrecht HügliAlbrecht Hügli

6,2261524




6,2261524







  • 1





    We're a bit like scientists and mathematicians. Why use ordinary words when you can baffle brains with unusual esoteric ones instead..?

    – Tim
    5 hours ago











  • I think it's the wrong attempt to make music more "scientificial". in German it's called Vordersatz and Nachsatz.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    5 hours ago











  • Might be so, but German often uses long words!

    – Tim
    5 hours ago












  • 1





    We're a bit like scientists and mathematicians. Why use ordinary words when you can baffle brains with unusual esoteric ones instead..?

    – Tim
    5 hours ago











  • I think it's the wrong attempt to make music more "scientificial". in German it's called Vordersatz and Nachsatz.

    – Albrecht Hügli
    5 hours ago











  • Might be so, but German often uses long words!

    – Tim
    5 hours ago







1




1





We're a bit like scientists and mathematicians. Why use ordinary words when you can baffle brains with unusual esoteric ones instead..?

– Tim
5 hours ago





We're a bit like scientists and mathematicians. Why use ordinary words when you can baffle brains with unusual esoteric ones instead..?

– Tim
5 hours ago













I think it's the wrong attempt to make music more "scientificial". in German it's called Vordersatz and Nachsatz.

– Albrecht Hügli
5 hours ago





I think it's the wrong attempt to make music more "scientificial". in German it's called Vordersatz and Nachsatz.

– Albrecht Hügli
5 hours ago













Might be so, but German often uses long words!

– Tim
5 hours ago





Might be so, but German often uses long words!

– Tim
5 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














This answer repeats a lot of what I wrote in... Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?



My understanding is antecedent and consequent are the two parts of a period.



The two parts are defined by cadences.



The antecedent can end with a variety of cadences but not a perfect cadence in the main key/tonic. The typical thing is some kind of cadence on the dominant chord of the main key.



The consequent ends on a perfect cadence in the main key.



My understanding of the theory is a period sets up tension in the antecedent by cadencing somewhere that isn't the tonic then later resolves that tension in the consequent by a cadence confirming the tonic. The idea is to create structural dissonance.



In the case of a simple period the structural dissonance is resolved quickly because the second phrase - the consequent - goes to a cadence in the tonic. You can compare that to a sonata structure which also starts with a kind of antecedent, a cadence on the dominant, but then the structural dissonance is hugely elaborated with other phrases cadencing in other keys before finally recapitulating with a final cadence on the tonic.



Periods are found through out classical music. Here is one (Mozart K.331)...



enter image description here



...mm. 1-4 are the antecedent and end on a half cadence I6/4 V while mm. 5-8 are the consequent and end on a perfect cadence I6/4 V7 I.



This particular melody exhibits parallel properties meaning that the antecedent and consequent use the same basic melody with slight variation. While many periods are parallel in shape the parallel shape should not be confused with period structure. The two-part antecedent/consequent structure of a period is defined by the cadences ending the phrases!






share|improve this answer
































    2














    A period is one type of theme, like the sentence, common to the Classical style.



    The period is generally eight measures long and contains two four-measure phrases, called antecedent and consequent.



    http://openmusictheory.com/period.html



    2 fine examples are posted in this link:



    https://mramusicplace.net/2016/02/26/what-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music/






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1





      An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

      – Tim
      5 hours ago






    • 1





      (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

      – Richard
      5 hours ago












    • or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

      – Albrecht Hügli
      5 hours ago











    • @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

      – Michael Curtis
      4 hours ago











    • @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

      – Richard
      3 hours ago











    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "240"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmusic.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85110%2fwhat-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    5














    This answer repeats a lot of what I wrote in... Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?



    My understanding is antecedent and consequent are the two parts of a period.



    The two parts are defined by cadences.



    The antecedent can end with a variety of cadences but not a perfect cadence in the main key/tonic. The typical thing is some kind of cadence on the dominant chord of the main key.



    The consequent ends on a perfect cadence in the main key.



    My understanding of the theory is a period sets up tension in the antecedent by cadencing somewhere that isn't the tonic then later resolves that tension in the consequent by a cadence confirming the tonic. The idea is to create structural dissonance.



    In the case of a simple period the structural dissonance is resolved quickly because the second phrase - the consequent - goes to a cadence in the tonic. You can compare that to a sonata structure which also starts with a kind of antecedent, a cadence on the dominant, but then the structural dissonance is hugely elaborated with other phrases cadencing in other keys before finally recapitulating with a final cadence on the tonic.



    Periods are found through out classical music. Here is one (Mozart K.331)...



    enter image description here



    ...mm. 1-4 are the antecedent and end on a half cadence I6/4 V while mm. 5-8 are the consequent and end on a perfect cadence I6/4 V7 I.



    This particular melody exhibits parallel properties meaning that the antecedent and consequent use the same basic melody with slight variation. While many periods are parallel in shape the parallel shape should not be confused with period structure. The two-part antecedent/consequent structure of a period is defined by the cadences ending the phrases!






    share|improve this answer





























      5














      This answer repeats a lot of what I wrote in... Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?



      My understanding is antecedent and consequent are the two parts of a period.



      The two parts are defined by cadences.



      The antecedent can end with a variety of cadences but not a perfect cadence in the main key/tonic. The typical thing is some kind of cadence on the dominant chord of the main key.



      The consequent ends on a perfect cadence in the main key.



      My understanding of the theory is a period sets up tension in the antecedent by cadencing somewhere that isn't the tonic then later resolves that tension in the consequent by a cadence confirming the tonic. The idea is to create structural dissonance.



      In the case of a simple period the structural dissonance is resolved quickly because the second phrase - the consequent - goes to a cadence in the tonic. You can compare that to a sonata structure which also starts with a kind of antecedent, a cadence on the dominant, but then the structural dissonance is hugely elaborated with other phrases cadencing in other keys before finally recapitulating with a final cadence on the tonic.



      Periods are found through out classical music. Here is one (Mozart K.331)...



      enter image description here



      ...mm. 1-4 are the antecedent and end on a half cadence I6/4 V while mm. 5-8 are the consequent and end on a perfect cadence I6/4 V7 I.



      This particular melody exhibits parallel properties meaning that the antecedent and consequent use the same basic melody with slight variation. While many periods are parallel in shape the parallel shape should not be confused with period structure. The two-part antecedent/consequent structure of a period is defined by the cadences ending the phrases!






      share|improve this answer



























        5












        5








        5







        This answer repeats a lot of what I wrote in... Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?



        My understanding is antecedent and consequent are the two parts of a period.



        The two parts are defined by cadences.



        The antecedent can end with a variety of cadences but not a perfect cadence in the main key/tonic. The typical thing is some kind of cadence on the dominant chord of the main key.



        The consequent ends on a perfect cadence in the main key.



        My understanding of the theory is a period sets up tension in the antecedent by cadencing somewhere that isn't the tonic then later resolves that tension in the consequent by a cadence confirming the tonic. The idea is to create structural dissonance.



        In the case of a simple period the structural dissonance is resolved quickly because the second phrase - the consequent - goes to a cadence in the tonic. You can compare that to a sonata structure which also starts with a kind of antecedent, a cadence on the dominant, but then the structural dissonance is hugely elaborated with other phrases cadencing in other keys before finally recapitulating with a final cadence on the tonic.



        Periods are found through out classical music. Here is one (Mozart K.331)...



        enter image description here



        ...mm. 1-4 are the antecedent and end on a half cadence I6/4 V while mm. 5-8 are the consequent and end on a perfect cadence I6/4 V7 I.



        This particular melody exhibits parallel properties meaning that the antecedent and consequent use the same basic melody with slight variation. While many periods are parallel in shape the parallel shape should not be confused with period structure. The two-part antecedent/consequent structure of a period is defined by the cadences ending the phrases!






        share|improve this answer















        This answer repeats a lot of what I wrote in... Where is the antecedent and consequent phrase in this melody?



        My understanding is antecedent and consequent are the two parts of a period.



        The two parts are defined by cadences.



        The antecedent can end with a variety of cadences but not a perfect cadence in the main key/tonic. The typical thing is some kind of cadence on the dominant chord of the main key.



        The consequent ends on a perfect cadence in the main key.



        My understanding of the theory is a period sets up tension in the antecedent by cadencing somewhere that isn't the tonic then later resolves that tension in the consequent by a cadence confirming the tonic. The idea is to create structural dissonance.



        In the case of a simple period the structural dissonance is resolved quickly because the second phrase - the consequent - goes to a cadence in the tonic. You can compare that to a sonata structure which also starts with a kind of antecedent, a cadence on the dominant, but then the structural dissonance is hugely elaborated with other phrases cadencing in other keys before finally recapitulating with a final cadence on the tonic.



        Periods are found through out classical music. Here is one (Mozart K.331)...



        enter image description here



        ...mm. 1-4 are the antecedent and end on a half cadence I6/4 V while mm. 5-8 are the consequent and end on a perfect cadence I6/4 V7 I.



        This particular melody exhibits parallel properties meaning that the antecedent and consequent use the same basic melody with slight variation. While many periods are parallel in shape the parallel shape should not be confused with period structure. The two-part antecedent/consequent structure of a period is defined by the cadences ending the phrases!







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 3 hours ago

























        answered 4 hours ago









        Michael CurtisMichael Curtis

        14.1k1049




        14.1k1049





















            2














            A period is one type of theme, like the sentence, common to the Classical style.



            The period is generally eight measures long and contains two four-measure phrases, called antecedent and consequent.



            http://openmusictheory.com/period.html



            2 fine examples are posted in this link:



            https://mramusicplace.net/2016/02/26/what-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music/






            share|improve this answer


















            • 1





              An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

              – Tim
              5 hours ago






            • 1





              (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

              – Richard
              5 hours ago












            • or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

              – Albrecht Hügli
              5 hours ago











            • @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

              – Michael Curtis
              4 hours ago











            • @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

              – Richard
              3 hours ago















            2














            A period is one type of theme, like the sentence, common to the Classical style.



            The period is generally eight measures long and contains two four-measure phrases, called antecedent and consequent.



            http://openmusictheory.com/period.html



            2 fine examples are posted in this link:



            https://mramusicplace.net/2016/02/26/what-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music/






            share|improve this answer


















            • 1





              An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

              – Tim
              5 hours ago






            • 1





              (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

              – Richard
              5 hours ago












            • or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

              – Albrecht Hügli
              5 hours ago











            • @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

              – Michael Curtis
              4 hours ago











            • @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

              – Richard
              3 hours ago













            2












            2








            2







            A period is one type of theme, like the sentence, common to the Classical style.



            The period is generally eight measures long and contains two four-measure phrases, called antecedent and consequent.



            http://openmusictheory.com/period.html



            2 fine examples are posted in this link:



            https://mramusicplace.net/2016/02/26/what-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music/






            share|improve this answer













            A period is one type of theme, like the sentence, common to the Classical style.



            The period is generally eight measures long and contains two four-measure phrases, called antecedent and consequent.



            http://openmusictheory.com/period.html



            2 fine examples are posted in this link:



            https://mramusicplace.net/2016/02/26/what-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music/







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 5 hours ago









            Albrecht HügliAlbrecht Hügli

            6,2261524




            6,2261524







            • 1





              An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

              – Tim
              5 hours ago






            • 1





              (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

              – Richard
              5 hours ago












            • or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

              – Albrecht Hügli
              5 hours ago











            • @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

              – Michael Curtis
              4 hours ago











            • @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

              – Richard
              3 hours ago












            • 1





              An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

              – Tim
              5 hours ago






            • 1





              (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

              – Richard
              5 hours ago












            • or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

              – Albrecht Hügli
              5 hours ago











            • @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

              – Michael Curtis
              4 hours ago











            • @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

              – Richard
              3 hours ago







            1




            1





            An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

            – Tim
            5 hours ago





            An eight bar sentence seems quite long. Not as long as a two year sentence though...

            – Tim
            5 hours ago




            1




            1





            (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

            – Richard
            5 hours ago






            (But the Mozart example on that website is not a period structure, but a sentence; yikes!)

            – Richard
            5 hours ago














            or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

            – Albrecht Hügli
            5 hours ago





            or as Goethe says in Faust: "What you have in black and white, you can safely carry home"

            – Albrecht Hügli
            5 hours ago













            @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

            – Michael Curtis
            4 hours ago





            @Richard, that Mozart Sym. 40 example is not a period, because there isn't the two cadence structure? Even though the opening melody has a 4+4 parallel shape.

            – Michael Curtis
            4 hours ago













            @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

            – Richard
            3 hours ago





            @MichaelCurtis Those two Mozart examples are the two basic ideas of a larger sentence structure.

            – Richard
            3 hours ago

















            draft saved

            draft discarded
















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Music: Practice & Theory Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmusic.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85110%2fwhat-are-antecedent-consequent-phrases-in-music%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Log på Navigationsmenu

            Wonderful Copenhagen (sang) Eksterne henvisninger | NavigationsmenurSide på frankloesser.comWonderful Copenhagen

            Detroit Tigers Spis treści Historia | Skład zespołu | Sukcesy | Członkowie Baseball Hall of Fame | Zastrzeżone numery | Przypisy | Menu nawigacyjneEncyclopedia of Detroit - Detroit TigersTigers Stadium, Detroit, MITigers Timeline 1900sDetroit Tigers Team History & EncyclopediaTigers Timeline 1910s1935 World Series1945 World Series1945 World Series1984 World SeriesComerica Park, Detroit, MI2006 World Series2012 World SeriesDetroit Tigers 40-Man RosterDetroit Tigers Coaching StaffTigers Hall of FamersTigers Retired Numberse