CADENCES
CONTENT
- Definition of Cadence
- Kinds of Cadence
Definition of Cadence
A cadence can be defined as a resting point in a musical composition. In music, there are such punctuation marks, as full –stops, commas, and so on. In other words, a cadence can be defined as “the phrase ending of a musical composition.
Kinds of Cadence
- Perfect cadence (full close)
- Imperfect cadence (half close)
- Plagal cadence (Amen)
- Interrupted cadence. (Surprise, deceptive, evaded)
Perfect Cadence
This serves as a full sentence which usually ends with a full stop, gives a sense of finality or conclusion. This type of cadence is produced by the movement of the dominant chord (V), followed by the tonic chord (I). In other words, the movement of chord V to chord I produces perfect cadence. Look at the following examples:
Imperfect Cadence
This cadence is half-closed because it does not give any sense of finality. It acts as comma in a musical composition.
You are viewing an excerpt of this lesson. Subscribing to the subject will give you access to the following:
- NEW: Download the entire term's content in MS Word document format (1-year plan only)
- The complete lesson note and evaluation questions for this topic
- The complete lessons for the subject and class (First Term, Second Term & Third Term)
- Media-rich, interactive and gamified content
- End-of-lesson objective questions with detailed explanations to force mastery of content
- Simulated termly preparatory examination questions
- Discussion boards on all lessons and subjects
- Guaranteed learning