Roman numeral analysis

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File:Scale degree numbers.png
Root position triads of the C major scale with Roman numerals.[1] <phonos file="Root position triads from C major scale.mid">Play</phonos>
File:Scale degree Roman numerals minor.png
Root position triads of the C natural minor scale with Roman numerals. Audio file "Scale degree Roman numerals minor.mid" not found

In music, Roman numeral analysis involves the use of Roman numerals to represent chords. In this context, Roman numerals (I, II, III, IV, ...) typically denote scale degrees (first, second, third, fourth, ...). When a Roman numeral is used to represent a chord, it is meant to indicate the scale degree corresponding to its root note, which is the note on which the chord is built. For instance, III is the Roman numeral which denotes either the third degree of a scale, or the chord built on that degree. In many cases, uppercase Roman numerals (such as I, IV, V) represent major chords while lowercase Roman numerals (such as i, iv, v) represent the minor chords (see Major and Minor below for alternative notations); elsewhere, upper-case Roman numerals are used for all chords.[2]

In the most common day-to-day use, Roman numerals allow musicians to quickly understand the progression of chords in a piece. For instance, the standard twelve bar blues progression is denoted by the Roman numerals I7 (first), IV7 (fourth), and V7 (fifth). In the key of C (where the notes of the scale are C, D, E, F, G, A, B), the first scale degree (Tonic) is C, the fourth (Subdominant) is F, and the fifth (Dominant) is a G. So the I7, IV7, and V7 chords are C7, F7, and G7. Similarly, if one were to play the same progression in the key of A (A, B, C, D, E, F, G) the I7, IV7, and V7 chords would be A7, D7, and E7. In essence, Roman numerals provide a way to abstract chord progressions, by making them independent of the selected key. This allows chord progressions to be easily transposed to any key.

Overview

Roman numeral analysis is the use of Roman numeral symbols in the musical analysis of chords. In music theory related to or derived from the common practice period, Roman numerals are frequently used to designate scale degrees as well as the chords built on them.[2] In some contexts, arabic numerals with carets are used to designate scale degrees (scale degree 1);[citation needed] theory related to or derived from jazz or modern popular music may use Roman numerals or arabic numbers (1, 2, 3, etc...) to represent scale degrees (See also diatonic function). In some contexts an arabic number, or careted number, may refer also to a chord built upon that scale degree.[citation needed] For example, \hat 1 or 1 may both refer to the chord upon the first scale step.[citation needed]

Gottfried Weber's Versuch einer geordneten Theorie der Tonsetzkunst (Theory of Musical Composition) (Mainz, B. Schott, 1817–21) is credited with popularizing the analytical method by which a chord is identified by the Roman numeral of the scale-degree number of its root.[citation needed] However, the practice originated in the works of Abbé Georg Joseph Vogler, whose theoretical works as early as 1776 employed Roman numeral analysis.[3]

Common practice numerals

Types of triads: <phonos file="Major triad on C.mid">I</phonos>, <phonos file="Minor triad on C.mid">i</phonos>, <phonos file="Diminished triad on C.mid">io</phonos>, <phonos file="Augmented triad on C.mid">I+</phonos>
Roman numeral analysis symbols[4][5]
Symbol Meaning Examples
Uppercase Roman numeral Major triad I
Lowercase Roman numeral Minor triad i
Superscript ° Diminished triad
Superscript + (sometimes x[citation needed]) Augmented triad I+
Superscript number added note V7, I6
Two or more numbers figured bass notation V4 - 3, I6
4
(equivalent to Ic)
Lowercase b First inversion Ib
Lowercase c Second inversion Ic
Lowercase d Third inversion V7d

The current system used today to study and analyze tonal music comes about initially from the work and writings of Rameau’s fundamental bass. The dissemination of Rameau’s concepts could only have come about during the significant waning of the study of harmony for the purpose of the basso continuo and its implied improvisational properties in the later 18th century. The use of Roman numerals in describing fundamentals as “scale degrees in relation to a tonic” was brought about, according to one historian, by John Trydell’s Two Essays on the Theory and Practice of Music, published in Dublin in 1766.[6] However, another source says that Trydell used Arabic numerals for this purpose, and Roman numerals were only later substituted by Georg Joseph Vogler.[7] Alternatives include the functional hybrid Nashville number system[8] and macro analysis.

Jazz and pop numerals

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In music theory, fake books and lead sheets aimed towards jazz and popular music, all triads are represented by upper case numerals, followed by a symbol to indicate if it is not a major chord (e.g. "-" for minor or "ø" for half-diminished):

E Major:

  • E maj7 becomes I maj7
  • F -7 becomes II -7
  • G -7 becomes III -7
  • A maj7 becomes IV maj7
  • B7 becomes V7
  • C -7 becomes VI -7
  • Dø7 becomes VIIø7

Major

Scale degree
(major mode)
Tonic Supertonic Mediant Subdominant Dominant Submediant Leading tone
Traditional notation I ii iii IV V vi vii°
Alternative notation I II III IV V VI VII[9]
Chord symbol I Maj II min III min IV Maj V Maj VI min VII dim

Minor

Scale degree
(minor mode)
Tonic Supertonic Mediant Subdominant Dominant Submediant Subtonic Leading tone
Traditional notation i ii° III iv V VI VII vii°
Alternative notation I ii[citation needed] iii iv v vi vii
Chord symbol I min II dim III Aug IV min V Maj VI Maj VII min VII dim

Sources

  1. Jonas, Oswald (1982). Introduction to the Theory of Heinrich Schenker (1934: Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerks: Eine Einführung in Die Lehre Heinrich Schenkers), p.22. Trans. John Rothgeb. ISBN 0-582-28227-6. Shown all uppercase.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Sessions, Roger (1951). Harmonic Practice. New York: Harcourt, Brace. LCCN 51008476. p. 7.
  3. Floyd Kersey Grave and Margaret G. Grave, In Praise of Harmony: The Teachings of Abbé Georg Joseph Vogler (1988).[full citation needed]
  4. Bruce Benward & Marilyn Nadine Saker (2003), Music: In Theory and Practice, seventh edition, 2 vols. (Boston: McGraw-Hill) Vol. I, p. 71. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  5. Taylor, Eric (1989). The AB Guide to Music Theory, Part 1. London: Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music. ISBN 1-85472-446-0. pp. 60–61.
  6. Dahlhaus, Carl. "Harmony." Grove Online Music Dictionary
  7. Richard Cohn, "Harmony 6. Practice". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
  8. Gorow, Ron (2002). Hearing and Writing Music: Professional Training for Today's Musician, second edition (Studio City, California: September Publishing, 2002), p. 251. ISBN 0-9629496-7-1.
  9. Mehegan, John (1989). Jazz Improvisation 1: Tonal and Rhythmic Principles (Revised and Enlarged Edition) (New York: Watson-Guptill Publications, 1989), pp. 9-16. ISBN 0-8230-2559-4.