Supertonic

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Tonic and supertonic in C <phonos file="Supertonic and tonic in C.mid">Play</phonos>. C major and D minor chords.
Supertonic (ii) in ii-V-I progression on C, found at the end of the circle progression <phonos file="Ii-V-I turnaround in C.mid">Play</phonos>
Minor seventh chord on d, ii7 or supertonic seventh chord in C. <phonos file="Minor seventh chord on d ii7 in C.mid">Play</phonos>

In music or music theory, the supertonic is the second degree or note of a diatonic scale, one step above the tonic.[1] It is sung as re in solfege. In music theory, the supertonic chord may be symbolized by the Roman numeral ii in a major scale, indicating that the chord is a minor chord (for example, D-F-A in C major), or iio in a natural minor scale, indicating that the chord is a diminished chord (for example, D-F-A in C natural minor), if in second inversion a six-four chord (A-D-F), and if the third is raised an augmented sixth chord (A-F). If in major or minor, through the lowering of the second scale degree (also the sixth in major), the chord is major (D-F-A) then it is a Neapolitan 6th chord, N6 or II6. The supertonic may be raised as part of the common-tone diminished seventh chord, iio7.

The similarity between the subdominant and supertonic chords is easily seen and heard through the supertonic seventh chord, ii7, <phonos file="Subdominant and supertonic similarity.mid">Play</phonos>.
The French sixth chord; distinguishing tone highlighted in blue. <phonos file="French sixth moving to V.ogg">Play</phonos>
In C Major: A Neapolitan sixth chord in first inversion contains an interval of a sixth between F and D (<phonos file="Neapolitan sixth.mid">Play</phonos>).
Common-tone diminished seventh chord <phonos file="Common-tone diminished seventh chord.mid">Play</phonos>.
Supertonic diminished seventh chord in C <phonos file="Supertonic diminished seventh chord in C.mid">Play</phonos>.

One variant of the supertonic seventh chord is the supertonic diminished seventh[2] with the raised supertonic, which equals the lowered third through enharmonic equivalence (in C: D=E).

Pre-dominant (sometimes called "sub-dominant") chords are chords which distinguish chord V as a goal of motion (as opposed to it acting as an embellishing chord within a phrase) they create gravity and harmonic motion towards dominant harmony, and form a fundamental aspect of western tonal music.

The supertonic chord is known as a pre-dominant chord, as it is one of the unique chords which has a natural tendency to gravitate towards chord V and strengthen V as a goal of motion. The supertonic chord lies a fifth above chord V. Descending fifths are a strong basis for harmonic motion and harmonic motion through intervals of fifths is a natural way for chords to progress to one another; the supertonic is one of the strongest pre-dominants and approaches chord V from above through a descending 5th. It is preferable to avoid chord two in root position in the minor mode due to the harsh quality of its diminished intervals, ii6 is a much nicer alternative. This is less of an issue if the chord contains a chordal seventh; indeed, root-position diminished seventh chords are quite common.

Adding a chordal seventh to the supertonic (minor or diminished) does nothing to interfere with its pre-dominant qualities, but rather intensifies their pre-dominant function and also increases harmonic intensity and motion towards dominant harmony. Supertonic seventh chords are such intense pre-dominant chords because they outline the leading note contained in chord V with a dissonance.

"Supertonic" also refers to a relationship of musical keys. For example, relative to the key of C major, the key of D major (or D minor) is the supertonic. Modulation (change of key) to the supertonic is relatively common (by far the most common modulation in modern popular music),[citation needed] though in classical music it is more common to modulate to the dominant or other keys.

In German theory derived from Hugo Riemann, the supertonic is considered the subdominant parallel: Sp/T in major though sP/T in minor (AM).

Sources

  1. Benward & Saker (2003). Music: In Theory and Practice, Vol. I, p.32. Seventh Edition. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  2. Kitson, C. H. (2006). Elementary Harmony, p.43. ISBN 1-4067-9372-8.