Plagal mode

Plagal mode

A plagal mode (from Greek πλαγιος 'oblique, sideways') [Merriam Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, 1963] is a musical mode, and one of four Gregorian modes whose tonic is the fourth note of the scale. These four modes correspond to the modern modal scales starting on A (Aeolian), B (Locrian), C (Ionian), and D (Dorian), though the correspondence is not exact since the tonic in plagal modes is not the first note of the scale. The other four Gregorian modes are the authentic modes.

The plagal mode was developed by Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius (480-524), who discovered the concept of Greek musical modes almost by chance.

However, Hucbald (840-930) saw Boethius's modes and created a series of either modes, separated into two pairs: Authentic and Plagal modes. The plagal modes are the even modes, numbered 2, 4, 6 and 8. The mode always being a 4th below the Authentic mode, the tonic is always the same as the authentic mode, but the dominant is different. As a general rule, the dominant is 3 above the tonic, except in hypophrygian, which is a 4th above. This is because a 5th above the tonic of the Phyrigian mode is B, which was considered dissonant to the early Roman Church, as an accidental use of this note would produce a tritone.

References


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  • plagal — plagal, ale, aux [ plagal, o ] adj. • 1598; lat. ecclés. plaga, du gr. plagios « oblique » ♦ Mus. Mode plagal : mode du plain chant où la quinte est à l aigu et la quarte au grave (opposé à mode authentique). Par ext. Cadence plagale. ● plagal,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • MODE — Un examen rapide de la définition du mot «mode» montre qu’à ce terme deux autres vocables sont souvent associés: le «monde» (pour société ou univers) et la «modernité». Dérivée du substantif latin modus (façon d’être passagère) et de l’adverbe… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • plagal — [plā′gəl] adj. [ML plagalis < plaga, plagal mode < MGr plagios, plagal (in Gr, oblique, slanting) < Gr plagos, a side, akin to pelagos, the sea: see PELAGIC] Music 1. designating a mode having a range about a fifth above and a fifth… …   English World dictionary

  • mode — mode1 /mohd/, n. 1. a manner of acting or doing; method; way: modern modes of transportation. 2. a particular type or form of something: Heat is a mode of motion. 3. a designated condition or status, as for performing a task or responding to a… …   Universalium

  • Mode —    From the Latin modus ( manner ), mode may denote, depending on the context: the classification of a chant according to its pitch range (ambitus) and final pitch (finalis); a scale for composition and improvisation, distinguished from other… …   Historical dictionary of sacred music

  • plagal — /play geuhl/, adj. Music. (of a Gregorian mode) having the final in the middle of the compass. Cf. authentic (def. 5a). [1590 1600; < ML plagalis, equiv. to plag(a) plagal mode (appar. back formation from plagius plagal; see PLAGE) + alis AL1] *… …   Universalium

  • plagal — pla•gal [[t]ˈpleɪ gəl[/t]] adj. mus 1) mad (of a church mode) having the final in the middle of the compass Compare authentic 4), a) 2) mad (of a cadence) progressing from the subdominant to the tonic chord Compare authentic 4), b) • Etymology:… …   From formal English to slang

  • plagal — adj. Mus. (of a church mode) having sounds between the dominant and its octave (cf. AUTHENTIC). Phrases and idioms: plagal cadence (or close) a cadence in which the chord of the subdominant immediately precedes that of the tonic. Etymology: med.L …   Useful english dictionary

  • plagal — [ pleɪg(ə)l] adjective Music (of a church mode) containing notes between the dominant and the note an octave higher. Compare with authentic. Origin C16: from med. L. plagalis, from plaga plagal mode , from L. plagius, from Gk plagos side …   English new terms dictionary

  • plagal — /ˈpleɪgəl/ (say playguhl) adjective Music (of a church mode) having the final in the middle of the compass. {Medieval Latin plagālis, from plaga plagal mode, apparently backformation from plagius, from Medieval Greek plagios, from Greek: oblique} …  

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