Abstract

In this study we use the tone counting technique, the tonal hierarchies and the key-finding algorithm in order to quantitatively assess the similarity between the musical language of the Renaissance and the posterior tonal language. The results show that there is a huge correspondence between tonal distributions in both languages, and between these and the tonal hierarchies found by Krumhansl and Kessler (1982). This suggests that the differences are fewer than usually believed, and that in the Renaissance there is a tonal hierarchy similar to that of tonal system. Moreover, some problematic cases show that modal language favors tonal ambiguity. Finally, empirical evidence is provided to the notion that, in the Renaissance, the system tends progressively in time, to two poles: tonal major and minor.

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