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Encyclopedia > Altered



In music, an altered chord', an example of alteration, is a chord with one or more diatonic notes replaced by, or altered to, a neighboring pitch in the chromatic scale. For example the following progression:


Altered chord progression


uses an altered IV chord and is an alteration of:


Unaltered chord progression


The Ab serves as a leading tone to G.


In jazz music, an altered chord is a dominant chord that has the 5th and the 9th flatted or sharped. An altered chord may contain any of the following:


b5, #5, b9, #9


They may be in any combination. It is more common to have one of each, for example an altered 5th and an altered 9th rather than both being altered 5ths (or altered 9ths).


The altered chords create more tension and dissonance and in jazz harmony they are preferable to a generic dominant chord with either diatonic tensions (9 and 13) or no tensions whatsoever.


However, in more recent times, even such altered harmony has become commonplace, and more dissonant chromatic harmony is being explored by jazz players such as David Liebman and Randy Sandke.


  Results from FactBites:
 
MySQL AB :: MySQL 5.0 Reference Manual :: 12.1.2 ALTER TABLE Syntax (3070 words)
You can use Alter Table to optimise a table without locking out selects (only writes), by altering a column to be the same as it's current definition.
ALTER TABLE ADD FOREIGN KEY defines [reference definition] as optional yet I believe this part should be required for this definition.
However, after using it on a lot of tables I made the grim discovery that for older myisam tables that didn't have any character set, it mangled the length of most varchar fields.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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