The ragtime progression is a chord progression characterized by a chain of secondary dominants following the circle of fifths, named for its popularity in the ragtime genre, despite being much older. Also typical of parlour music, its use originated in classical music and later spread to American folk music. Growing, "by a process of gradual accretion. First the dominant chord acquired its own dominant...This then acquired its dominant, which in turn acquired yet another dominant, giving":
It can be represented in Roman numeral analysis as
or
In C major this is
Most commonly found in its four-chord version (including the chord in parentheses). Play This may be perceived as a, "harder, bouncier sounding progression," than the diatonic vi-ii-V7-I (in C: Am-Dm-G7-C). Play The three-chord version (II-V-I) is "related to the cadential progression IV-V-I...in which the V is tonicized and stabilized by means of II with a raised third."
The progression is an example of centripetal harmony, harmony which leads to the tonic and an example of the circle progression, a progression along the circle of fourths. Though creating or featuring chromaticism, the bass (if the roots of the chords), and often the melody, are pentatonic. (major pentatonic on C: C, D, E, G, A) Contrastingly, Averill argues that the progression was used because of the potential it offered for chromatic pitch areas.
Variations include the addition of minor seventh chords before the dominant seventh chords, creating overlapping temporary ii-V-I relationships through ii-V-I substitution:
since Bm7-E7-A is a ii-V-I progression, as is Em7-A7-D and so on. Play
Examples of the use of the ragtime progression include the chorus of Howard & Emerson's "Hello! Ma Baby" (1899), the traditional "Keep On Truckin' Mama," Robert Johnson's "They're Red Hot" (1936), Arlo Guthrie's "Alice's Restaurant" (1967), Bruce Channel's "Hey! Baby" (1962), The Rooftop Singers' "Walk Right In" (1963), James P. Johnson's "Charleston" (1923), Ray Henderson's "Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue" (1925), Rev. Gary Davis's "Salty Dog," Bernie and Pinkard's "Sweet Georgia Brown" (1925), the "Cujus animam" (mm.9-18) in Rossini's Stabat Mater, the beginning of Liszt's Liebesträume (1850), Bob Carleton's "Ja-Da" (1918), and Sonny Rollins's "Doxy" (1954).
Video Ragtime progression
See also
- Diatonic function
- Extended dominant
- Rhythm changes
Maps Ragtime progression
Sources
Further reading
- Averill, Gage (2003). Four Parts, No Waiting, p. 32. ISBN 978-0-19-511672-4.
Source of the article : Wikipedia