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{{See also|Parallel key|Parallel harmony|#Leittonwechselklänge}}
[[Image:Tonic parallel in C major.png|thumb|Tonic and tonic parallel in C
[[Image:Tonic parallel in C minor.png|thumb|Tonic and tonic parallel in C
[[Image:Subdominant parallel in C major.png|thumb|Subdominant and subdominant parallel in C
[[Image:Subdominant parallel in C minor.png|thumb|Subdominant and subdominant parallel in C
[[Image:Dominant parallel in C major.png|thumb|Dominant and dominant parallel in C
[[Image:Dominant parallel in C minor.png|thumb|Dominant and dominant parallel in C
[[Image:Subdominant and supertonic similarity.png|thumb|The similarity between the [[subdominant]] and [[supertonic]] chords is easily seen and heard through the supertonic seventh chord {{audio|Subdominant and supertonic similarity.mid|Play}}.]]
'''Parallel''' and '''counter parallel''' chords are terms derived from the German (''Parallelklang'', ''Gegenparallelklang'') to denote what is more often called in English the "relative", and possibly the "counter relative" chords. In [[Riemannian theory|Hugo Riemann's theory]], and in German theory more generally, these chords share the [[diatonic function|function]] of the chord to which they link: subdominant parallel, dominant parallel, and tonic parallel.<ref name=
{{blockquote|The substitution of the major sixth for the perfect fifth above in the major triad and below in the minor triad results in the parallel of a given triad. In C
The German text, in the 11th : ''die Sexte des Durakkords und die Untersexte des Moll-akkordes bei fehlender Quinte (für diese eintretend), ergibt den für den betreffenden Klang innerhalb der Tonart stellvertretenden Parallelklang. In C : [literal }} For example, the major {{audio|Major triad on C.mid|tonic}} and {{audio|Minor chord on A.mid|tonic parallel}} and minor {{audio|Minor chord on C.mid|tonic}} and {{audio|Eb major triad.mid|tonic parallel}}.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
| ''Parallel''
| ''Note letter in
| ''Name''
| ''Parallel''
| ''Note letter in
| ''Name''
|-
| {{center|Tp}}
|
| [[Submediant]]
| {{center|tP}}
| {{nobr|E{{sup|{{music|
| Mediant
|-
| {{center|Sp}}
|
| [[Supertonic]]
| {{center|sP}}
| {{nobr|A{{sup|{{music|
| Submediant
|-
| {{center|Dp}}
|
| [[Mediant]]
| {{center|dP}}
| {{nobr|B{{sup|{{music|
| [[Subtonic]]
|}
What is meant here is that, in the key of C }} [[Image:Tonic, subdominant, dominant, and their parallels.png|550px|Major T, S, D, and parallels]]
: The '''[[tonic (music)|tonic]]''', '''[[subdominant]]''', and {{nobr|'''[[dominant (music)|dominant]]''' chords,}} in [[root (chord)|root]] position, each followed by its parallel. The parallel is formed by raising the [[fifth (chord)|fifth]] a [[whole tone]].
[[Image:Minor tonic, subdominant, dominant, and their parallels.png|550px|Minor T, S, D, and parallel]]
: The [[minor (music)|minor]] [[tonic (music)|tonic]], [[subdominant]], [[dominant]], and their parallels, created by lowering the fifth (German) / root (
The parallel [[chord (music)|chord]] (but ''not'' the [[#Counter parallel|counter parallel]] chord) of a major chord will always be the minor chord whose [[root (chord)|root]] is a [[minor third]] ''down'' from the major chord's root, inversely the parallel chord of a minor chord will be the major chord whose root is a minor third ''up'' from the root of the minor chord. Thus, in a major [[key (music)|key]], where the dominant is a major chord, the dominant parallel will be the minor chord a minor third below the dominant. In a minor key, where the dominant may be a minor chord, the dominant parallel will be the major chord a minor third above the (minor) dominant.
{{blockquote|Dr.
: Online source: {{cite web The name "parallel chord" comes from the [[German language|German]] musical theory, where "Paralleltonart" means not "parallel key" but "relative key", and "parallel key" is "Varianttonart".
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{{anchor|Counter parallel chord|Contrast chord|Gegenklang|Leittonwechselklange|Leittonwechselklänge|Leading-tone contrast chord}}
{{more citations needed section|date=May 2008}}
[[Image:Tonic counter parallel in C major.png|thumb|Tonic and tonic counter parallel in C
[[Image:Tonic counter parallel in C minor.png|thumb|Tonic and tonic counter parallel in C
[[Image:Contrast chord example.png|thumb|Contrast chord example {{audio|Contrast chord example.mid|Play}}: C major and E minor contrast through their respective notes
The "'''counter parallel'''" or "'''contrast chord'''" is terminology used in German theory derived mainly from Hugo Riemann to refer to (US:) [[relative (music)|relative]] (German: parallel) [[diatonic function]]s and is abbreviated Tcp in major and tCp in minor (Tkp respectively tKp in Riemann's diction). The chord can be seen as the "tonic parallel reversed" and is in a major key the same chord as the dominant parallel (Dp) and in a minor key equal to the subdominant parallel (sP); yet, it has another function. According to Riemann the chord is derived through '''''Leittonwechselklänge''''' (German, literally: "[[leading-tone]] changing sounds"), sometimes called ''gegenklang'' or "contrast chord", abbreviated Tl in major and tL in minor,<ref name=
{| class="wikitable"
|colspan=3| '''Major'''
|colspan=3| '''Minor'''
|-
| ''Contrast''
| ''Note letter in
| ''Name''
| ''Contrast''
| ''Note letter in
| ''Name''
|-
| Tl (Tcp)
| {{nobr|E minor<ref name=
| [[Mediant]]
| tL (tCp)
| {{nobr|A{{sup|{{music|
| [[Submediant]]
|-
| Sl (Scp)
| {{nobr|A minor<ref name=
| [[Submediant]]
| sL (sCp)
| {{nobr|D{{sup|{{music|
| [[Neapolitan chord]]
|-
| Dl (Dcp)
| {{nobr|B minor<ref name=
| Leading-tone
| dL (dCp)
| {{nobr|E{{sup|{{music|
| [[Mediant]]
|}
{{blockquote|
|Hugo Riemann|"Dissonance", ''Musik-Lexikon''<ref name=Oxford/>
}}
[[Image:Major Leittonwechselklänge.png|400px|Major Leittonwechselklänge]]
: Major Leittonwechselklänge, formed by lowering the [[root (chord)|root]] a half step.
[[Image:Minor Leittonwechselklänge.png|400px|Minor Leittonwechselklänge]]
: Minor Leittonwechselklänge, formed by raising the root (US) / fifth (German) a half step.
For example,
A chord should be analysed as a Tcp rather than Dp or sP particularly at cadential points, for example at an [[Cadence (music)|interrupted cadence]], where it substitutes the tonic. It is most easily recognised in a minor key since it creates an ascending [[semitone]] step at the end of the cadence by moving from the major dominant chord to the minor counter parallel:
:{|
|-
t - s - D - tCp▼
| '''Example'''
|-
where C is located a major third below Em▼
|   E{{small|m}} - A{{small|m}} - B - C
T - S - D - tCp▼
|-
| '''Example'''
where Db is located a major third below the minor tonic Fm▼
|-
|   F - B{{sup|{{music|b}}}} - C - D{{sup|{{music|b}}}}
▲|
|}
In [[four-part harmony]], the Tcp usually has a doubled third to avoid [[consecutive fifths|consecutive fifths or octaves]]. This further emphasises its coherency with the tonic, since the third of the minor key counter parallel is the same as the tonic root which thus is doubled.
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[[File:IV-V-I in C.png|thumb|[[Perfect authentic cadence]]: IV–V–I progression in C {{audio|IV-V-I in C.mid|Play}}. Considered the strongest ending during the [[common practice period]]. {{audio|sP-dP-T cadence in C.mid|Play sP-dP-T}}]]
{{Blockquote|This is clearly not a simple system. Three functional categories can appear in any one of three chordal guises in either of two modes, eighteen possibilities in all: T, Tp, Tl, t, tP, tL, S, Sp, Sl, s, sP, sL, D, Dp, Dl, d, dP, dL. Why all this complexity? Perhaps the central reason is that this ingenious, occasionally convoluted system enabled Riemann to ... [interpret] ostensibly remote triads ... through the traditional terms of the I-IV-V-I, or now T-S-D-T, [[cadence|cadential]] schema. A sequence of {{nobr|A{{sup|{{music|b}}
|Gjerdingen<ref name= }} ==Footnotes==
{{notelist}}
==See also==
{{div col begin|colwidth=15em}}
*[[Borrowed chord]]
*[[Chord substitution]]
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*[[Subsidiary chord]]
*[[Voice leading]]
{{div col end}}
==References==
{{reflist|25em}}
==External links==
*
*
{{Chords}}
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