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I've always liked the arpeggio section in dance of the sugar plum fairy, it sounds so sweet and mysterious. I was trying to figure out the idea behind them. Here's the section in Synthesia.

enter image description here

From complete score, first edition, 1892.

I typed in the notes as followed:

D F# A C | D F# A C
D# F# A B | D# F# A B
*D F# A C | D F# A C
*D# F# A B | D# F# A B
F A C E | F A C E
*F# A B D# | F# A B D#
*F A C E | F A C E
*F# A B D# | F# A B D#
A C D# G | A C D# G
* B D# F# | B D# F#
* A C D# G | A C D# G
* B D# F# | B D# F#
* D F# A C | D F# A C
* D# F# A B | D# F# A B
* D F# A C | D F# A C
* D# F# A B | D# F# A B

And simplying further (removing repeated chords in asterisk) and using a reverse chord finder I found that the four main chords are:

(1) D F# A C -- D7, D dominant seventh, VII7 of the key 

(2) D# F# A B -- B7, B dominant seventh, V7 of parallel key 

(3) F A C E -- could be Fmaj7 or Dm9, or ???

(4) A C D# G -- could be Cm6 or Cm9, or ??? 



The key of the song is in E minor; here are its diatonic chords:

  Emin, F#dim, G, Amin, Bmin, C, D.
Here are the chords of the parallel E major:


  E, F#min, G#min, A, B, C#min, D#dim

So I think I know where (1) and (2) chords come from (please correct me if wrong). But I'm having trouble figuring out where (3) (4) came from. They are not in the key or the parallel key.

Another way to look at this is maybe this is a certain scale that he's arpeggiating and not chords. If I take the unique notes of the above section they are: D# F# A B C D E F. But this doesn't form a scale.

So maybe someone knows if its chords and what those 4 are, or if it's not chords maybe it's something else. (?)

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  • 2
    Could you please switch flats to sharps? Would make it much easier to understand.
    – coconochao
    Commented Sep 4, 2018 at 12:53
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    Mmm, I hadn't watched the second video. Since we are in E minor, sharps are much more suitable, because the scale has sharps, not flats. You yourself are talking about D7 and B7 chords, and those have sharps, not flats. Also, I don't think the video is very accurate in transcribing the notes. Watch the original at speed 0.25 and compare. There are a few differences.
    – coconochao
    Commented Sep 4, 2018 at 13:10
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    There is a concept known as non-harmonic tones that is specifically for notes that are not a part of the harmony. There can't always be a 1 to 1 harmonic relationship as you might find in another subject like in a more strict subject like Stoichiometry chemistry. There are sometimes things that are done for color or that deliberately take you away from tonality for tonal ambiguity (see whole tone scale).
    – Dom
    Commented Sep 4, 2018 at 21:30
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    Yes, but talking in terms of whole chords and guessing the function is where this is counterproductive. If you see the notes for a Cm6, it doesn't mean it's automatically functioning as that. The 6 could be a non harmonic tone so you're just left with a Cm for functionality. This is more just a warning than anything else since I've seen a lot of people put more time than they need trying to make an argument for functionality rather than just accepting it as a coloring via non harmonics.
    – Dom
    Commented Sep 4, 2018 at 21:59
  • What would be the function of an added 6th? (Though sometimes 'Cm6' really means 'Am7b5'.)
    – Laurence
    Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 11:02

1 Answer 1

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Wow, really terrific musical example!

There are two necessary aspects to acknowledge that help us understand this section. First is that these chords alternate between something and B7 (or the B-major triad). This is important because, since the excerpt is in E minor, the chords in question alternate between something and V7. This is a big clue that we can understand these chromatic harmonies as relating to V(7).

The second aspect is of something that we call common-tone chords. A common-tone chord, simply put, is some chromatic harmony that shares at least one pitch with the chord it is decorating. Since Nutcracker was written by Tchaikovsky, let's look at a Tchaikovsky example, this one from the first movement of his sixth symphony:

enter image description here

(listen here)

We're in D major. The second chord in the first full measure is a little odd...an E♯ diminished seventh chord? If we had to give a Roman numeral, it would be...a ♯ii°42?! Even if we understood this as an applied chord, it would function as a vii°7 of F♯, but there's just one problem: it doesn't resolve to an F♯ chord, but rather back to the same D chord that preceded it!

This is an example of what we call a common-tone chord; more specifically, a common-tone diminished seventh (labeled CT°7). Notice how there's a consistent common-tone D from the original D-major triad through this common-tone diminished seventh and back to the D major. It's this constant thread that connects these harmonies into one unit that elaborates the underlying D major.

Note that we could say these are just upper-voice non-chord tones. This isn't untrue! But this is such a common tool—it's all over the place, for instance, in barbershop music—that it's received a name, so I'm using that name here.


Now, back to your question. Let's look at the harmonies again:

    D  F♯ A  C
    D♯ F♯ A  B  (repeat)  (V7)
    F  A  C  E
    F♯ A  B  D♯ (repeat)  (V7)
    A  C  D♯ G 
    B  D♯ F♯    (repeat)  (V)
    D  F♯ A  C
    D♯ F♯ A  B  (repeat)  (V7)

And notice how every single harmony has at least one common tone with the prevailing V(7) chord. We can make this more obvious with some notation:

enter image description here

In the above example, the "x" noteheads show a common tone with the preceding and/or succeeding chord. You'll also notice that most other voices move by half step (with only one exception: the A to B between the fifth and sixth measures).

So, welcome to the world of common-tone chords. Whereas my example above was a CT°7, the examples in Nutcracker include common-tone dominants, major-major sevenths, and half-diminished sevenths. But in all cases, these common-tone chords function to elaborate the prevailing harmony; in this case, a clear V7 that will smoothly lead back to the tonic E.


Lastly, it's also possible that this is a modified version of the omnibus progression. In an omnibus progression, two pitches of the V7 stay constant while the remaining two pitches move by half step in contrary motion. Although these rules aren't strictly followed in this Nutcracker example, it's important to note that the two pitches that stay constant in the omnibus are scale-degrees 2 and 4. In E, these scale degrees are F♯ and A—the two pitches that are often (but not always) in common in this Nutcracker example.

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  • but "D# F# A B" was the V7 of the parallel key.
    – user34288
    Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 3:37
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    @foreyez It's very common for a minor key to have the V7 chord. In fact, in common-practice music, the V7 is much more common than the v7.
    – Richard
    Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 3:38
  • yes you're right my mistake. it makes it resolve better to the tonic. need some time to digest the info in this answer though. thanks for the effort you've put in this. I was reading about chromatic mediants last weekend and how they also share a common tone (the third). this kind of reminds me of that.
    – user34288
    Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 3:45
  • both examples you gave, the non-common ones just move by a half step. is this usually the case?
    – user34288
    Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 4:17
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    @foreyez I assume you mean from WTC 1? If so, that one is much more functional than the Tchaikovsky example. It can completely be understood as diatonic chords and applied chords.
    – Richard
    Commented Sep 13, 2018 at 22:43

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