Diagrammatic representation of modulation through a pivot chord connecting two tonal areas. Modulation is a fundamental concept in Western music, referring to the process of moving from one key to another within the unfolding of a musical work. Its function is closely tied to direction, formal organization, and the shaping of expressive continuity within musical discourse. In tonal music, each key is structured around a central pitch—the tonic—and a network of harmonic relationships that define stability and motion. Modulation introduces a new tonal center, creating a shift in harmonic focus and redefining the sonic environment. This process operates as a mechanism of orientation in musical time, allowing music to develop perspective and a sense of forward movement. In Classical sonata form, modulation to the dominant or the relative major constitutes a structural turning point. In the first movement of Symphony No. 40 in G minor by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , the transition to B-f...
Hexagonal concertina with bellows, a characteristic nineteenth-century portable aerophone. The concertina is a portable free-reed instrument that emerged in the early nineteenth century. It was designed in 1829 by the British physicist and instrument maker Sir Charles Wheatstone, during a period of intense experimentation with new bellows-driven keyboard and button instruments. Although it is often confused with the accordion, it is a distinct instrument with its own structural design and playing technique. The concertina is a free-reed aerophone in which sound is produced by air flowing through metal reeds that vibrate freely. Its appearance is closely linked to the broader family of free-reed aerophones, instruments in which sound is produced by the vibration of metal reeds activated by a flow of air. Such instruments began to spread throughout Europe during the early nineteenth century. The accordion had already appeared in Germany, while other related instruments developed in diffe...