polytonality
polytonality, in music, the simultaneous occurrence of two or more different tonalities or keys (the interrelated sets of notes and chords used in a composition). If only two keys are employed, the term bitonality is sometimes used.
- Related Topics:
- harmony
Polytonality first appeared in music of the early 20th century. Stravinsky’s Petrushka (1911) employs “black keys against white” (in terms of the piano keyboard), combining C major and F♯ major. Sergey Prokofiev’s Sarcasms for piano juxtaposes the keys of F♯ minor in the right hand and B♭ minor in the left, while Darius Milhaud’s Saudades do Brasil combines a melody in C with an accompaniment in A♭ major. Such combinations of tonalities may be reviewed as 20th-century extensions of diatonic harmonic practices, following logically from post-Wagnerian chromaticism.