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By-the-book music theory tells you that if you play a dissonant chord, you need to resolve that dissonance by playing a consonant chord just after (and not any consonant chord either, there are lotsa rulez to pick the right one)
The easiest dissonant "chord" would be something like a V7 (let's say G7 in Cmajor) which uses the 7th interval as the dissonant, leading tone to guide the ear back to I. Essentially, you are looking at VII and II as being your predominantly dissonant intervals, while III and VI will be harmonic.
If you're into metal, you could look into djent, which is a progressive metal subgenre in which a lot of dissonance can often be found. Specifically, a very dissonant song would by Entrapment by Meshuggah — you can skip ahead of the heavy vocals at the beginning, to listen to the rather unsettling guitar parts. Reply.
30 paź 2011 · An augmented chord (c e g#) is (imperfect) consonance for all combinantions, yet it is perceived as one of the most dissonant chords. Also for two note combinations it matters in which octave you play them.
Harmonic Dissonance I: The Diminished Triad. Key Points. Here we learn how to work with a harmonic dissonance in a chord, starting with the diminished fifth as part of the leading tone diminished triad. Harmonic Dissonance: A chord tone which forms a dissonant harmonic interval in relationship to the root of the chord.
Preparation means using the dissonant note in the previous chord, in the same part. Resolution means moving by a step downwards in the following chord, in the same part. For example, with this bass note B, figure 4, the dissonant note is E (a 4 th above B).
23 sie 2014 · The consonance or dissonance of a chord is related, but it's not a very strong relationship in many cases. The best example I can think of is sometimes a very dissonant, tense chord structure resolves to a target chord. For instance C#dim7 may resolve to Dmin7, or Eb7#11 may resolve to Dmaj7.