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Posted

So, speaking of "clashing notes," what are your favorite examples of two different triads played together?

The "Petrushka chord" is a very famous bichord, C major + F# major creating a crunchy, dissonant sound.

I have some other favorites:

C major + D major. Creates a very "dreamy" feeling because of the Lydian implication.

C minor + Ab major. Equivalent to an AbM7. But when stated as two triads it creates a dissonant, tense feeling.

Posted
So, speaking of "clashing notes," what are your favorite examples of two different triads played together?

The "Petrushka chord" is a very famous bichord, C major + F# major creating a crunchy, dissonant sound.

I have some other favorites:

C major + D major. Creates a very "dreamy" feeling because of the Lydian implication.

C minor + Ab major. Equivalent to an AbM7. But when stated as two triads it creates a dissonant, tense feeling.

Taken together with all the posts so far, this is a nice sample of bi-chords – which is interesting for its own sake of being bi-symmetric or not bi-symmetric.

On the background of my Isocord Theory, only major triads superimposed with minor triads (or vice versa) can be really bi-symmetric bichords (or of palindrome nature, as I'd like to call it).

Therefore I like most the so far listed sounds of

C minor + Ab major (Weca)

C major + D minor (if I understood Dev's "I and ii" correctly)

C major + D# minor (Qmwne235)

G major + B minor (if I understood Nicola's "G major with a B minor+5" correctly)

C major + C minor (Heckelphone224, Dev's "I and i")

In a similar way you can build tri-chords as bi-symmetric palindromes, e.g.

F major + C major + G major without its 5

The interval series of all the above listed chords, measured in semitone distances, is as follows:

3-4-1-4-3

4-3-7-3-4

4-3-8-3-4

4-3-9-3-4 (or 4-3-4 in close position)

4-3-5-3-4

4-3-4-3-4 (my tri-chord example in close position)

* * * * *

Addendum of DAI's favorites:

Cmaj7 + Dmaj7 (C,E,G,B,D,F#,A,C#)

[= 4-3-4-3-4-3-4 semitone pattern]

Cmaj7 + Dmaj7 + C#minor (C,E,G,B,D,F#,A,C#,E,G#)

[= 4-3-4-3-4-3-4-3-4 semitone pattern]

Truely imposing bi-symmetries!

Posted

G Major + B Minor +5 = Funny, especially when people don't conceptualize it.

E Minor + Ab Dim7 is sexy (E,G,B & Ab,Cb,Ebb[D]), which ends up being E,G,Ab[G#],B,D... or E Minor7 + E Major7... which means Bi-Chord Theory = LOL!!!

Okay. I'm done.

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