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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9

Progression (Chord)
A definite series of chords, forming a passage with some harmonic unity or dramatic meaning. Chords in progressions are labeled with Roman numerals (I, II, etc.) while scale degrees, and upper structures (q.v.), are labeled with Arabic numerals (1, 2, etc.). Chord progressions evolved from the study of contrapuntal music. (The most widely used examples of this would be the Chorales written by JS Bach.) In analyzing the Chorales, music theorists realized that music functioned vertically (chordal harmony) as well as horizontally (contrapuntally). It was recognized that the notes of the scale demonstrated either an active quality or resting quality. Active tones predicted their movement in a specific direction, whereas resting tones could move up, down, or be content to stay put. Just as the notes in the diatonic scale had a tendency to predict their movement, the chords derived from the four contrapuntal lines of the chorale followed same characteristics exhibited by the notes of the scale. The active or resting quality and direction a chord tends to move in is determined by the quality of the notes that comprise it. A chord with one active tone and two resting tones will be considered a resting chord, however, the active tone can be used to determine its direction. Conversely, a chord with more active tones than resting will tend to move in a specific direction. Keep in mind that the active or resting quality of a note or chord is dependent on its relationship to other notes in the scale. E.g., in the key of C Major, scale degree three is the note E which is a resting tone. In the key of F Major, the note E becomes scale degree seven, which is an active tone. Because of these and a number of other relationships that go beyond the scope of this definition, our ear tells us that there is a special relationship between scale degree one scale, degree four, and scale degree five. The relationship between five and one is extremely important since it determines the tonal center of the key. A triad on scale degree five always wants to resolve to scale degree one. A triad built on scale degree one can act like scale degree five in relation to four, with the four-chord acting like scale degree one. What this means is that in the key of C Major for example, a chord built on scale degree one (C major) moves easily to a triad built on scale degree four (F Major) which can move to scale degree five's triad, (G major), which in turn desperately wants to go back to scale degree one. Basically we've just described the most common progression in popular music, the Blues Progression: I, IV, V.

P-94

p-n Junction

P-Pop

P90

PA

PACE

Pad

PAF

Page

PAIA

PAL

Palm Muting

Palo Escrito

Pan (Panning)

Pancake

Pang Cymbal

Panic Button

Panther

Parabolic Reflector

Paradiddle

Paragraphic Equalizer

Parallel

Parallel/Parallel Port

Parallel Compression

Parameter

Parametric Equalizer

Parasitic Oscillation

Parity

Parlor Guitar

Partial

Partition

Pascal

Pass

Passband

Passive

Passive Monitor

Passive Pickup

Passive Radiator

Password

Paste

PA System

PA System

Patch

Patch Bay

Patch Change

Patch Cord

Patch List

Patchlist

Patch Mapping

Patent Number Pickup

Path

Paua

PC3200

PC4200

PCB

PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect)

PCI-X

PCI Express (PCIe)

Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)

PCMCIA

PCM Deck

PD Drive

PDF

Peak

Peak Hold

Peak Power Handling

Pearloid

Pedal

Pedalboard

Pedal Point

Pedal Steel

Peer-to-Peer

Peghead

Pencil Mic

Penny Whistle

Pentachord

Pentatonic Scales

Pentium

Pentode

Perceptual Coding

Percussion Switch

Perfect Fifth

Perfect Pitch

Period

Peripheral

Perkins EQ

Permeability

Perpetual Looper

petaFLOPS

PeterGabrielizing

Pre-Fade Listen (PFL)

Phantom Channel

Phantom Image

Phantom Power

Phase

Phase Cancellation

Phase Invert

Phase Lock

Phase Locked Loop

Phase Modulation

Phase Quadrature

Phase Shifter

Philharmonic

Phon

Phon

Phone Plug

Phono Plug

Phono preamp

Phosphor Bronze

Photona

Phrase

Phrase Sampler

Phrasing

Physical Modeling Synthesis

Pianissimo

Piano

Piccolo Snare

Pick

Pick Guard

Pickup

Picofarad

Piezo

Piggyback Amp

Pigtail

Pinch

Pinch Roller

Pink Noise

Pinna Effect

Pin Out

Pipe Organ

Pitch

Pitch-to-voltage Converter

Pitch Bend

Pitch Correction

Pitch Shifter

Pixel

Pizzicato

Plainsong

Plain String

Planar Loudspeaker

Plate

Plate Reverb

Platter

Playability

Playhead

Play List

Plectrum

Plenum

Plesiochronous

Plesiochronous

Plexi

Abbreviation for Phase Locked Loop.

Plosive

Plug

Plug-in

Plug and Play

PMPO

Pocket

Pocketing

Podcast

Point-to-Point Wiring

Point Source Monitor

Polarity

Polarize

Polar Pattern

Pole

Pole Piece

Polka

Polyester

Polyphonic

Polyphony

Polyrhythm

Polytonality

Polyurethane

Poly WAV File

Ponticello

Pop

Pop Filter

Popsicle Brace

Port

Portamento

Portative Organ

Position

Positional Sensing

Post Fader

Post Production

Pot

Potential Acoustic Gain

Potentiometer

Potting

POW-r

Power

Power Amp

Power Amp Input

Power Amplifier

Power Attenuator/Power Attenuation

Power Calibration Area

Power Chord

Power Compression

Power Conditioner

Power Cycle

Power Down

Powered Monitor

Powered Speaker

Power Factor

Power Rail

Power Spike

Power Strip

Power Supply

Power Surge

Power Tube

Power Up

PPG Wave

Peak Program Meter (PPM)

PPQN (Pulses Per Quarter Note, sometimes Parts Per Quarter Note)

PQ Subcode

P-Ram - (a.k.a. PRAM)

Pre-bend

Pre-CBS

Pre-delay

Pre-roll

Preamp

Preamplifier

Preamplifier

Preamp Output

Preamp Tube

PrecedenceEffect

Pre Fade/Post Fade

Pre Fader

Preference File

Premiere

Prepolarization

Presence

Preset

Pressed Top

Pressure-gradient Microphone

Pressure Microphone

Pressure Wave

Presto

Primary Tones

Princess Ensemble

Print

Printed Circuit Board

Print-Through

Producer

Program

Program-dependent Compression

Program-dependent Release

Program Change

Program Material

Progression (Chord)

Progressive Hammer Action

Progressive Scan

Project-O-Sonic

Projection

Propagation

Proprietary

Prosumer

Protocol

Proximity Effect

Proxy Icon

PS/2

Psychoacoustics

PTP

Public Address System

Public Beta

Public Beta Test

Public Performance Right

Pull-off

Pull Down

Pulldown Menu

Pulse

Pulse Wave

Puma

Pumping

Punch

Punch Block

Punch In

Pure Tone

Pure Tone

Purfling

Purple Heart

Push-Pull

Pulse Width Modulation (PWM)

PZM

     
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