Major mode in the context of "Tertian"

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👉 Major mode in the context of Tertian

In music theory, tertian (Latin: tertianus, "of or concerning thirds") describes any piece, chord, counterpoint etc. constructed from the intervals of (major and minor) thirds. An interval such as that between the notes A and C encompasses 3 semitone intervals (A-Bâ™­-Bâ™®-C) and is termed a minor third while one such as that between C and E encompasses 4 semitones (C-Dâ™­-Dâ™®-Eâ™­-Eâ™®) and is called a major third. Tertian harmony (also called tertiary harmony) principally uses chords based on thirds; the term is typically used to contrast with quartal and quintal harmony which uses chords based on fourths or fifths.

A common triad chord can be regarded as consisting of a "stack" of two consecutive thirds. This allows for four permutations, each producing a chord with distinct quality:

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