Borrowed Chord

A borrowed chord (also called mode mixture and modal interchange) is a chord borrowed from the parallel key (minor or major scale with the same tonic). Borrowed chords are typically used as "color chords", providing variety through contrasting scale forms, major and the three forms of minor. Similarly chords may be borrowed from the parallel modes, the various modes beginning on the same tonic, for example Dorian or Phrygian.

Six chords borrowed from the parallel minor key are commonly found in the Baroque, Classical and Romantic eras (shown here in C major):

Diminished supertonic triad (iio): D - F - A♭ Half-diminished supertonic seventh (iiØ7): D - F - A♭ - C "Flat three" (♭III): E♭ - G - B♭ Minor subdominant (iv): F - A♭ - C "Flat six" (♭VI): A♭ - C - E♭ Fully diminished leading-tone seventh (viio7): B - D - F - A♭

The following three chords are also found in Romantic era, albeit rarely:

Minor subdominant seventh (iv♭7): F - A♭ - C - E♭ Major-minor subdominant seventh (IV♭7): F - A - C - E♭ Dominant flat ninth (V♭9): G - B - D - F - A♭

The major-minor subdominant seventh, which contains an A♮, is borrowed from the parallel ascending melodic minor scale.

If the root of the borrowed chord is not in the original key, then the chord is named by the accidental. For instance, in a major key, a chord built on the parallel minor's sixth degree is a "flat six chord" written ♭VI.

Chord progressions may be constructed with borrowed chords, including two progressions common in rock music, I - ♭VII - ♭VI - ♭VII, common everywhere, and I - ♭VI - IV, used a lot by bands including Genesis, Yes and Nirvana. ♭VII is from Mixolydian and ♭VI is found in both Aeolian and Phrygian. The ♭VII-I cadence with ♭VII substituting for V is common, as well as ♭II-I, ♭III-I, and ♭VI-I. In popular music, the major triad on the lowered third scale degree (♭III), the major triad on the lowered sixth scale degree (♭VI) and the major triad on the lowered seventh scale degree, or "flat seven" (♭VII, in C major: B♭, D, F) are common. Borrowing from a parallel major key is a common feature of grunge, and can be occasionally be found in other styles of post-grunge Rock. Otherwise it is generally limited in western music to ending a minor piece on a major tonic triad, a chord which is then called a Picardy third, use of the Major subdominant chord (in C minor: F, A, C, generally used when A is in the bass leading upward to B and then C) and the Major dominant chord (in C minor: G, B, D). However, both of these could also be viewed as use of the melodic minor scale, or the Dorian and harmonic minor scales.

In major the typical chords borrowed from minor are iv, ♭VI, ♭VII, and in jazz, the iio. The ♭VII is also known as the subtonic. The lowered-sixth occurs in many of the chords borrowed from minor and is a, "distinctive characteristic," of borrowed chords. Borrowed chords have typical inversions or common positions, for example iio6 and iiø, and progress in the same manner as the diatonic chords they replace except for ♭VI, which progresses to V(7).

Famous quotes containing the words borrowed and/or chord:

    It is not the literal past that rules us, save, possibly, in a biological sense. It is images of the past.... Each new historical era mirrors itself in the picture and active mythology of its past or of a past borrowed from other cultures. It tests its sense of identity, of regress or new achievement against that past.
    George Steiner (b. 1929)

    Give me the keys. I feel for the common chord again,
    Sliding by semi-tones till I sink to a minor,—yes,
    And I blunt it into a ninth, and I stand on alien ground,
    Surveying a while the heights I rolled from into the deep;
    Which, hark, I have dared and done, for my resting-place is found,
    The C Major of this life: so, now I will try to sleep.
    Robert Browning (1812–1889)