A Dictionary of Music and Musicians/Nota Cambita

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
1750697A Dictionary of Music and Musicians — Nota Cambita


NOTA CAMBITA (Ital. Nota Cambiata, Germ. Wechselnote, Eng. Changing Note.) I. A Note of Irregular Transition: in other words, a Passing-Note, on the strong part of the measure; as opposed to the Note of Regular Transition, or true Passing-Note, which, though equally foreign to the harmony, produces a less discordant effect, because it invariably occurs upon the weak part of the measure.

In the following example from Cherubini, the D is a Changing, and the second G a Passing-Note.

<< \override Score.TimeSignature #'stencil = ##f \time 4/4 \new Staff { \relative c'' { r2 c | g c, | d^"*" e | f g^"†" | a b | c1 \bar "||" } }
\new Staff { \clef bass c1 e a f d c } >>

The use of Changing-Notes is only permitted, in strict Counterpoint, as a means of escape from some grave difficulty; and, of course, only in the Second, Third and Fifth Orders. [See Counterpoint; Part-Writing.]

II. Fux applies the term, Nota cambita,[1] to a peculiar Licence, by virtue of which the Polyphonic Composers, instead of resolving a Passing Discord, at once, suffered it to descend a Third, and then to rise a Second to its Resolution. Cherubini condemns this Licence, as one which should 'neither be admitted, nor tolerated, in strict Counterpoint.' Fux accounts for it by the omission of an imaginary Quaver. The norm of the passage is, he says, as at (a), in the following example. By leaving out the first Quaver, it is made to appear as at (b); by leaving out the second, as at (c).

{ \override Score.TimeSignature #'stencil = ##f \time 2/1 \new Staff << \new Voice { \relative d'' { \stemUp d4^"(a)" c8 b a4 b c1 | d4^"(b)" b a b c1 | d4^"(c)" c a b c1 \bar "||" } }
\new Voice { \relative d' { d1 c d c d c } } >> }
Cherubini recommends the form shown at (b). The common consent of the great Polyphonic Composers justifies the preference of (c); and their best defence lies in the exquisitely beautiful effects they produce by means of it. Without multiplying examples, we may mention innumerable instances in the 'Missa Papæ Marcelli,' and in Orlando Gibbons's Full Anthem 'Hosanna to the Son of David.' [See Harmony, p. 678.] The last-named Composition—one of the finest in existence, in the English Polyphonic School—derives a great part of its wonderful beauty from the judicious use of this unjustly condemned Licence.


  1. 'Nota cambita, ab Italis cambiata nuncupata.' (Gradus ad Parnassum, ed. 1725, p. 63.)