Tonal music is music whose pitch content is organized around a central pitch (the tonic), with every other pitch relating to it in a pre-established hierarchy. It defined Western 'common practice' music from roughly 1650 to 1900 and is the system behind functional harmony and cadences in AP Music Theory.
Tonal music is any music built around one home pitch, the tonic, where every other note and chord has a defined job relative to that home. Per the CED (PIT-2.H.1), music is tonal when its pitch content is organized around a central pitch and all other pitches relate to it in a pre-established, hierarchical way. Think of it like gravity. The tonic is the ground, and everything else is at some height above it, pulled back down with more or less force. The dominant (V) pulls hard toward the tonic; the leading tone practically demands to resolve up to it.
This system ruled Western music from about 1650 to 1900, a period called the common practice era, which is why the AP course is essentially a course in tonal music. But tonality isn't locked to that era. Pop, folk, jazz, and plenty of post-1900 Western music are tonal too. If a song has a key, a chord that feels like 'home,' and progressions that build tension and resolve it, you're hearing tonal organization.
This term anchors Topic 4.3 (Harmonic Progression, Functional Harmony, and Cadences) in Unit 4, supporting learning objectives AP Music Theory 4.3.A (identify and describe harmonic function in a progression) and AP Music Theory 4.3.B (identify cadence types). Here's the thing, though. Tonality isn't just one topic. It's the operating system the entire course runs on. Functional harmony only works because chords have tonal jobs. Cadences only feel conclusive or inconclusive because of the tonic hierarchy. Voice leading rules (resolve the leading tone, resolve the seventh) exist to reinforce tonal pull. When you label a chord 'V' instead of just 'G major triad,' you're making a tonal claim about what that chord wants to do next.
Keep studying AP Music Theory Unit 4
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryTonic (Unit 1)
The tonic is the central pitch the whole tonal hierarchy hangs on. You meet it in Unit 1 as scale degree 1, but Unit 4 upgrades it from 'first note of the scale' to 'the destination every progression is trying to reach.'
Diatonic Harmony (Unit 4)
Diatonic chords are the seven chords built from the key's own scale, and functional harmony assigns each one a tonal role (tonic, dominant, predominant). Tonality is the system; diatonic harmony is its default vocabulary.
Leading Tone (Unit 4)
Scale degree 7 is tonality's strongest tendency tone. Its half-step pull up to the tonic is a big reason V resolves so convincingly to I, which is exactly the kind of resolution the exam asks you to explain.
Plagal Cadence (Unit 4)
Cadences are tonal punctuation marks. The CED sorts them into conclusive (perfect authentic, plagal) and inconclusive (half, imperfect authentic, deceptive), and every one of those labels only means something because the tonic defines what 'finished' sounds like.
You won't get a question that just says 'define tonal music.' Instead, tonality is the assumption behind almost everything you do. Multiple-choice questions ask things like what the central pitch of tonal music is, what the tonic chord represents, why tendency tones in the V chord create such a strong pull to I, and what the most basic harmonic progression is (I-V-I, the tonal skeleton). On the free-response side, every harmonic dictation, part-writing exercise, and Roman numeral analysis presumes tonal organization. When you write a perfect authentic cadence with V-I in root position and scale degree 1 in the soprano, you're demonstrating that you understand how tonal music creates closure. No released FRQ needs the phrase 'tonal music' verbatim because the entire FRQ section operates inside it.
Tonal and diatonic aren't synonyms. 'Tonal' describes the whole system, where pitches are organized hierarchically around a tonic. 'Diatonic' describes content, meaning notes and chords that belong to the key's scale. Tonal music can include chromatic (non-diatonic) chords like secondary dominants and still be completely tonal, because those chords still point toward the tonic hierarchy. Diatonic tells you what's in the key; tonal tells you how everything relates to home.
Music is tonal when all of its pitch content is organized around a central tonic pitch in a pre-established hierarchy (CED PIT-2.H.1).
Tonal organization defined Western common-practice music from roughly 1650 to 1900, and 'common practice' is another name for this style.
Tonality also shows up outside that era, including pop, folk, jazz, and some Western music written after 1900.
Functional harmony is tonality in action, because each chord's label (tonic, dominant, predominant) describes its job relative to the home pitch.
Cadences reinforce tonal structure, with conclusive types (perfect authentic, plagal) landing on the tonic and inconclusive types (half, imperfect authentic, deceptive) leaving the phrase open.
The V-I resolution is the strongest move in tonal music because the leading tone and other tendency tones in V pull directly into the tonic.
Tonal music is music organized around a central pitch called the tonic, where every other pitch relates to it in a fixed hierarchy. It's the system behind keys, functional harmony, and cadences, and it's the foundation of the entire AP course.
No. Tonality specifically describes the Western common-practice tradition from about 1650 to 1900, plus styles like pop, folk, and jazz that use the same tonic-centered organization. Music without a central pitch hierarchy (like much atonal 20th-century music) isn't tonal, and the AP exam stays inside the tonal system.
Tonal describes the overall system of organizing pitches around a tonic, while diatonic describes notes and chords drawn from the key's own scale. A piece can use chromatic, non-diatonic chords and still be fully tonal as long as everything relates back to the home pitch.
Common practice is the CED's other name for tonal music, referring to the Western tradition from approximately 1650 to 1900. The harmony, voice leading, and cadence rules you learn in AP Music Theory come from this period.
The V chord contains tendency tones, especially the leading tone (scale degree 7), which sits a half step below the tonic and pulls up to it. That pull makes V-I the most basic and most conclusive progression in tonal music, and it's the backbone of the perfect authentic cadence.
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