Tension and release

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Tension and Release is an often used term for analyzing music, to describe how music keeps the interest of a listener. In Western tonal music, ranging from European classical music to modern pop, tension is often thought to derive from the dominant chord. Release is said to occur when the music then reaches the tonic chord or "one chord" based from the first scale degree of the key.

In atonal music or improvised music, such as free jazz or jam band music, harmonic progressions are not necessarily recognizable, but audiences still often perceive suspense and resolution, closely related to the concepts of tension and release, respectively.

Tension and release can be traced to human reproduction: there's tension during foreplay, and later if you're lucky, release.

Seen in terms of its phenomenology for the musician performing an improvisation, this experience can be attributed to different temporal relationships between a musician's cognitive perception of the notes played and the physical sounds from the instrument. If the musician is internally choosing the notes to be played a moment before each note is actually played, this tends to involve an active assertion of the will on the course of musical choices and will often be perceived as a kind of tension. By contrast, if a musician takes a less active role in choosing new notes, but simply repeats the same pattern while effectively only listening to the sounds after they are played, this can create a sensation of release. Ben Vigoda of the band The Mustn't Grumble has called these two states "make it" and "let it," respectively.

Music which fails to return to the tonic is frequently called, "Negotase Respute" In reference to the 18th Century Russian Composer who would frequently shift keys without resolving the tension he created. His music would ultimately return to the root key and resolve the tonic, which was a rewarding musical experience. However, frequently the listener would lose interest before this climatic finish.

The rock group Phish brought this technique to popular music in the latter part of the 20th Century.