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Parlour music

Parlour music (or parlor music) is a type of popular music which, as the name suggests, is intended to be performed in the parlours of houses, usually by amateur singers and pianists. Disseminated as sheet music, its heyday came in the 19th century, as a result of a steady increase in the number of households with enough resources to purchase musical instruments and instruction in music, and with the leisure time and cultural motivation to engage in recreational music-making. Its popularity faded in the 20th century as the phonograph record and radio replaced sheet music as the most common means for the spread of popular music.

Parlour music

19th-century Europe, North America

Much 20th century popular music

's "Turkish March" from "The Ruin of Athens"

Ludwig van Beethoven

's Waltz in Ab, Op.34, no.1 theme

Frédéric Chopin

's "Colonel Bogey March"

Kenneth Alford

's "The Thunderer"

John Philip Sousa

""

The Yellow Rose of Texas

""

Silent Night

's Tannhäuser's song

Richard Wagner

""

Rock-a-bye Baby

""/"John Brown's Body":

The Battle Hymn of the Republic

As described by Peter van der Merwe (1984), in contrast to the chord-based classical music era, 'parlour music' features melodies which are harmonically-independent or not determined by the harmony. This produces parlour chords, many of them added tone chords if not extended such as the dominant thirteenth, added sixth, and major dominant ninth. Rather, the melodies are organized through parlour modes, variants of the major mode with the third, sixth, and seventh emphasized through modal frames such as the mediant-octave mode, which uses the third as a floor and ceiling note, its less common variants the pseudo-phrygian, in which the seventh and often fifth are given prominence, and submediant-octave mode.


Some mediant-octave mode examples are:

Hamm, Charles. Yesterdays: Popular Song in America, 1979.  0-393-01257-3

ISBN

Hamm, Charles (ed.). Heart Songs, 1983.  0-306-76146-7. (facsimile of original, published in 1909 by The Chappel Publishing Company, Boston).

ISBN

(1989). Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Popular Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-316121-4.

van der Merwe, Peter