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crossprogressions

Crossprogressions is a term used in music theory to describe a class of harmonic movements that traverse tonal regions in ways that depart from standard functional harmony. The core idea is to connect chords or keys that are not closely related on the traditional circle of fifths, creating color and contrast rather than predictable cadences. Crossprogressions often employ chromatic mediants, modal mixture, enharmonic reinterpretation, or pivot chords borrowed from parallel keys to bridge distant tonal centers. In practice, crossprogressions appear in jazz, film music, and contemporary pop where composers seek expressive tonal journeys and less predictable resolutions. The effect can be a sense of movement across keys, a change of mode, or a coloristic shift rather than a simple tonic-dominant relationship.

Terminology around crossprogressions is not always consistent, and some analysts may describe similar material using terms

See also: chord progression, chromatic mediant, modal interchange, nonfunctional harmony, common-tone modulation.

such
as
nonfunctional
harmony,
chromatic
mediant
progressions,
or
common-tone
modulations.
In
some
discussions,
crossprogressions
are
contrasted
with
functional
progressions
that
emphasize
clear
dominant-to-tonic
resolution.
Beyond
music,
the
phrase
crossprogressions
is
rarely
used
in
formal
mathematics
or
computer
science;
when
encountered
there,
it
is
generally
a
metaphorical
or
informal
descriptor
rather
than
a
standard
technical
term.