dissonantietheorie
Dissonantietheorie is the study of dissonance in music, examining why certain intervals and chords are perceived as tense and unstable and how composers use them to create forward motion or emotional color. The concept rests both on psychoacoustic factors, such as auditory roughness and beating between close frequencies, and on cultural-historical context that assigns different degrees of acceptability to particular sonorities.
Historically, Western music has treated dissonance in relation to consonance. In medieval and Renaissance practices, dissonances
Dissonantietheorie also distinguishes between harmonic dissonance (tension created by simultaneous pitches) and melodic dissonance (tension produced
Today the theory informs analysis and composition in many genres, from classical to contemporary popular music,