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Guy Capuzzo, Neo-Riemannian Theory and the Analysis of Pop-Rock Music, Music Theory Spectrum, Volume 26, Issue 2, Fall 2004, Pages 177–199, https://doi.org/10.1525/mts.2004.26.2.177
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Abstract
This article outlines the use of neo-Riemannian operations (NROs) for the analysis of certain pop-rock chord progressions whose features invite a transformational approach. After presenting the NROs used in the paper, I delineate the general features of the progressions under discussion, distinguish the progressions from the late-Romantic progressions analyzed with NROs by Richard Cohn, Brian Hyer, Henry Klumpenhouwer, and David Lewin, and contrast pc parsimony (one or two pcs shared by two triads) with p parsimony (one or two pitches shared by two triads). I then offer a series of analyses, which fall into three categories: sequences, progressions with chromatic lines from or
, and a song that combines triads and seventh chords. I close with an analysis of a complete song.