- Counterpoint refers to music made up from independent lines or voices. Bach was famous for his counterpoint skills, just listen to his Goldberg Variations! You might want to look into terms such as canon, fugue, voice leading etc.
- Homophony is like the opposite of counterpoint. It describes music were voices are united in providing harmoniic progression.
- Polyphony is a term used to describe music of multiple voices. Again, think of Bach for a good example of polyphonic music.
- Suspension is completely different. It refers (in the context you're probably speaking of) to a note being held after the harmony has moved on. The suspension usually has to resolve in tonal progressions. Suspended 4th and 2nd chords are common.
Counterpoint refers to setting a melody against another melody. It is a musical skill, concept or art.
Suspended chords are really something else. These are not resolved. They are used as constant chords in pop music. These chords are only named after the suspension technique.
Uuh, almost all western music has multiple voices. If you have a series of chords you also talk about chord voicings. Each individual note is a 'voice'.
Look at the opening theme in Mozart K545 Mvt 1. Here we have two clearly independent voices, suggesting a counterpoint. Yet, with closer inspection it is clear that the lower voice is just an Alberti figure representing a harmonic accompaniment. So how do we describe this music objectively?
With this in mind, it strikes me that much of tonal music sits along a line between the two extremes of homophony and polyphony.
Music can lean eitherway, but rarely fit perfectly into one category or the other. A Bach Fugue is clearly a counterpoint,
but how would you class a Chopin Nocturne (Op27 No2)? I would guess that it could, subjectively speaking, be considered either depending on how the individual perceives it.
Imagine we have a monophonic line that suggests an underlying harmonic progression.
Yet a further example might be the 20th century soundmass. Quite often these dense textures contain scores of independent voices. Yet only the dense cluster is perceived, begging the question 'Is polyphony something that we perceive or something that we rely on the score to tell us?'.
Sure. But in many SATB works, then inner voices serve only to support the harmony. Infact, counterpoints written to support a Cantus Firmi could often be considered mere harmonic support.
I dont disagree with you on this point, I only propose fault in the classification system. I would say that some Alberti figures offer more independence than the inner voices of some so called 'polyphonic' music.
Just take a look through a few of Bach's chorals - it is not uncommon for a number of voices to share rhythm and be related through harmony. How are they considered independent when an Alberti bass (or another broken accompaniment is not?
How about the B section of Rachmaninov's Op23 No5? In the second cycle you have an arpeggiated accompaniment, with a harmonised melody and a contrapunctal inner voice. How could this be caterogised other than to say that it exhibits characteristics of both?
What about if a work is polytonal and has an accompanyment of broken chords NOT related to the melody by harmony (or sometimes rhythm either)? Does polytonality void the other categorisations?
Dont get me wrong, I am certainly not trying to propose alternative categorisations for these examples. I dont feel they fit into either adequately, which makes me think that such terminology is all but redundant.
Never the less, we tend to think of them as melodies requiring accompaniment.
But this is absolutely the case. Take some of the work by composers like Ligeti and Penderecki. Performers will be asked to play unorthodox techniques in series, often independent of meter (like Ponticello scratches and other weird effects). Each performer is in essense forming an independent voice, yet the result is of a soundmass, rather than of polyphony.
Obviously this is extreme example, but it illustrates further the flaws in this system of categorisation.