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Positive harmony

Positive harmony is built on the same underlying concept as negative harmony: the idea of transforming the notes of a melody or chord progression according to a specific algorithm. However, instead of mirroring the notes across a central axis like in negative harmony, positive harmony applies the reverse operation, resulting in a different but equally structured transformation. This approach preserves the logic of the original progression while offering a fresh and contrasting perspective on the harmonic material.

In this article we’ll see how positive harmony works, with diagrams and practical examples.

Origins and theory

Positive harmony isn’t a concept you’ll find anywhere but here, it’s a Strokamin original concept that extends further the negative harmony concept. For those who lives in a musical world of melancholy and wants some sparks of hope.

The principle is this: the notes of a given Minor scale can be reflected along a chromatic circle axis and will map into the corresponding parallel Major scale. Considering for example the 𝔸 Minor scale (A, B, C, D, E, F, G) and the chromatic circle, the axis begins between C and C♯ and ends between F♯ and G.

A diatonic chromatic circle that starts from the A note and the positive harmony oriented symmetry axis.
From dusk to dawn… in the key of A.

Following this diagram, the A Minor scale (A, B, C, D, E, F, G) becomes (E, D, C♯, B, A, G♯, F#) — that is the A Major scale (A, B, C♯, D, E, F♯, G#) if we reorder the notes properly.

This process generates new melodies or chord progressions that still have a perceivable relationship together.

Example for harmony

Let’s start from a common Minor chord progression:

Am FG

Applying note-by-note positive harmony transformation gives:

  • Am chord (A, C, E) → (E, C♯, A) — that is the A chord (A, C♯, E) if we reorder the notes properly
  • F chord (F, A, C) → (G♯, E, C♯) — that is the C♯m chord (C♯, E, G♯) if we reorder the notes properly
  • G chord (G, B, D) → (F♯, D, B) — that is the Bm chord (B, D, F♯) if we reorder the notes properly

Therefore, the Major counterpart of the prior chord progression is:

AC♯m Bm

Example for melody

Original phrase in A Minor:

A C B D C B A

Positive version:

E C♯ D B C♯ D E

The C sharpens while the other notes switch.

Conclusion

Positive harmony isn’t a magic formula either, but it’s a another powerful tool for composers.

It comes handy as an idea generator, reharmonizer, and complement nicely the approach proposed by the negative harmony concept.

BONUS: Positive harmony diagram for any key

With the following diagram, you’ll be able to map any Minor scale notes to their parallel Major scale notes, enjoy!

A diatonic chromatic circle that starts from degree 1 and the positive harmony oriented symmetry axis.
From dusk to dawn… in any key!
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