So you see a chord as something inherently existing within a context of linear motion (i.e. melody)?jancivil wrote:I'll tell you why I consider these chords: when I went to adapt it (and the reason for it is these chords, very McCoy Tyner, only ca. 1890s) for my own purpose, creating lines/parts worked as per the chords, as though chord changes in jazz.
That sort of goes back to a very old argument in music theory, back to Rameau and Mattheson. Rameau believed that harmony generated melody and Mattheson believed melody generated harmony.
Anyway, I thumbed through Allen Forte's The Structure of Atonal Music and found that he uses the word "chord" several times and in reference to works by both Schoenberg and Webern, admittedly earlier works from the "atonal" period rather than the serial works.
But I also found it in George Perle's Serial Composition and Atonality in reference to a serial work by Scriabin.
Again, my point is that the term has been used in the literature in reference to not only non-tertian sonorities, but atonal and serial ones as well.