The augmented triad differs from the other kinds of triad (the
major triad, the
minor triad, and the
diminished triad) in that it does not naturally arise in a
diatonic scale. Although it could be conceptualized as a triad built on the third degree of a
harmonic minor scale or
melodic minor scale, it virtually never occurs in this way due to the harsh
dissonance of the chord. Striking examples of its use may be found in
Mozart’s keyboard minuet K355. It first occurs as a
passing chord on the third beat of bar 1 (D–G–B). However it comes into more striking prominence in the 6-bar
sequential passage starting on the first beat of bar 5 (D-F–A): According to Aubyn Raymar, in this minuet “flowing counterpoints woven among closely crowded chromaticisms and richly variegated harmony, sequential progressions in either direction coupled with unexpected dissonance… - such resources used with a mastery of concentration intensify the emotion which stirs within the brooding phrases of a perfectly balanced poem.” Its rarity makes the augmented triad a special chord that touches on the
atonal. Its uses to 'suspend' tonality are famous; for example, in
Arnold Schoenberg's "Walzer" (
Fünf Klavierstücke Op. 23 No. 5). An earlier example may be found at the opening of
Franz Liszt's
Faust Symphony, where a sequence of augmented triads unfolds as
arpeggios: However, the augmented triad occurs in tonal music, with a perfectly tonal meaning, since at least
J.S. Bach. See the "surprising" first chord (D–F–B) in the opening chorus to his cantata
Ach Gott, vom Himmel sieh darein, BWV 2: . Other examples may be found in the work of
Joseph Haydn. See, for example, bars 5-8 of the Trio from Haydn's String Quartet Op. 54 No. 2: -also in
Richard Wagner's
Siegfried Idyll: -and in
Chopin’s stormy
Prelude No. 24. The left hand piano arpeggios outline an augmented triad (D–F-A) in bars 47-50. The sudden change in
dynamics from
forte to a hushed
piano in these bars highlights the emotional intensity of this passage: An augmented triad results diatonically in minor mode from a
dominant chord where the fifth (the second degree) is replaced by the third degree, as an anticipation of the resolution chord.
Johannes Brahms's
Tragic Overture also features the chord prominently (A–C–E), in alternation with the regular dominant (A–C–E). In this example one can also see other aspect of the appeal of the chord to composers: it is a 'conflation' of the fifth degree and the third degree, the usual contrasting keys of a piece in the minor mode. The "whirl of the final bars" of
Mahler’s Symphony No. 7 features an abrupt interpolation of an augmented chord (E–G–C) in the
penultimate bar, before the final chord of C major: With the lead of
Franz Schubert (in his
Wanderer Fantasy),
Romantic composers started organizing many pieces by descending major thirds, which can be seen as a large-scale application of the augmented triad (although it probably arose from other lines of development not necessarily connected to the augmented triad). This kind of organization is common; in addition to Schubert, it is found in music of Franz Liszt,
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov,
Louis Vierne and Richard Wagner, among others. ==Expressive and dramatic potential==