[Lessons in Music Form by Percy Goetschius]@TWC D-Link book
Lessons in Music Form

CHAPTER V
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CADENCES.
CADENCES IN GENERAL .-- A cadence is the ending of a phrase.

Strictly speaking, every interruption or "break" between figures, and between all melodic members, is a cadence; but the term "cadence" is applied to nothing smaller than entire phrases.
The cadence is the point of Repose which creates the necessary contrast with the condition of Action that prevails more or less constantly during the phrase; and the effect of this point of repose is, therefore, to separate one phrase from the next.

The cadential effect is generally produced by two or three chords, the last one of which is called the cadence-chord, and stands, when the cadence is perfectly regular, upon an accented beat of the final measure.

This, according to our definition of the phrase, will most commonly be the fourth measure.
For example: [Illustration: Example 18.


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