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===Descending, or upper, leading tone=== {{Image frame|content=<score sound="1" override_midi="Escribano - Lamentation, upper leading-tone cadence.mid"> { #(set-global-staff-size 18) << \new StaffGroup << \new Staff << \clef treble \time 2/2 \relative c' { \clef treble \time 2/2 e2 f2~ f4 e d2~ d4 \once \set suggestAccidentals = ##t cis8 b \once \set suggestAccidentals = ##t cis!2 d1\fermata } >> \new Staff << \clef treble \time 2/2 \new Voice \relative c' { r2 a f g a1 a1\fermata } >> \new Staff << \clef bass \time 2/2 \new Voice \relative c' { a1 d, e d\fermata } >> \new Staff << \clef bass \time 2/2 \new Voice \relative c { a1 bes a d\fermata \bar "|." } >> >> >> } </score>|width=420|caption=Cadence featuring a descending leading tone (B flat – A in the bass voice) from a well-known 16th-century lamentation, the debate over which was documented in Rome c.1540.{{sfn|Berger|1987|loc=148}}<br />[[File:Escribano - Lamentation, upper leading-tone cadence.mid|thumb|left|155px|Upper-leading tone trill]][[File:Escribano - Lamentation, upper leading-tone cadence diatonic.mid|thumb|155px|Diatonic trill]]}} By contrast, a descending, or upper, leading tone{{sfn|Berger|1987|loc=148}}{{sfn|Coker|1991|loc=50}} is a leading tone that resolves ''down'', as opposed to the seventh scale degree (a ''lower'' leading tone) which resolves up. The descending, or upper, leading tone usually is a lowered second degree ({{music|flat}}{{music|scale|2}}) resolving to the tonic, but the expression may at times refer to a {{music|flat}}{{music|scale|6}} resolving to the dominant.{{Citation needed|date=April 2020}} In German, the term ''Gegenleitton'' ("counter leading tone") is used by [[Hugo Riemann]] to denote the descending or upper leading-tone ({{music|flat}}{{music|scale|2}}),{{sfn|Riemann|1918|loc=113–114}} but [[Heinrich Schenker]] uses {{lang|de|abwärtssteigenden Leitton}}{{sfn|Schenker|1910||pages=143–145}} ("descending leading tone") to mean the descending diatonic [[supertonic]] ({{music|natural}}{{music|scale|2}}).) The [[tritone substitution]], chord progression ii–subV–I on C (Dm–Db7–C), results in an upper leading note. :<score sound="1" lang="lilypond"> { \new Staff << \new Voice \relative c' { \clef treble \key c \major \time 4/4 \override NoteColumn.force-hshift = #1 \override NoteHead.color = #red s2 des \override NoteColumn.force-hshift = #0.5 c1 } \new Voice \relative c' { \clef treble \key c \major \time 4/4 <d f a c>2 <f aes ces> <e g c>1 \bar "||" } >> } </score>
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