Music that has no sense of
tonality and no obvious key. Atonal music uses the notes of the chromatic scale and, depending on the system employed, uses all twelve pitch classes in hierarchies other than triadic harmony. This means that there is no pull towards any particular tonic note.
Arnold
Schoenberg was one of the first composers to explore atonality, from 1909, although Gustav
Mahler experimented with it in many passages of his later symphonies. Schoenberg's aim was to extend tonal expression and not just to disturb. He rejected the term as he felt it was misleading. Other important composers of atonality include Alban Berg, Anton Webern, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Pierre Boulez. It has since become the main paradigm of all serious mid- to late-20th-century composers, due to the fact that the use of tonality now sounds clichéd due to all the possibilities of tonality having been exhausted.
Populist use of atonality can be found in film and television scores as background music for scenes of mystery or horror, although here it is only the
dissonance (a small aspect of atonality) exploited for its ability to disturb.
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