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Polytonality
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===Polyvalency=== The following passage, taken from [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]]'s [[Piano Sonata No. 26 (Beethoven)|Piano Sonata in E{{music|flat}}, Op. 81a (''Les Adieux'')]], suggests clashes between tonic and dominant harmonies in the same key.{{sfn|Marquis|1964|loc={{Page needed|date=November 2010}}}} [[File:Bitonality in Beethoven.PNG|thumb|upright=1.8|center|Polyvalency suggested in Beethoven{{sfn|Marquis|1964|loc={{Page needed|date=October 2010}}}}[[File:Bitonality in Beethoven.mid]]]] Leeuw points to Beethoven's use of the clash between tonic and dominant, such as in his [[Symphony No. 3 (Beethoven)|Third Symphony]], as polyvalency rather than bitonality, with polyvalency being, "the telescoping of diverse functions that should really occur ''in succession'' to one another".{{sfn|Leeuw|2005|loc=87}} [[File:Polyvalency in Beethoven.png|thumb|upright=1.8|center|Polyvalency in Beethoven{{sfn|Leeuw|2005|loc=88}}[[File:Polyvalency in Beethoven.mid]]]] [[File:Polyvalency in Stravinsky's Mass.png|thumb|upright=1.8|center|Polyvalency in Stravinsky's ''[[Mass (Stravinsky)|Mass]]''{{harv|Leeuw|2005|loc=88}}[[File:Polyvalency in Stravinsky.mid]]]]
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