Fugue Guide

: The first voice introduces the central melody in the home (tonic) key.

: Often used near the end to build intensity, this technique involves overlapping subject entries so that one voice starts before the previous one has finished. : The first voice introduces the central melody

: A second voice enters with the subject transposed, usually to the dominant key (a fifth higher). If it's a literal transposition, it is a "real answer"; if slightly altered to stay in the home key, it is a "tonal answer". If it's a literal transposition, it is a

A fugue is a sophisticated musical form defined by the systematic imitation of a principal theme, called the , across multiple simultaneously sounding voices . Emerging as a pinnacle of Baroque composition—most famously refined by Johann Sebastian Bach —it relies on strict rules of counterpoint to create a dense, "conversation-like" texture. Structural Anatomy of a Fugue Structural Anatomy of a Fugue A traditional fugue

A traditional fugue typically follows a three-part structural lifecycle: :

: While the second voice plays the answer, the first voice continues with a secondary melody that fits harmonically.