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diatonicism การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • He called this " flexible diatonicism ", and differentiated flex from chromaticism.
  • Here he introduces the balance between diatonicism and chromaticism, diatonic notes being those found lower in the harmonic series of the specific key area.
  • In general, Kabalevsky was not as adventurous as his contemporaries in terms of harmony and preferred a more conventional diatonicism, interlaced with chromaticism and major-minor interplay.
  • Most composers today use a harmonic language that Hartke describes as " dissonated diatonicism, " meaning a language spiked with dissonance yet hewing close to major and minor keys.
  • Her interest in the properties of diatonicism and tonal spaces has also fed much of her work in the history of music theory, notably in her studies of Arthur von Oettingen and Heinrich Schenker.
  • Of course the contrast between chromaticism and diatonicism does not exist any more; . . . I am convinced that musical symbolism does exist, even if only, unfortunately, in a very primitive form.
  • When his friend Nikolai Myaskovsky praised the second theme, Prokofiev retorted, with reference to the work's coda, " from the musical point of view, the only worthwhile part, if you please, is the final section, and that, I think, is probably the result of my sweetness and diatonicism ".
  • Some of the harmonic language used in the chansons is daring, and approaches the experimental level of chromatic and enharmonic, with no mixture of diatonicism except in an interval in the " bassecontre " and another in the " hautecontre ", made to express the word'death'" However, in a later edition of the same songs ( published posthumously in 1587 ) his publisher removed the dots used as microtone accidentals; evidently they were either too hard to sing, or the notation was too unfamiliar.