เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

dodecaphony การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Fortner used dodecaphony but included traditional Spanish instruments, such as mandolins, castanets, tambourine and guitars.
  • :" . . . demonstrates a great facility and even felicity, with occasional daring excursions into dodecaphony.
  • His compositions often combined elements of prior liturgical music styles ( such as Gregorian chant ) with modern techniques like dodecaphony.
  • The work is in the late-Romantic tradition, in particular the New German School, unaffected by the emerging dodecaphony.
  • After studying in Paris  and under Leibowitz s influence  he turned to dodecaphony, serialism and other contemporary composition techniques.
  • The term is also often used for dodecaphony, or twelve-tone technique, which is alternatively regarded as the model for integral serialism.
  • Movement 3 relates to movements 1 and 5 through their common use of recurring organ versets, and relates to movements 2 and 4 by their common use of dodecaphony.
  • He remains close to Shostakovich, whose music his own continues to resemble, even to the point of a few scattered gestures in the direction of dodecaphony beginning in the 1960s.
  • This concept was called atonality . ( It has also been called other things, such as dodecaphony and pantonality, and in its most sophisticated application it was known as serialism.
  • Harmony as the basis of musical structure had become so complicated that it had to break up and be pieced back together in the early 20th century as Arnold Scho nberg's dodecaphony.
  • His five " Synth鑣es " offer a form of dodecaphony, while " Formes en l'air " was dedicated to Picasso and is a Cubo-Futurist concept.
  • However, shows were still confrontational and lasted about three hours, wherein the poet criticized Margaret Thatcher, Leonid Brezhnev, Pierre Boulez and " subsidized dodecaphony composers ", Pope John Paul II and Ronald Reagan.
  • Composer, contemporary musicians for which all the forms of musical expression can find their place in masterpiece and even combine ( jazz, fusion, folklore, atonality, dodecaphony, sound effects, etc . ).
  • He gradually managed to develop a distinctive personal style, which is pre-eminently characterized by counterpoint and is equally close to both musical dodecaphony, in the sense of Arnold Schoenberg, whom he critically admired.
  • Henri Langlois was one of several commentators who noted in " Muriel " a significantly innovative style and tone : " " Muriel " marks the advent of cinematic dodecaphony; Resnais is the Schoenberg of this chamber drama ".
  • Composer Hans Werner Henze, whose music was regularly performed at Darmstadt in the 1950s, reacted against the Darmstadt School ideologies, particularly the way in which ( according to him ) young composers were forced either to write in total dodecaphony or be ridiculed or ignored.
  • His early training with van Baaren and Seiber disposed him toward twelve-tone technique, and his earliest compositions, such as the " Introductie en adagio in oude stijl " ( 1954 ) and the Septet ( 1957 ), combine traditional forms with dodecaphony.
  • This is the first study to offer a comprehensive technical discussion of Goehr s post-serial harmonic practice in its aesthetic context, and explores Goehr s synthesis of French and Austro-German approaches to tonality and modality and their relation to his understanding of Schoenbergian dodecaphony.
  • In 1956 Brooks worked with Zoot Sims and Al Cohn on a recording " Folk Jazz U . S . A . " He became better-known as a composer during this time, and his works blend elements of folk music and dodecaphony with the idioms of modern jazz.
  • Because I thought there needed to be a source that gave Lorca's original title ( in Spanish ) for the work, I added a citation to the other Schott source ( used for dodecaphony ) after that first sentence, and also included the Klebe there because it sources the 1957 premiere info.
  • ตัวอย่างการใช้เพิ่มเติม:   1  2