Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Clarinet Concerto (Mozart)" ¶ 12
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

canonic and material
The " texture " of much minimalist music is based on canonic imitation, exact repetitions of the same material, offset in time.
As the secondary theme comes to a close, the clarinet has another chance to improvise briefly, and this time leads the canonic material that follows.
This device lends unity to a work or even a group of works ( as some motives Beethoven used not only in one work, but in many works ) without repeating material exactly or turning to canonic devices.

canonic and opening
) This theme serves to introduce a compact, driven sonata form pushed ahead by economical use of rhythms ( new themes often are based on some of the same rhythms as older ones, and overlap with them as well ), by the intensity added by canonic treatment of themes, centering around, pushing towards, a small number of climaxes one of which is the reappearance of that opening theme in a much-slowed-down form just preceding ( and followed without pause by ) the recapitulation.
The major-mode themes are accorded slightly less space this time around before A minor returns in the form of a quiet pair of octaves, F in tremolo in the left hand and A held in the right, occasionally alternating with the scurrying sixteenths ; over which the violin plays the longer version of its main theme from the first movement, twice, then, crescendo, joins in the piano's perpetual motion frenzy until a recall of the canonic theme that had opened the development is reached-now played sforzando ( mit Violoncell, Schumann also writes ), opening the last stage of the coda punctuating the rush to the final chords sixteen bars later.

canonic and time
Bach inscribed the piece " Regis Iussu Cantio Et Reliqua Canonica Arte Resoluta " ( the theme given by the king, with additions, resolved in the canonic style ), the first letters of which spell out the word ricercar, a well-known genre of the time.

canonic and with
The canonic nine are traditionally divided into two groups, with Alcaeus, Sappho and Anacreon, being ' monodists ' or ' solo-singers ', with the following characteristics:
He was a highly sophisticated contrapuntist, often using strict canonic techniques ; in addition, he used colorful sonorities, changes of meter between sections, and colorful chromaticism, showing an acquaintanceship with contemporary secular practice as well as the work of the Venetian School.
The mid-16th century Italians, especially Sebastiano Serlio and Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola, who established a canonic version of the orders, thought they detected a " Composite order ", combining the volutes of the Ionic with the foliage of the Corinthian, but in Roman practice volutes were almost always present.
They were arranged in nine ' books ', exemplifying the following genres ( Bacchylides in fact composed in a greater variety of genres than any of the other lyric poets who comprise the canonic nine, with the exception of Pindar, who composed in ten ):
Bacchylides had become, almost overnight, among the best represented poets of the canonic nine, with about half as many extant verses as Pindar, adding about a hundred new words to Greek lexicons.
The bass line begins the piece with a low note, proceeds to a slow lament bass and only picks up the pace of the canonic voices in bar 3:
Alexandrian scholars included him in their canonic list of iambic poets, along with Semonides and Hipponax, yet ancient commentators also numbered him with Tyrtaeus and Callinus as the possible inventor of the elegy.
The Syntagma philosophicum sub-divides, according to the usual fashion of the Epicureans, into logic ( which, with Gassendi as with Epicurus, is truly canonic ), physics and ethics.
Vincent Duckles writes, " As musicology has grown more pluralistic, its practitioners have increasingly adopted methods and theories deemed by observers to mark the academy as irrelevant, out of touch with ' mainstream values ', unwelcoming of Western canonic traditions or simply incomprehensible.
These two objects ( 27 lines on the cubic, 28 bitangents on a quartic ), together with the 120 tritangent planes of a canonic sextic curve of genus 4, form a " trinity " in the sense of Vladimir Arnold, specifically a form of McKay correspondence, and can be related to many further objects, including E < sub > 7 </ sub > and E < sub > 8 </ sub >, as discussed at trinities.
Algebro-geometrically, McKay also associates E < sub > 6 </ sub >, E < sub > 7 </ sub >, E < sub > 8 </ sub > respectively with: the 27 lines on a cubic surface, the 28 bitangents of a plane quartic curve, and the 120 tritangent planes of a canonic sextic curve of genus 4.
In a purported sonata allegro scheme, the B < sup > 1 </ sup > section would inaugurate the development, given its more active texture and return to the main key of C. The A theme is developed next, with canonic imitations in E-flat major, after which surface the mysterious B-major chords of section D. These two sections ( D and X ) shatter the proposed sonata scheme, and in place of a recapitulation, the movement closes with another reprise of the lyrical A theme.
The style of Mouton's music has superficial similarities to that of Josquin des Prez, using paired imitation, canonic techniques, and equal-voiced polyphonic writing: yet Mouton tends to write rhythmically and texturally uniform music compared to Josquin, with all the voices singing, and with relatively little textural contrast.
Most of this movement is written homophonically, with a brief canonic section towards the end.
Her music features canonic structures and prominent, sometimes exclusive, glissandos, being " characterized by extremely strict, even rigid technical procedures ( canonic structures ), which are often worked out with unusual musical materials ( glissandi )".
The first movement begins passionately, with the theme first played by the violin and amenable like so many of Schumann's themes to canonic treatment.

canonic and bass
Commenting on the structure of the canons of the Goldberg Variations, Glenn Gould cited this variation as the extreme example of " deliberate duality of motivic emphasis [...] the canonic voices are called upon to sustain the passacaille role which is capriciously abandoned by the bass.
The outer voices form a canon at the octave ; in the other two canonic versets in the 1624 collection, Titelouze created canons at the fifth ( and the hymn is in the soprano voice or bass ).

canonic and over
The Archdiocese of Avignon has canonic jurisdiction over the department of Vaucluse.
Despite the canonic status of Berlin Alexanderplatz, Döblin is often characterized as an under-recognized or even as a forgotten author ; while his work has received increasing critical attention ( mostly in German ) over the last few decades, he is much less well known by the reading public than other representatives of German modernism such as Thomas Mann, Bertolt Brecht, or Franz Kafka.
The canonic proportions of the male torso established by Polykleitos ossified in Hellenistic and Roman times in the heroic cuirass exemplified by the Augustus of Prima Porta, who wears ceremonial dress armor modelled in relief over an idealized muscular torso which is ostensibly modelled on the Doryphoros.

canonic and first
The first ' modern ' publication of Alcaeus ' verses appeared in a Greek and Latin edition of fragments collected from the canonic nine lyrical poets by Michael Neander, published at Basle in 1556.
" So the work must have existed in the first half of the 2nd century, which is also the commonly accepted date of the canonic Second Epistle of Peter.

canonic and .
The other six of the canonic nine composed verses for public occasions, performed by choruses and professional singers and typically featuring complex metrical arrangements that were never reproduced in other verses.
In the Middle Ages, the term was widely used to denote any works in canonic style ; by the Renaissance, it had come to denote specifically imitative works.
It is then argued that when one of the three " canonic " Montesquieu's powers gains an additional power on media, this would be extremely dangerous for the survival of democracy, and an eventual conflict of interests is contested.
Early 16th-century Franco-Flemings moved away from the complex systems of canonic and other mensural play of Ockeghem's generation, tending toward points of imitation and duet or trio sections within an overall texture that grew to five and six voices.
The canonic interplay in the upper voices features many suspensions.
The Ionic order () forms one of the three orders or organizational systems of classical architecture, the other two canonic orders being the Doric and the Corinthian.
By 1340, Machaut was living in Rheims, having relinquished his other canonic posts at the request of Pope Benedict XII.
Some of Willaert ’ s motets and chanzoni franciose a quarto sopra doi ( double canonic chansons ) had been published as early as 1520 in Venice.
He used all the resources of polyphony as they had developed by the middle 16th century in his work, including imitation and canonic techniques, all in the service of careful text setting.
However, there are versions of Colombeau algebras ( so called full algebras ) which allow for canonic embeddings of distributions.
Yardena Arazi, one of Israel's most popular stars, made a recording in 1989 called " Dimion Mizrahi " ( Eastern Imagination ), and included original materials and some canonic Israeli songs.
While he was a moderately prolific composer, and his motets are polished and display a mastery of canonic counterpoint, his principal claim to fame was his work as a theorist.
All of the pieces are in four voices, except the canonic versets, which use only three.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia in the registers, on the margin of the text of the record, the last sentence is noted as its real definition: " Declaratio quod subesse Romano Pontifici est omni humanae creaturae de necessitate salutis "; thus this phrase, like some in canonic scripture, may have moved from an original position as a marginal gloss to an integral part of the text as it has been accepted.

0.242 seconds.