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- Chordioid abstract "A chordioid, also called chord fragment or fragmentary voicing or partial voicing, is a group of musical notes which does not qualify as a chord under some preferred chord theory or other, but still useful to name and reify for other reasons.The main use of chordioids is to form "legitimate" chords enharmonically in 12TET by adding one or more notes to this base. It is typical of chordioids that many different resultant chords can be created from the same base depending on the note or combination of notes added. The resultant chords on a single chordioid are somewhat related, because they can be progressed between using motion of just one voice. Theorists – or practical music teachers – writing of chordioids usually go so far as to advise that students learn them in the practical manner of chords generally: in all transpositions, ranges, permutations, and voicings, for reading, writing, and playingIt is the case, also, that "legitimate chords" can be used as chordioids to create resultant chords by the same process. Perhaps this is from whence the non-chord chordioids come. The Italian augmented 6th chord (It+6) is one example, from which proceed the French augmented 6th chord (Fr+6) and German augmented 6th chord (Gr+6) by addition of one note. Rawlins(2005) asserts that the notion derives from practice of such composers as Eric Satie, Claude Debussy, Maurice Ravel, and Gabriel Faure, and was first used in jazz by Bill Evans.Two chordioids may potentially be combined, as well. Typically, duplication of notes will result in a reduced number of unique notes in the resultant.Chordioids as a technique is related to polychords insofar as polychords are the result of an additive process, but differs in that the basis of polychords is the addition of two known chords. Chordioids is related also to upper structures as a technique insofar as upper structures represent groups of notes not commonly taken to be "legitimate" chords, but differs in that chordioids as a technique uses a priori structures held in common rather than a free selection of color tones appropriate for a lower integral chord. Chordioids is related to slash chords as a technique insofar as known chords may be used as chordioids to create resultant scales, but differs in that chordioids used are not exclusively known chords.".
- Chordioid wikiPageID "41866974".
- Chordioid wikiPageLength "18651".
- Chordioid wikiPageOutDegree "112".
- Chordioid wikiPageRevisionID "670514874".
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink 12TET.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Accordion.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Ancohemitonia.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Anhemitonia.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Anhemitonic_scale.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Augmented_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Augmented_major_seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Augmented_seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Augmented_sixth.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Augmented_sixth_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Augmented_triad.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Bill_Evans.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chords.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jazz_techniques.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jazz_terminology.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musical_techniques.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musical_terminology.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Chord_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Chord_progression.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Debussy.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Cohemitonia.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Diminished_triad.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_function.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_seventh_flat_five_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Eleventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Enharmonic.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Equal_temperament.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Eric_Satie.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Erik_Satie.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Fifth_(chord).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Gabriel_Faure.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Gabriel_Fauré.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Homogeneity.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Homogeneity_and_heterogeneity.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Interval_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Interval_number.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Jazz.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Schillinger.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Major_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Major_seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Major_third.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Maurice_Ravel.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Minor_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Minor_major_seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Minor_seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Nicolas_Slonimsky.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Ninth_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Permutation.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Permutations.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Polychord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Range_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Reification_(knowledge_representation).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Seventh_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Slash_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Suspended_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Symmetry.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Third.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Third_(chord).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Third_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Thirteenth.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Thirteenth_chord.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Transposition_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Upper_structure.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Voicing_(music).
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Whole_tone_scale.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLink Wholetone_scale.
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chordioid".
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chordioid#Master_Chord".
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLinkText "chordioid technique".
- Chordioid wikiPageWikiLinkText "chordioid".
- Chordioid hasPhotoCollection Chordioid.
- Chordioid wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chords.
- Chordioid wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Jazz_theory.
- Chordioid wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Chordioid wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Music.
- Chordioid wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Chordioid subject Category:Chords.
- Chordioid subject Category:Jazz_techniques.
- Chordioid subject Category:Jazz_terminology.
- Chordioid subject Category:Musical_techniques.
- Chordioid subject Category:Musical_terminology.
- Chordioid hypernym Group.
- Chordioid type Band.
- Chordioid comment "A chordioid, also called chord fragment or fragmentary voicing or partial voicing, is a group of musical notes which does not qualify as a chord under some preferred chord theory or other, but still useful to name and reify for other reasons.The main use of chordioids is to form "legitimate" chords enharmonically in 12TET by adding one or more notes to this base.".
- Chordioid label "Chordioid".
- Chordioid sameAs m.0_x6l44.
- Chordioid sameAs Q16957987.
- Chordioid sameAs Q16957987.
- Chordioid wasDerivedFrom Chordioid?oldid=670514874.
- Chordioid isPrimaryTopicOf Chordioid.