Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Monophony> ?p ?o }
- Monophony abstract "In music, monophony is the simplest of textures, consisting of melody without accompanying harmony. This may be realized as just one note at a time, or with the same note duplicated at the octave (such as often when men and women sing together). If an entire melody is played by two or more instruments or sung by a choir with a fixed interval between the voices or in unison, it is also said to be in monophony. Music in which all the notes sung are in unison is called monophonic. Musical texture is determined in song and music by varying components. Songs intersperse monophony, heterophony, polyphony, homophony, or monody elements throughout the melody to create atmosphere and style. Monophony may not have underlying rhythmic textures, and must consist of only a melodic line. The music with a melodic line and rhythmic accompaniment is called homophony.According to Ardis Butterfield (1997), monophony "is the dominant mode of the European vernacular genres as well as of Latin song ... in polyphonic works, it remains a central compositional principle." Polyphony has two or more independent melodic voices. Monophony is one voice in music rather like a soliloquy.".
- Monophony soundRecording Monophony__1.
- Monophony soundRecording Monophony__2.
- Monophony soundRecording Monophony__3.
- Monophony thumbnail Pop_Goes_the_Weasel_melody.PNG?width=300.
- Monophony wikiPageExternalLink monophony.htm.
- Monophony wikiPageExternalLink 0,7832,731071-,00.html.
- Monophony wikiPageExternalLink monophony.htm.
- Monophony wikiPageExternalLink music-texture.html.
- Monophony wikiPageExternalLink homophony.html.
- Monophony wikiPageID "185515".
- Monophony wikiPageLength "8133".
- Monophony wikiPageOutDegree "65".
- Monophony wikiPageRevisionID "677320919".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Ambrosian_chant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Armenian_chant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Beneventan_chant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_Chant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Carnatic_music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chants.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Category:Harmony.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Category:Monophony.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Composition_(music).
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Drone_(music).
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Duophonic.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Flagellant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Geisslerlieder.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Gregorian_chant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Guido_dArezzo.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Guido_of_Arezzo.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Harmony.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Heinrich_Glarean.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Heterophony.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Hindustani_classical_music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Hindustani_music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Homophony.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Indian_classical_music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Jehan_de_Lescurel.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Sebastian_Bach.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Kannada.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Lauda_(song).
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Laude_spirituale.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink MID.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Malayalam.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Luther.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Melody.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Mid.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Minnesang.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Monody.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Mozarabic_chant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Music_history_of_India.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Music_history_of_Italy.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Musical_composition.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Musical_note.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Musical_texture.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Note_(music).
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Octave.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Ogg.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Organum.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Plainchant.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Plainsong.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Polyphony.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Provence.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Sanskrit.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Tamil_language.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Telugu_language.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Texture_(music).
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Troubador.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Trouvère.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Unison.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink Voicing_(music).
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink File:Gregorian_chant.gif.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLink File:Pop_Goes_the_Weasel_melody.PNG.
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mono".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "Monophonic".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "Monophony".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "doubling".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monodic".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monophonic Sound".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monophonic song".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monophonic texture".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monophonic".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monophonically".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monophony".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monotonal".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monotone".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monotoned".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monotonous sound".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monotonous".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "monotony".
- Monophony wikiPageWikiLinkText "one note at a time".
- Monophony description "A monophonic Antiphon from the Gregorian Chant collection Liber Usualis".
- Monophony description "Erik Satie The Four Ogives. Their calm, slow melodies are built up from paired phrases reminiscent of plainchant.".
- Monophony description "This is the plainchant version of Pange Lingua sung to its traditional Latin text.".
- Monophony filename "Erik Satie - Ogive No.1.mid".
- Monophony filename "Liber Usualis 0340b.mid".