Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pandiatonicism> ?p ?o }
- Pandiatonicism abstract "Pandiatonicism is a musical technique of using the diatonic (as opposed to the chromatic) scale without the limitations of functional tonality. Music using this technique is pandiatonic. The term "pandiatonicism" was coined by Nicolas Slonimsky in the second edition of Music since 1900 to describe chord formations of any number up to all seven degrees of the diatonic scale, "used freely in democratic equality" (Kostelanetz 2013, 465). Triads with added notes such as the sixth, seventh, or second (added tone chords) are the most common (Anon. 2001; Kennedy 2006), while the, "most elementary form," is a nonharmonic bass (Andriessen & Schönberger 2006, 57). According to Slonimsky's definition,Pan-diatonicism sanctions the simultaneous use of any or all seven tones of the diatonic scale, with the bass determining the harmony. The chord-building remains tertian, with the seventh, ninth, or thirteenth chords being treated as consonances functionally equivalent to the fundamental triad. (The eleventh chord is shunned in tonic harmony because of its quartal connotations.) Pan-diatonicism, as consolidation of tonality, is the favorite technique of NEO-CLASSICISM [sic]. (Slonimsky 1938, xxii)Pandiatonic music typically uses the diatonic notes freely in dissonant combinations without conventional resolutions and/or without standard chord progressions, but always with a strong sense of tonality due to the absence of chromatics. "Pandiatonicism possesses both tonal and modal aspects, with a distinct preference for major keys" (Kostelanetz 2013, 465). C major is in fact the key favored by most composers using the technique. Characteristic examples include the opening of Sergei Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3, Alfredo Casella's Valse diatonique, and Igor Stravinsky's Pulcinella (Latham 1992). "The functional importance of the primary triads...remains undiminished in pandiatonic harmony" (Kostelanetz 2013, 465). An opposed point of view holds that pandiatonicism does not project a clear and stable tonic (Simms 1986, 63–64). Pandiatonicism is also referred to as "white-note music" (Machlis 1979, 163), though in fact occasional accidentals may be present. Other composers who employed the technique are Maurice Ravel, Paul Hindemith, Darius Milhaud, Aaron Copland, and Roy Harris (Slonimsky 1947, iv). Pandiatonicism is also employed in jazz (e.g., added sixth ninth chord) and in Henry Cowell's tone clusters.(Kostelanetz 2013, 517).Slonimsky later came to regard pandiatonicism as a diatonic counterpart of Arnold Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique, whereby melodies may be made up of seven different notes of the diatonic scale, and then be inverted, retrograded, or both. According to this system, "strict pandiatonic counterpoint" may use progressions of seven different notes in each voice, with no vertical duplication (Slonimsky 1947, iv).The term has been criticized as one of many by which, "Stravinsky's music, everywhere and at once, is made to represent or encompass every conceivable technique" (van den Toorn 1975, 105), and that has, "become so vague a concept that it has very little meaning or use" (Woodward 2009, 1). Pandiatonic music is usually defined by what it is not, "by the absence of traditional elements" (Woodward 2009, iii): chromatic, atonal, twelve-tone, functional, clear tonic, and/or traditional dissonance resolutions (Woodward 2009, 3). "It has been applied...to diatonic music lacking harmonic consistency [or]...centricity" (Tymoczko 2011, 188n31). Slonimsky himself, while making fun of the definition, quotes a professor saying pandiatonicism is, "C-major that sounds like hell" (Woodward 2009, 2).Examples of pandiatonicism include the harmonies Aaron Copland used in his populist work, Appalachian Spring (Jaffe 1992, 30–31), and the minimalist music by Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and the later works of John Adams (Dahlhaus, et al. 2001; Jaffe 1992, 28). William Mann describes The Beatles "This Boy" as, "harmonically...one of their most intriguing, with its chains of pandiatonic clusters" (Mann 1963 cited in Everett 2001, 204).".
- Pandiatonicism thumbnail Stravinsky_pandiatonic_nonharmonic_bass-_Symphony_of_Psalms_3rd_mov.png?width=300.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageExternalLink glossary.html.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageID "605498".
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageLength "11765".
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageOutDegree "86".
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageRevisionID "641307950".
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Aaron_Copland.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Accidental_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Added_tone_chord.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Alfredo_Casella.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Appalachian_Spring.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Arnold_Schoenberg.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Bass_note.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink C_major.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Lists_of_musical_works.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musical_techniques.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Chord_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Chord_progression.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Chromatic_scale.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Debussy.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Concerto_for_Piano_and_Wind_Instruments_(Stravinsky).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Consonance_and_dissonance.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Counterpoint.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Darius_Milhaud.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Degree_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Diatonic_and_chromatic.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Diatonic_function.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Diatonic_scale.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Déodat_de_Séverac.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Eleventh_chord.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink George_Gershwin.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Harmony.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Heitor_Villa-Lobos.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Cowell.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Igor_Stravinsky.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Inversion_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Jazz.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink John_Adams_(composer).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink John_Tyrrell_(musicologist).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink La_cathédrale_engloutie.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Le_tombeau_de_Couperin.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Major_6th_chord.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Maurice_Ravel.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Kennedy_(music_critic).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Minimal_music.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Mode_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Musical_technique.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Ned_Rorem.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassicism_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Nicolas_Slonimsky.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Ninth_chord.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Nonchord_tone.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Nonharmonic_bass.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Hindemith.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Philip_Glass.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Piano_Concerto_No._3_(Prokofiev).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Primary_triad.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Préludes_(Debussy).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Pulcinella_(ballet).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Quartal_and_quintal_harmony.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Resolution_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Retrograde_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Retrograde_inversion.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Roy_Harris.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Scale_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Scale_degree.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Sergei_Prokofiev.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Seventh_chord.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Shes_Leaving_Home.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Sixth_chord.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Stanley_Sadie.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Steve_Reich.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Tehillim_(Reich).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink The_Beatles.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink The_Desert_Music.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink The_Times.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink This_Boy.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Tonality.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Tonic_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Triad_(music).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Twelve-tone_technique.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink Variations_on_%22I_Got_Rhythm%22.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink William_Mann_(critic).
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLink File:Stravinsky_pandiatonic_nonharmonic_bass-_Symphony_of_Psalms_3rd_mov.png.
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pandiatonicism".
- Pandiatonicism wikiPageWikiLinkText "pandiatonicism".
- Pandiatonicism hasPhotoCollection Pandiatonicism.
- Pandiatonicism reference "10.0".
- Pandiatonicism reference "1900.0".
- Pandiatonicism reference "2.0".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Andriessen, Louis, and Elmer Schönberger. 2006. The Apollonian Clockwork: On Stravinsky. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 9789053568569.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Anon. 2001. "Pandiatonicism". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Dahlhaus, Carl, Julian Anderson, Charles Wilson, Richard Cohn, and Brian Hyer. 2001. "Harmony". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Everett, Walter. 1999. The Beatles as Musicians: Revolver Through the Anthology. Oxford. ISBN 9780195129410.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Everett, Walter. 2001. The Beatles as Musicians: The Quarry Men Through Rubber Soul. Oxford and Bew York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-514105-4.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Hepokoski, James A. 1984. "Formulaic Openings in Debussy". 19th-Century Music 8, no. 1 : 44–59.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Jaffe, Stephen. 1992. "Conversation between SJ and JS on the New Tonality". Contemporary Music Review 6, no. 2:27–38.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Kennedy, Michael. 2006. "Pandiatonicism". The Oxford Dictionary of Music, second edition, revised; edited by Joyce Bourne. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-861459-3.".
- Pandiatonicism reference "Kostelanetz, Richard. 2013. A Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781136806193.".