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- Trichord abstract "In music theory, a trichord is a group of three different pitch classes found within a larger group (Friedmann 1990, 42). For example a contiguous three-note set from a musical scale (Houlahan and Tacka 2008, 54) or a twelve-tone row. The term is derived by analogy from the 20th-century use of the word "tetrachord". Unlike the tetrachord and hexachord, there is no traditional standard scale arrangement of three notes, nor is the trichord necessarily thought of as a harmonic entity (Rushton 2001). Just as a diatonic scale is conventionally said to be constructed of two disjunct tetrachords (CDEF+GABC=CDEFGABC), a pentatonic scale can be constructed of two disjunct trichords (ACD+EGA=ACDEGA; GAC+DEG=GACDEG).Milton Babbitt's serial theory of combinatoriality makes much of the properties of three-note, four-note, and six-note segments of a twelve-tone row, which he calls, respectively, trichords, tetrachords, and hexachords, extending the traditional sense of the terms and retaining their implication of contiguity. He usually reserves the term "source set" for their unordered counterparts (especially hexachords), but does occasionally employ terms such as "source tetrachords" and "combinatorial trichords, tetrachords, and hexachords" instead (Babbitt 1955, 57–58, 60; Babbitt 1961, 76; Babbitt 2003, 59).Allen Forte occasionally makes informal use of the term trichord (Forte 1973, 124 and 126) to mean what he usually calls "sets of three elements" (Forte 1973, 3, 23, 27, and 47), and other theorists (notably including Howard Hanson 1960, and Carlton Gamer 1967, 37, 46, 50–52), mean by the term triad, a three-note pitch collection which is not necessarily a contiguous segment of a scale or a tone row and not necessarily (in twentieth-century music) tertian or diatonic either.".
- Trichord thumbnail Trichords_in_C_major.png?width=300.
- Trichord wikiPageID "427908".
- Trichord wikiPageLength "6697".
- Trichord wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Trichord wikiPageRevisionID "624593659".
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Carlton_Gamer.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chords.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Category:Simultaneities.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Harmony.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Hexachord.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Howard_Hanson.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink John_Tyrrell_(musicologist).
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Kliment_Kvitka.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Klyment_Kvitka.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Milton_Babbitt.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Music_theory.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Musical_scale.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Pentatonic_scale.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Pitch_class.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Pyotr_Sokalsky.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Scale_(music).
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Set_(music).
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Stanley_Sadie.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Tetrachord.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Tone_row.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Triad_(music).
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink Viennese_trichord.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLink File:Trichords_in_C_major.png.
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLinkText "Trichord".
- Trichord wikiPageWikiLinkText "trichord".
- Trichord hasPhotoCollection Trichord.
- Trichord reference "Babbitt, Milton . "Set Structure as a Compositional Determinant". Journal of Music Theory 5, no. 1 : 72–94.".
- Trichord reference "Babbitt, Milton . "Some Aspects of Twelve-Tone Composition". The Score and I. M. A. Magazine, no. 12 : 53–61.".
- Trichord reference "Babbitt, Milton . "Twelve-Tone Invariants as Compositional Determinants ". In The Collected Essays of Milton Babbitt, edited by Stephen Peles, Stephen Dembski, Andrew Mead, and Joseph Straus, 55–69. Princeton: Princeton University Press.".
- Trichord reference "Gamer, Carleton . "Some Combinational Resources of Equal-Tempered Systems". Journal of Music Theory 11, no. 1 : 32-59.".
- Trichord reference "Gilbert, Steven E. . "The Trichord: An Analytic Outlook for Twentieth-Century Music". Ph.D. diss. New Haven: Yale University.".
- Trichord reference "Houlahan, Mícheál, and Philip Tacka . Kodály Today: A Cognitive Approach to Elementary Music Education. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531409-0.".
- Trichord reference "Kastal'skii, Aleksandr Dmitrievich . Особенности народно-русской музыкальной системы [Properties of the Russian Folk Music System], edited by T. V. Popova. Moscow: Gosudarstvennoe muzykal'noe izdatel’stvo.".
- Trichord reference "Rushton, Julian . "Trichord". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.".
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Harv.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Harvnb.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Page_needed.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Pitch_segments.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Spoken_Wikipedia.
- Trichord wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wikicite.
- Trichord subject Category:Chords.
- Trichord subject Category:Simultaneities.
- Trichord hypernym Group.
- Trichord type Article.
- Trichord type Band.
- Trichord type Article.
- Trichord comment "In music theory, a trichord is a group of three different pitch classes found within a larger group (Friedmann 1990, 42). For example a contiguous three-note set from a musical scale (Houlahan and Tacka 2008, 54) or a twelve-tone row. The term is derived by analogy from the 20th-century use of the word "tetrachord".".
- Trichord label "Trichord".
- Trichord sameAs Trihord.
- Trichord sameAs Tricordo.
- Trichord sameAs トリコルド.
- Trichord sameAs m.0278p_.
- Trichord sameAs Трихорд.
- Trichord sameAs Q1642219.
- Trichord sameAs Q1642219.
- Trichord wasDerivedFrom Trichord?oldid=624593659.
- Trichord depiction Trichords_in_C_major.png.
- Trichord isPrimaryTopicOf Trichord.