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- Q1333184 subject Q6434837.
- Q1333184 subject Q8367764.
- Q1333184 subject Q8653122.
- Q1333184 abstract "Template:ForIn music, a chromatic fourth, or passus duriusculus, is a melody or melodic fragment spanning a perfect fourth with all or almost all chromatic intervals filled in (chromatic line). The quintessential example is in D minor with the tonic and dominant notes as boundaries, About this sound Play :File:Chrom4th Example.pngThe chromatic fourth was first used in the madrigals of the 16th Century. The Latin term itself ("suffered somewhat hard") originates in Christoph Bernhard's 17th century Tractatus compositionis augmentatus (1648–49), where it appears to refer to repeated melodic motion by semitone creating consecutive semitones. The term may also relate to the pianto associated with weeping. In the Baroque, Johann Sebastian Bach used it in his choral as well as his instrumental music, in the Well-Tempered Clavier, for example (the chromatic fourth is indicated by a red bracket), About this sound Play :400pxIn operas of the Baroque and Classical, the chromatic fourth was often used in the bass and for woeful arias, often being called a "lament bass". In the penultimate pages of the first movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, the chromatic fourth appears in the cellos and basses.This does not mean that the chromatic fourth was always used in a sorrowful or foreboding way, or that the boundaries should always be the tonic and dominant notes. One counterexample comes from the Minuet of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's String Quartet in G major, K. 387 (the chromatic fourths are conveniently bracketed by the slurs and set apart with note-to-note dynamics changes), About this sound Play :400px".
- Q1333184 thumbnail Chopin-_Prelude_in_C_Minor_mm.5-6_chromatic_run.png?width=300.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q11221917.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q11989.
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- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q170412.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q1768379.
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- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q2458157.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q254.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q255.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q2737992.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q283903.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q3024785.
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- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q524156.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q638.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q6434837.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q6481743.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q6784051.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q7190223.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q8367764.
- Q1333184 wikiPageWikiLink Q8653122.
- Q1333184 comment "Template:ForIn music, a chromatic fourth, or passus duriusculus, is a melody or melodic fragment spanning a perfect fourth with all or almost all chromatic intervals filled in (chromatic line). The quintessential example is in D minor with the tonic and dominant notes as boundaries, About this sound Play :File:Chrom4th Example.pngThe chromatic fourth was first used in the madrigals of the 16th Century.".
- Q1333184 label "Chromatic fourth".
- Q1333184 depiction Chopin-_Prelude_in_C_Minor_mm.5-6_chromatic_run.png.