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- Prolation_canon abstract "In music, a prolation canon or mensuration canon is a type of canon, a musical composition wherein the main melody is accompanied by one or more imitations of that melody in other voices. Not only do the voices sing or play the same melody, they do so at different speeds (or prolations, a mensuration term that dates to the medieval and Renaissance eras). Accompanying voices may enter either simultaneously or successively. Prolation canons are among the most difficult to write, and are relatively rare in the repertory, though they are most common in the early Renaissance and from the 20th century to the present.Examples of prolation canons from different eras include Le Ray Au Soleyl by Johannes Ciconia (late 14th century); the entire Missa prolationum by Johannes Ockeghem (mid-15th century), in which each separate section of the mass explores a different prolation (or different gap between entries and relative speed of each voice); the Agnus Dei from the Missa L'homme armé super voces musicales by Josquin des Prez (late 15th century); the Agnus Dei from the Missa L'homme armé by Pierre de la Rue (early 16th century); the Canon a 4 per Augmentationem et Diminutionem, the last in a set of 14 canons written as an appendix to the Goldberg Variations, by Johann Sebastian Bach; and in the 20th century, the Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten by Arvo Pärt (1976). Additionally, Larry Polansky has written numerous four-voice prolation canons whose melodies are permutations of a limited number of elements, and Mark Alburger, in Immortality from San Rafael News, directly maps a new melody into the framework of the aforementioned Josquin. A particularly striking example of prolation canon occurs twice in the opening movement of Shostakovich's Symphony No. 15 (1971), first in the strings (Rehearsal Figure 29) and later in the woodwind.In this example, the first 12 bars of the Agnus Dei II of the earlier of the two masses Josquin wrote based on the L'homme armé tune, each voice sings the same music, but at different speeds. The top voice is barred in 3/4 meter for clarity. The slowest voice is the one in the middle. The lowest voice sings the same music at twice the speed of the slowest, and the highest voice sings the same music at three times the speed of the slowest. In the original score, only one part is given: a notation over the single line of music indicates the three prolations to be used, and a second notation over the line indicates where each voice should end if sung correctly.".
- Prolation_canon thumbnail Prolationcanonjosquin.png?width=300.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageID "806507".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageLength "3997".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageOutDegree "29".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageRevisionID "693192380".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Arvo_Pärt.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Canon_(music).
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Cantus_in_Memoriam_Benjamin_Britten.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musical_techniques.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Category:Polyphonic_form.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Dmitri_Shostakovich.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Goldberg_Variations.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Imitation_(music).
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Sebastian_Bach.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Johannes_Ciconia.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Johannes_Ockeghem.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Josquin_des_Prez.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Lamb_of_God.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Larry_Polansky.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Lhomme_armxc3xa9.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Mark_Alburger.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Medieval_music.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Melody.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Missa_Lhomme_armxc3xa9.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Missa_Lhomme_armxc3xa9_super_voces_musicales.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Missa_prolationum.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Part_(music).
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Pierre_de_la_Rue.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance_music.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink Symphony_No._15_(Shostakovich).
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink File:Josquin_Agnus_Dei_mensuration_canon.tiff.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLink File:Prolationcanonjosquin.png.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLinkText "Prolation canon".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLinkText "contrapunctal canons".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLinkText "mensural".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLinkText "mensuration canon".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLinkText "mensuration canons".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageWikiLinkText "prolation canon".
- Prolation_canon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:!.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Audio.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Prolation_canon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses.
- Prolation_canon subject Category:Musical_techniques.
- Prolation_canon subject Category:Polyphonic_form.
- Prolation_canon hypernym Canon.
- Prolation_canon type Person.
- Prolation_canon type Technique.
- Prolation_canon comment "In music, a prolation canon or mensuration canon is a type of canon, a musical composition wherein the main melody is accompanied by one or more imitations of that melody in other voices. Not only do the voices sing or play the same melody, they do so at different speeds (or prolations, a mensuration term that dates to the medieval and Renaissance eras). Accompanying voices may enter either simultaneously or successively.".
- Prolation_canon label "Prolation canon".
- Prolation_canon sameAs Q2308635.
- Prolation_canon sameAs Proporcia_kanono.
- Prolation_canon sameAs Canon_de_proportion_(musique).
- Prolation_canon sameAs Proportiecanon.
- Prolation_canon sameAs m.03dfr1.
- Prolation_canon sameAs Q2308635.
- Prolation_canon wasDerivedFrom Prolation_canon?oldid=693192380.
- Prolation_canon depiction Prolationcanonjosquin.png.
- Prolation_canon isPrimaryTopicOf Prolation_canon.