Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tonality> ?p ?o }
- Tonality abstract "Tonality is a musical system that arranges pitches or chords to induce a hierarchy of perceived relations, stabilities, and attractions. The pitch or triadic chord with the greatest stability is called the tonic. The most common use of the term ...\"is to designate the arrangement of musical phenomena around a referential tonic in European music from about 1600 to about 1910\" (Hyer 2001). Modern classical music may practice or avoid any sort of tonality—but harmony in popular music remains tonal in some sense, and harmony in jazz music includes many, if not all, tonal characteristics, while having different properties from common-practice classical music.\"All harmonic idioms in popular music are tonal, and none is without function\" (Tagg 2003, 534).Tonality is an organized system of tones (e.g., the tones of a major or minor scale) in which one tone (the tonic) becomes the central point for the remaining tones. In tonality, the tonic (tonal center) is the tone of complete relaxation, the target toward which other tones lead (Benward & Saker 2003, 36).\"Tonal music is music that is unified and dimensional. Music is unified if it is exhaustively referable to a precompositional system generated by a single constructive principle derived from a basic scale-type; it is dimensional if it can nonetheless be distinguished from that precompositional ordering\" (Pitt 1995, 299).The term tonalité originated with Alexandre-Étienne Choron (1810) and was borrowed by François-Joseph Fétis in 1840 (Reti 1958,; Simms 1975, 119; Judd 1998a, 5; Heyer 2001; Brown 2005, xiii). According to Carl Dahlhaus, however, the term tonalité was only coined by Castil-Blaze in 1821 (Dahlhaus 1967, 960; Dahlhaus 1980, 51).Although Fétis used it as a general term for a system of musical organization and spoke of types de tonalités rather than a single system, today the term is most often used to refer to major–minor tonality, the system of musical organization of the common practice period. Major-minor tonality is also called harmonic tonality (translation from Dahlhaus' harmonische Tonalität), diatonic tonality, common practice tonality, functional tonality, or just tonality.".
- Tonality thumbnail IV-V-I_in_C.png?width=300.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink 2007_05_01_archive.html.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=Choron%20Tonality&f=false.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink index-en.html.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink mapharmony.html.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink Purwins_IJCNN_2000_ModulTrack.pdf.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink bsb10599980_00001.html.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink tonality.htm.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink tonality.pdf.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink keysignatures1.pdf.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink tonalharmony.htm.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink www.tonalcentre.org.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink index.php.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink editions?editionsView=true&referer=br.
- Tonality wikiPageExternalLink traitcompletde00ft.
- Tonality wikiPageID "304572".
- Tonality wikiPageLength "58747".
- Tonality wikiPageOutDegree "144".
- Tonality wikiPageRevisionID "705841701".
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Alban_Berg.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_Scriabin.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Alexandre-Étienne_Choron.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Einstein.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Anton_Bruckner.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Anton_Webern.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_maqam.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Arnold_Schoenberg.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Atonality.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Benjamin_Britten.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Béla_Bartók.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Cadence_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Dahlhaus.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Castil-Blaze.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tonality.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Chord_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Chord_progression.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Circle_of_fifths.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Classical_music.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Debussy.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Claudio_Monteverdi.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Common_practice_period.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Consonance_and_dissonance.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Constant_Q_transform.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Cuthbert_Girdlestone.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink David_Cope.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Diatonic_function.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Lowinsky.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Elisabeth_Mann-Borgese.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Forte_number.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Francesco_Durante.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Francis_Poulenc.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink François-Joseph_Fétis.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Wilhelm_Marpurg.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Gamelan.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink George_Perle.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Gregorian_chant.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Grunge.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Gustav_Mahler.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Harmonic_rhythm.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Harmony.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Harold_Powers.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Heavy_metal_music.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Heinrich_Schenker.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Pleasants_(music_critic).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Hermann_von_Helmholtz.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Hierarchy.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink History_of_music.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Homophony.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Hugo_Riemann.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Hugo_Wolf.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Ii–V–I_progression.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Irving_Fine.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink I–IV–V–I.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Jaan_Soonvald.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Jazz.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Philippe_Rameau.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Jean_le_Rond_dAlembert.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Johannes_Kepler.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink John_Tyrrell_(musicologist).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Josquin_des_Prez.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Key_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Leading-tone.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Leonard_B._Meyer.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Leonard_Bernstein.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Lou_Harrison.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Major_and_minor.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Major_scale.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Litchfield_West.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Minor_scale.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Mode_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Modernism_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Modulation_(music).
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Monophony.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Moritz_Hauptmann.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Music_for_Strings,_Percussion_and_Celesta.
- Tonality wikiPageWikiLink Music_information_retrieval.