And the parts of the form are called sections. At least, that is what I was
taught.
<http://www.empire.k12.ca.us/capistrano/Mike/capmusic/form/Sonata%20form/sonata.htm>
At 9/12/2006 01:44 PM, Chuck Israels wrote:
>I just call these things "form."
>
>
>On Sep 12, 2006, at 8:49 AM, A-NO-NE Music wrote:
>
>>
>> Once again, against my policy, I am asking an OT question because this
>> list is truly resourceful :-)
>>
>> Basically I have to find the musical term in English for what I am
>> about
>> to explain bellow. In Japanese, it is called "Ki-Shou-Ten-Ketsu",
>> which
>> is somewhat similar to "Intro-Dev-Climax-Conclusion".
>>
>> In music, I was taught it is what is divided in four regions called
>> harmonic rhythm, which is a wrong term according to my net search.
>> What
>> is the correct terminology for this?
>>
>> In 4/4, the strength of the beat is 1-3-2-4 to flow. The same will
>> apply to a form, i.e., 8 bars phrase will be divided into 2 bars each,
>> and the same 1-3-2-4 priority applies. The 32 bars form tune of AABA
>> form gets the same 1-3-2-4 priority divided in 8 bars each. The 32
>> bars
>> form tune of ABAC form gets into 16 bars each, and the 16 bar will
>> divided into 4 bars each for 1-3-2-4 priority. When you analyze a
>> tune
>> with odd phrasing such as Falling Grace, you say this composition is
>> unique because it shifts the "harmonic rhythm (now I want to know the
>> correct terminology for this)".
>>
>> For long years, I believed this is called harmonic rhythm, but quick
>> googling denis it. I'd appreciate if anyone know the correct
>> terminology for this.
>>
Phil Daley < AutoDesk >
http://www.conknet.com/~p_daley
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