-
influential works on
music theory written during the Renaissance, was the
Dodecachordon,
which he
published in
Basel in 1547. This m****ive work
includes writings...
- He was born in
Fulda and died in Wittenberg. In
Heinrich Glarean's
Dodecachordon he is
described as Fran**** Germanum, i.e., of
German origin. Adam of...
- to
three parts and then more was
adopted by
Heinrich Glarean in his
Dodecachordon (1547), one of the most
influential music theory and
pedagogy treatises...
- to
develop after the loss of the
ancient Gr**** system. For example,
Dodecachordon was
published by the
Swiss Renaissance composer Heinrich Glarean (also...
-
added to the
original eight Gregorian modes in 1547 by Glare**** in his
Dodecachordon. The
final of an
authentic mode is the tonic,
though the
range of modes...
-
Musicians (2nd ed.). London, UK:
Macmillan Publishers. Glarean, H. (1547).
Dodecachordon. Powers,
Harold S. (2001c). "Hyperaeolian". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell...
- Josquin's
Missa L'homme armé
super voces musicales, as
reprinted in the
Dodecachordon of
Heinrich Glarean. A
realization in
modern notation is
given below...
-
several modes. In 1547,
Heinrich Petri published Heinrich Glarean's
Dodecachordon in Basel. His
premise had as its
central idea the
existence of twelve...
- VIII. In 1547, the
Swiss theorist Henricus Glare****
published the
Dodecachordon, in
which he
solidified the
concept of the
church modes, and
added four...
-
scales including a B♭ had to be the
result of a transposition. In his
Dodecachordon, he not only
described six "natural"
diatonic scales (still neglecting...