- of the
chords in a
polychord are not "chords" in some
exclusive sense according to some
preferred chord theory or other,
polychords devolves into chordioid...
-
thirteenth chords can be
built from or
decomposed into
separate chords: Thus
polychords do not
necessarily suggest polytonality, but they may not be explained...
- new b**** note.
Polychords, as the name suggests, are
combinations of two or more chords. The most
commonly found form of a
polychord is a
bichord (two...
-
given tension with
wedges placed between tube and string. They may be
polychords, with
lengthwise rows of
stings spaced out
around the tube, or parallel...
-
sometimes a
chord notated as F/A is
intended to be read as a
polychord; in this example, the
polychord would be an F
major chord (the
notes F, A, and C) and...
-
technique is
related to
polychords insofar as
polychords are the
result of an
additive process, but
differs in that the
basis of
polychords is the
addition of...
-
seventh chords,
extended chords,
added tone chords, clusters, and
polychords.
Polychords are
formed by two or more
chords superimposed.
Often these may be...
-
considered as
built from sevenths,
because of
musical inversion, are secundal.
Polychords may
create secundal chords. The
secundal harmony in Ross Lee Finney's...
-
guitar chord voicing to
ancohemitonic tetrads.
Michael Keith, in From
Polychords to Polya :
Adventures in
Musical Combinatorics (ISBN 978-0963009708),...
- guitars. Townsend's
technique varies from fingerpicking,
power chords and
polychords to sweep-picked
arpeggios and
tapping techniques. He is also
known for...