- In
music theory, a
trichord (/traɪkɔːrd/) is a
group of
three different pitch classes found within a
larger group. A
trichord is a
contiguous three-note...
- In
music theory, a
Viennese trichord (also
known as
Viennese fourth chord and tritone-fourth chord),
named for the
Second Viennese School, is a
pitch set...
- music, the all-
trichord hexachord is a
unique hexachord that
contains all
twelve trichords, or from
which all
twelve possible trichords may be derived...
- segment. Here is a row
derived from a
trichord taken from Webern's Concerto, Op. 24: P
represents the
original trichord, RI,
retrograde and inversion, R retrograde...
-
consecutive notes (tetrachord),
although ajnas of
three consecutive notes (
trichord) or five
consecutive notes (pentachord) also exist. In
addition to other...
- row. "Derivation
refers to a
process whereby, for instance, the
initial trichord of a row can be used to
arrive at a new, 'derived' row by
employing the...
- in Rotterdam.
Marilli (Eduard Vingerhoets, 1983) Des
Traces Retrouvees (
Trichord, 1984) VoizNoiz:
Urban Sound Scapes (Steamin'
Soundworks 1999) VoizNoiz...
- Claptonesque". He
identified two of the composition's
significant motifs: a
bluesy trichord and a
diminished triad with
roots in A and E.
Huntley called the song "a...
- own use.
Donald Martino had
produced tables of hexachords, tetrachords,
trichords, and
pentachords for
combinatoriality in his article, "The
Source Set...
- this with the use of
double (bichord)
strings in the
tenor and
triple (
trichord)
strings throughout the treble. The
plate (harp), or
metal frame, of a...