Augmentation (Music)
Music, Music theory, Late Latin, Melody, Rhythm, Interval (music), Chord (music)
978-613-4-99921-2
6134999210
148
2011-05-18
45.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In music and music theory augmentation (from Late Latin augmentare, to increase) is the lengthening or widening of rhythms, melodies, intervals or chords. The opposite is diminution (as in "a diminished triad"). A melody or series of notes is augmented if the lengths of the notes are prolonged. A melody originally consisting of four quavers (eighth-notes) for example, is augmented if it later appears with four crotchets (quarter-notes) instead. This technique is often used in contrapuntal music. It gives rise to the "canon in augmentation", in which the notes in the following voice are longer than those in the leading. he music of Johann Sebastian Bach provides examples of this application. Augmented intervals have a rather over-tense quality, while diminished intervals are experienced as rather cramped. Therefore, one may call the former luciferic in tendency and the latter ahrimanic.
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