polyphony Meaning & Definition

  • En [ pəˈlɪf.ən.i]
  • Us [ pəˈlɪf.ən.i]

Meaning of polyphony In English

More Definitions of polyphony

Examples of polyphony

  • There are almost no technological grounds to withhold wax tablets from the hands of composers of polyphony anytime from the eleventh to the fifteenth century.

  • Organum probably refers to early vocal polyphony, although the term can also suggest the instrument of the same name.

  • There the mellifluous voices of choirboys, the harmony of improvised polyphony, and the cadences of locally composed plainchant incited the populace to veneration.

  • This meant in a certain way translating a virtual, implicit polyphony into a real, explicit one.

  • Because of the multitude and layering or 'polyphony' of compositional gestures, there was a multitude of mappings.

  • Indeed, the most comprehensive witnesses to this form of adaptation are not chant books at all, but rather contemporary collections of liturgical polyphony.

  • Using these observations as our paradigm, we developed an interactive computer system to expand the concept of polyphony to harmonic clusters.

  • In general, polyphony and newly composed pieces were restricted to the elite.

More Examples of polyphony

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