Homophony is where the different parts of the score move in harmony. A good example would be "Chopin's Nocturne in E, Op. 62 No. 2."*
Polyphony, however, exists when the parts of the the score move completely independent of each other. "Johann Sebastian Bach's 'Fugue No.17 in A flat', from 'Das Wohltemperirte Clavier' (Part I)"**, is an example of polyphony.
*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homophony
**http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyphony
polyphony. gig 'em aggies
polyphony
No. Polyphony is combining melodies at the same time. Mashups are melodies that are played at different times.
Music played in a harmonic, chordal texture.
organium
Both use imitative polyphony or homophony
No, organum is actually an early form of polyphony
All except for cacophony
A relatively short composition in Latin, made up of short sections in homophony and imitative polyphony
Sameness of sound., Sameness of sound; unison., Plain harmony, as opposed to polyphony. See Homophonous.
Sameness of sound., Sameness of sound; unison., Plain harmony, as opposed to polyphony. See Homophonous.
polyphony. gig 'em aggies
polyphony
polyphony
polyphony
baroque music was actually almost completely dominated by polyphonic music with only a few homophonic pieces when it was moving into the classical era. probie :)
homophony is the relationship between them creating chords~