The twelve-tone technique is a style of atonal music in which none of the 12 notes in the chromatic scale is used any more or less than any other note in the scale.
twelve-tone system
Arnold Schoenberg A+
Arnold Schoenberg A+
It's the 12-tone system, where no one note of the western chromatic scale is used more or less than any other note.
Schoenberg was credited with it's creation, but Alban Berg started using Dodecaphony in 1912, three years before Schoenberg. Schoenberg did, however, innovate the twelve-tone system.
Atonal music
twelve-tone system
Schoenberg
Arnold Schoenberg A+
Arnold Schoenberg A+
Arnold Schoenberg A+
It's the 12-tone system, where no one note of the western chromatic scale is used more or less than any other note.
the twelve tone system
the twelve tone system
the twelve tone system
the twelve tone system
The twelve-tone system was invented by Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg in the early 20th century. This technique organizes the twelve pitches of the chromatic scale into a series or "row," which serves as the basis for a composition. Schoenberg's students, particularly Alban Berg and Anton Webern, further developed and popularized this system, contributing to the evolution of serialism in music.