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The fugue is a music form perfected by J. S. Bach. Compare it with a typical song. A song is a single melody, and the accompaniment provides harmonic structure and some kind of rhythmic skeleton. A fugue is made up of 3, 4 and sometimes 5 independent voices that move very much like melodies. Following the form as Bach used it, the voices come in one at a time, a few measures apart. There is no fixed order to the entry of the voices. They might enter in the order of Alto, Tenor, Soprano, Bass. It is up to the composer. Each time a voice comes in it gives the exact theme of the fugue. They will sometimes begin in the same key as the one before, and sometimes a voice will begin in a related key. After the voices are introduced, the theme moves from voice to voice, sometimes with interesting modifications, and sometimes the themes will overlap in various ways. Bach's Well Tempered Clavier, books I and II, are wonderful primers in the art of fugue. Of course, there is rich and complex harmony in a fugue, but not because the composer deliberately chooses a chord for a given moment in the music and plays it out. The harmony is embedded in the movements and interconnections of the voices. It is said that Bach was able to improvise fugues based on themes that were given to him as he sat at the keyboard.
their are some input devices in radio station. such as mic,telephone,CD player, computer. The main heart is the studio is CONSOLE.
It depends on the song you are playing. In some cases, Yes! But yet, some songs willl not sound good it everyone is playing/singing the same thing.
Bach is... - A composer - Lived long ago - Classical music - German Marsalis... -Musician (Trumpet player) -Jazz music -Lives now -American I'd suggest you listen to the different music of each. That's the biggest difference. There's a whole world between classical and jazz. Take the swung-note figure, or the culture even of the jazz world into account.
guided relaxation, borgore.
"Continuo" or "basso continuo" is a group of instruments that provide harmonisation, usually with bass-sounded instruments, combining and merge notes and phrases with main melodies by soloists and/or group or orchestra. Fugue is a style (type) of composition by which a musical phrase, theme or idea is played by some instrument(s) and are repeated by others but in different time, this is, one follows other, but always keeping good harmony; it undoubtedly is a very difficult way of composing.
The fugue is a music form perfected by J. S. Bach. Compare it with a typical song. A song is a single melody, and the accompaniment provides harmonic structure and some kind of rhythmic skeleton. A fugue is made up of 3, 4 and sometimes 5 independent voices that move very much like melodies. Following the form as Bach used it, the voices come in one at a time, a few measures apart. There is no fixed order to the entry of the voices. They might enter in the order of Alto, Tenor, Soprano, Bass. It is up to the composer. Each time a voice comes in it gives the exact theme of the fugue. They will sometimes begin in the same key as the one before, and sometimes a voice will begin in a related key. After the voices are introduced, the theme moves from voice to voice, sometimes with interesting modifications, and sometimes the themes will overlap in various ways. Bach's Well Tempered Clavier, books I and II, are wonderful primers in the art of fugue. Of course, there is rich and complex harmony in a fugue, but not because the composer deliberately chooses a chord for a given moment in the music and plays it out. The harmony is embedded in the movements and interconnections of the voices. It is said that Bach was able to improvise fugues based on themes that were given to him as he sat at the keyboard.
Some antonyms of harmony are:- disharmony- cacophony
I HAVE NO IDEA!I GUESS GO TO WALMART.COM AND TYPE Melody THEN SEE YOUR RESULTS! I hoped this helped! FroggyMama
their are some input devices in radio station. such as mic,telephone,CD player, computer. The main heart is the studio is CONSOLE.
It depends on the song you are playing. In some cases, Yes! But yet, some songs willl not sound good it everyone is playing/singing the same thing.
Some examples of IP devices are internet modems and routers, EtherNet/IP drive devices, VoIP systems, and numerous electronic devices, such as an iPad.
harmony and melody are ones that i can think of
no, mermaid melody DVD's won't come out in the UK, but it may if it's dubbed in English
Bach is... - A composer - Lived long ago - Classical music - German Marsalis... -Musician (Trumpet player) -Jazz music -Lives now -American I'd suggest you listen to the different music of each. That's the biggest difference. There's a whole world between classical and jazz. Take the swung-note figure, or the culture even of the jazz world into account.
Some of the episodes are on Veoh and on YouTube.
Some of the devices that can convert your phone into a TV are micro HDMI ports.