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533h: Musical texture (harmony)

 

Description
 

Musical texture refers to both the horizontal and vertical relationships of musical materials. Western music usually assumes some sort of harmony if there are more than two parts. Western harmony may not exist in non-Western music, but the terms may be useful in describing horizontal relationships.

 
Kinds of texture
Monophony Musical texture with a single melodic line.
Heterophony Musical texture in which the same melody is played by all voices and instruments but with variations and omissions depending on the particular nature of the each.
Polyphony Musical texture composed of two or more voices.
Parallel organum Polyphony composed of a melody and a second part that parallels it.
Drone Polyphony composed of a melody supported by one or two unchanging pitches.
Homophony Polyphony composed of a melody supported by chords.
Independent polyphony The melodic voices move in different directions. (The term "independent polyphony" is not necessarily recognized as standard, but it is useful to illustrate a point. Some scholars restrict the term "polyphony " to mean "independent polyphony.")
Imitative polyphony The melody of one voice is based on another; it imitates it.
Canon (or round) All or almost all the material of the first voice is repeated by one or more following voices.
Fugue A single melody is repeated at different times by different voices.

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