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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Music_theoryMusic theory - Wikipedia

    Music theory as a practical discipline encompasses the methods and concepts that composers and other musicians use in creating and performing music. The development, preservation, and transmission of music theory in this sense may be found in oral and written music-making traditions, musical instruments, and other artifacts.

    • Music

      t. e. Music is the arrangement of sound to create some...

    • Chord Chart

      A chord chart. Play ⓘ. A chord chart (or chart) is a form of...

  3. Theory of Music is all about trying to understand how existing music works and how new music could or should be organized. Someone who makes a special study of music theory is a music theorist . People who make their own music are composers. People who play or sing music are “performers”.

    • Concepts of Music
    • Music vs. Noise
    • Definitions
    • Specific Definitions
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    Because of differing fundamental concepts of music, the languages of many cultures do not contain a word that can be accurately translated as "music" as that word is generally understood by Western cultures. Inuit and most North American Indian languages do not have a general term for music. Among the Aztecs, the ancient Mexican theory of rhetoric,...

    Ben Watson points out that Ludwig van Beethoven's Große Fuge (1825) "sounded like noise" to his audience at the time. Indeed, Beethoven's publishers persuaded him to remove it from its original setting as the last movement of a string quartet. He did so, replacing it with a sparkling Allegro. They subsequently published it separately.[clarification...

    Organized sound

    An often-cited definition of music is that it is "organized sound", a term originally coined by modernist composer Edgard Varèse in reference to his own musical aesthetic. Varèse's concept of music as "organized sound" fits into his vision of "sound as living matter" and of "musical space as open rather than bounded". He conceived the elements of his music in terms of "sound-masses", likening their organization to the natural phenomenon of crystallization. Varèse thought that "to stubbornly c...

    Musical universals

    Most definitions of music include a reference to sound and a list of universals of music can be generated by stating the elements (or aspects) of sound: pitch, timbre, loudness, duration, spatial location and texture.). However, in terms more specifically relating to music: following Wittgenstein, cognitive psychologist Eleanor Rosch proposes that categories are not clean cut but that something may be more or less a member of a category. As such the search for musical universals would fail an...

    Social construct

    Many people do, however, share a general idea of music. The Websters definition of music is a typical example: "the science or art of ordering tones or sounds in succession, in combination, and in temporal relationships to produce a composition having unity and continuity" (Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, online edition).

    Clifton

    In his 1983 book, Music as Heard, which sets out from the phenomenological position of Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, and Ricœur, Thomas Clifton defines music as "an ordered arrangement of sounds and silences whose meaning is presentative rather than denotative ... This definition distinguishes music, as an end in itself, from compositional technique, and from sounds as purely physical objects." More precisely, "music is the actualization of the possibility of any sound whatever to present to some h...

    Nattiez

    "Music, often an art/entertainment, is a total social fact whose definitions vary according to era and culture", according to Jean. It is often contrasted with noise. According to musicologist Jean-Jacques Nattiez: "The border between music and noise is always culturally defined—which implies that, even within a single society, this border does not always pass through the same place; in short, there is rarely a consensus ... By all accounts there is no single and intercultural universal conce...

    Xenakis

    Composer Iannis Xenakis in "Towards a Metamusic" (chapter 7 of Formalized Music) defined music in the following way: 1. It is a sort of comportment necessary for whoever thinks it and makes it. 2. It is an individual pleroma, a realization. 3. It is a fixing in sound of imagined virtualities (cosmological, philosophical, ..., arguments) 4. It is normative, that is, unconsciously it is a model for being or for doing by sympathetic drive. 5. It is catalytic: its mere presence permits internal p...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MusicologyMusicology - Wikipedia

    Music theory, analysis and composition. Music theory is a field of study that describes the elements of music and includes the development and application of methods for composing and for analyzing music through both notation and, on occasion, musical sound itself.

  5. In music theory, an interval is a difference in pitch between two sounds. An interval may be described as horizontal , linear , or melodic if it refers to successively sounding tones, such as two adjacent pitches in a melody, and vertical or harmonic if it pertains to simultaneously sounding tones, such as in a chord .

  6. Jan 29, 2023 · Music theory is the study of music; and while the term is often applied to the Western musical tradition (more on that later), there are also music theories in other traditions around the world. It is of interest to the reader to know that music theory emerged after the actual production of music.

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