September 2010
Beginner
376 pages
12h 7m
English
The first known notated examples of two voices harmonizing with each other come from the 9th and 10th centuries. As if on railroad tracks at the interval of a perfect fifth apart, two voices move up and down a modal scale in a narrow range.
Later, more voices were added, and thus a polyphonic choral musical form called the “motet” was created.
Although the human ear-brain unit has trouble following more than three voices at a time, four to eight voices were not uncommon in the great contrapuntal works of the 17th and 18th centuries.
Polyphonic means “many voiced,” and as ...
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