i., müz. çokseslilik, polifoni

listen to the pronunciation of i., müz. çokseslilik, polifoni
التركية - الإنجليزية
polyphony
Music which uses several independent vocal lines simultaneously; the predominant early music style, replaced by homophony, in which the music moves chordally (for example, like a hymn)
a type of music in which several different tunes or notes are sung or played together at the same time
Music with more than one melody sounding at the same time and having equal emphasis but not necessarily starting and stopping at the same time I scalled polyphony Any familiar song performed as a round, such as “Row, Row Your Boat,” is polyphonic
Maximum number of different notes that can be produced simultaneously
refers to the number of notes that can be simultaneously sounded on a musical instrument Examples of polyphony are: a six-string guitar can sound no more than six notes at one time; an 88-key grand piano could sound 88 notes but it would be horrible to hear them all at once; brass or woodwind instruments can sound only one note at a time; Claviset Prime can sound 32 notes at once
the simultaneous combination of different melodies
A musical form that gained popularity in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in which several vocal or instrumental parts or melodies are combined simultaneously
musical texture in which the different lines are different melodies with different rhythms, and so the effect is of the interweaving of different strands
The polyphony of a synthesizer is the maximum number of voices (or sounds) that can be played simultaneously Some synthesizers employ more than one voice to produce a single note for some instruments These instruments reduce the number of notes that can be played simultaneously
{i} musical piece that consists of several harmonized melodies (Music)
Musical texture consisting of several independent melodic voices, as opposed to music with just one voice (monophony) or music with one dominant melodic voice accompanied by chords (homophony)
the mixing together of several melodic lines
Plurality of sounds and articulations expressed by the same vocal sign
The number of tones, voices or notes a synthesiser/MIDI instrument can produce simultaneously
A musical technique where many voices are singing at once (or many instruments are playing at once), but each one has its own melody None of the voices are meant to back any of the others up, i e there is no harmony It can sound chaotic at times
Multiplicity of sounds, as in the reverberations of an echo
(polyphonic) From the Greek for "many-sounding " Music in which two or more "voices" are heard at the same time This is different than monophonic ("one-sounding") and homophonic ("like-sounding") See counterpoint and texture
The maximum number of notes that a Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) output device can play simultaneously
A measure of how many notes of a MIDI voice can sound simultaneously i e if an instrument has five note polyphony then you can play five distinct notes at the same time, a sixth simulatenous note would cause one of the others to stop sounding Back
Composition in mutually related, equally important parts which share the melody among them; contrapuntal composition; opposed to homophony, in which the melody is given to one part only, the others filling out the harmony
i., müz. çokseslilik, polifoni
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