Chromaticism 썸네일형 리스트형 Definition of chromaticism chromaticism (from Gk. khroma, ‘colour’). In the modern sense, the use of a scale that divides the octave into 12 equal intervals of a semitone (see scale, 4). Chromaticism has been a feature of music since its origins in ancient Greece, however, in the sense of the ‘colouring’ of intervals by non-diatonic subdivision. Greek theory recognized a partly chromatic tetrachord involving two adjacent .. 더보기 Reference of Music theory study on 19th ■ Reference of Music theory study on 19th - Berry, Sturucture functions in music - Dahlhaus, Nineteenth Century Music - Kinderman and Krebs, The Second Practice of Nineteenth Century Tonality - Jim Samson, Music in Transition - Deborah J.Stein, Hugo Wolf's Lieder and Extensions of Tonality - Vladimir Barsky, Chromaticism - Henry Burnett and Roy Nitzberg, Composition Chromaticism and the Developm.. 더보기 이전 1 다음