Details, Explanation and Meaning About Klangfarbenmelodie

Klangfarbenmelodie Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Klangfarbenmelodie (German for sound-color-melody) is a musical technique that involves breaking up a musical line or melody out from one instrument to between several instruments. It adds greater color and texture to a melodic line, instead of just one timbre in playing the line.

The term was coined by Arnold Schoenberg in his text on harmony, Harmonielehre (1911), where he actualy discusses the creation of "timbre-structures", which, in Jim Samson's (1977) words, "succesions of changing tone-colors might create independent formal shapes which might be organized in a manner analagous to pitch structure." He and Anton Webern are particularly noted for their use of the technique, Schoenberg most notably in the third and the last of his Op. 16 pieces, and Webern in his Op. 10, a response to Schoenberg's Op. 16, and his Concerto for Nine Instruments, Op. 24. Even his Op. 11 pieces for solo cello use harmonics, am Steg, pizzicato, and am Griffbrett in the opening bars, and his orchestration of the ricecare from Bach's Musical Offering, "betrays the same preoccupation".

However, "To a marked degree the music of Debussy elevates timbre to an unprecedented structural status; already in L'Apres-midi d'un Faune the color of flute and harp functions referentially," according to Samson.

Isao Tomita also uses the technique in his works, instead of musical instruments, he uses different synthesizer voices.

There is also a french term, mélodie de timbres, which means much the same and was used by Olivier Messiaen to describe his Couleurs de la cité céleste.

Source

  • Samson, Jim (1977). Music in Transition: A Study of Tonal Expansion and Atonality, 1900-1920. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0393021939.


This is an Article on Klangfarbenmelodie. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Klangfarbenmelodie


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything