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In music, the Psalms chord is the opening chord of Igor Stravinsky's Symphony of Psalms. It is a "barking E minor triad" [1] that is voiced "like no E-minor triad that was ever known before" [2] – that is, in two highly separate groups, one in the top register and the other in the bottom register. The third of the E-minor triad, rather than ...
Some tones, presumably from the earliest layers of chant, such as the Collect, Pater noster, and Postcommunion for Easter, consist of just two notes, often a reciting tone on A or G, with inflected notes one pitch below on G or F. Other tones, from later in the medieval period, usually recited on a C or F, inflecting down to the two notes below ...
Formerly the rhythm of the non-reciting notes was strictly observed, but nowadays the rhythm is based on the natural cadence of speech. Thus, the length of each of these notes bears little relation to the normal musical value of a note such as a minim or semibreve. [12] Anglican chant was well established by the 18th century.
G ♭ (G-flat; also called Ges or sol bémol) is the seventh semitone of the solfège. It lies a diatonic semitone above F and a chromatic semitone below G, thus being enharmonic to F ♯ (F-sharp) or fa dièse. However, in some temperaments, it is not the same as F ♯. G ♭ is a major third below B ♭, whereas F ♯ is a major third above D ...
The resulting structure of all three voices begins and ends with a 1-5-8 chord and elsewhere moves in parallel 1-3-6 chords. In four voices (falsobordone), Guilielmus also begins with the two-part structure of the soprano and tenor beginning and ending with octaves, elsewhere moving in strict parallel sixths, as in three-part fauxbourdon.
Muzio Clementi chose F-sharp in his set for the prelude, but G-flat for the final "Grande Exercice" which modulates through all the keys. Antonín Dvořák composed Humoresque No. 7 in G-flat major, while its middle section is in the parallel key (F-sharp minor, enharmonic equivalent to the theoretical G-flat minor).
Gelineau psalmody is a method of singing the Psalms that was developed in France by Catholic Jesuit priest Joseph Gelineau around 1953, with English translations appearing some ten years later. [1]
G-flat may refer to: G-flat major; G-flat minor; The musical pitch G ...