When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pentatonic scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentatonic_scale

    The Orff system places a heavy emphasis on developing creativity through improvisation in children, largely through use of the pentatonic scale. Orff instruments, such as xylophones, bells and other metallophones, use wooden bars, metal bars or bells, which can be removed by the teacher, leaving only those corresponding to the pentatonic scale ...

  3. Kodály method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodály_Method

    The first Kodály exercise books were based on the diatonic scale, [7]: 3 but educators soon found that children struggled to sing half steps in tune and to navigate within such a wide range. [7]: 11 It is thus that the pentatonic scale came to be used as a sort of stepping stone.

  4. Pentachord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentachord

    C minor 9th chord Play ⓘ. A pentachord in music theory may be either of two things. In pitch-class set theory, a pentachord is defined as any five pitch classes, regarded as an unordered collection (Roeder 2001).

  5. List of musical scales and modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_musical_scales_and...

    List of musical scales and modes Name Image Sound Degrees Intervals Integer notation # of pitch classes Lower tetrachord Upper tetrachord Use of key signature usual or unusual 15 equal temperament: 15-tet scale on C. Play ⓘ — — — 15 — — — 16 equal temperament: 16-tet scale on C. Play ⓘ — — — 16 — — — 17 equal ...

  6. Glissando - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glissando

    For example, on a keyboard, a player's fingernails can be made to slide across the white keys or over the black keys, producing either a C major scale or an F ♯ major pentatonic scale, or their relative modes; by performing both at once, it is possible to produce a full chromatic scale.

  7. Scale (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_(music)

    Some scales use a different number of pitches. A common scale in Eastern music is the pentatonic scale, which consists of five notes that span an octave. For example, in the Chinese culture, the pentatonic scale is usually used for folk music and consists of C, D, E, G and A, commonly known as gong, shang, jue, chi and yu. [14] [15]

  8. Orff Schulwerk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orff_Schulwerk

    The Orff Approach of music education uses very rudimentary forms of everyday activity for the purpose of music creation by music students. The Orff Approach is a "child-centered way of learning" music education that treats music as a basic system like language and believes that just as every child can learn language without formal instruction so can every child learn music by a gentle and ...

  9. Tone cluster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tone_cluster

    In Western musical traditions, pentatonic scales—conventionally played on the black keys—are built entirely from intervals larger than a semitone. Commentators thus tend to identify diatonic and pentatonic stacks as "tone clusters" only when they consist of four or more successive notes in the scale. [1]