Holborne - Pavane and Galliard

Description

Instrumental Music Mind Map on Holborne - Pavane and Galliard, created by Alec Hewstone on 18/06/2013.
Alec Hewstone
Mind Map by Alec Hewstone, updated more than 1 year ago
Alec Hewstone
Created by Alec Hewstone over 11 years ago
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Resource summary

Holborne - Pavane and Galliard
  1. Structure
    1. Through composed ABC - tri-partite
      1. Each section is repeated
        1. Each strain concludes with a perfect cadence
        2. Rhythm and Meter
          1. Pavan - duple
            1. Galliard - triple
              1. Rhythmic patterns rarely repeated
                1. Rhythms of the two movements are considerably different
                2. Melody
                  1. Melodic interest is shared between instruments
                    1. Conjunct - particularly in first viol - only three cases of disjunct intervals
                      1. No interval wider than a perfect 5th
                      2. Instrumentation
                        1. Consort music - written for 5 instruments
                          1. Can be played on any 5 instruments
                            1. For amateur musicians
                              1. Viols - two trebles, one tenor and two basses
                              2. Texture
                                1. Five part polyphonic
                                  1. Imitation between parts
                                    1. The five instruments keep their own tier within texture
                                    2. Harmony
                                      1. Harmony is created by polyphonic movement
                                        1. Only at cadence points there is a sense of harmonic structure
                                          1. The music is linear opposed to vertical - harmony is less important than melody
                                          2. Tonality
                                            1. The key of the music changes regularly
                                              1. Diatonic D in the pavane
                                                1. A minor/major in the galliard
                                                  1. Composed towards the end of the renaissance when the modal system was being replaced by scales
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