Encyclopedia > Polytonality

  Article Content

Bitonality

Redirected from Polytonality

Bitonality is the use in music of two different keys at the same time. The use of more than two keys at once is known as polytonality.

A well known example is the fanfare[?] at the beginning of Igor Stravinsky's ballet, Petrushka[?]. The first clarinet plays a melody in C major, while the second clarinet plays the same melody in F sharp major:

Although this example consists of just two melodic lines, some examples of bitonality contrast fully harmonised sections of music in different keys. Examples of this rather more dissonant kind of bitonality can be found in the work of Charles Ives, whose use of the technique in his Variations on "America" (1891) is one of the first in classical music. Earlier examples, such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Ein musikalischer Spass, tend to use the technique for comic effect.

Bitonality was used quite often by members of the French group, Les Six, and expecially by Darius Milhaud, who perhaps used it more than any other composer.

Although the word bitonality is most often used when talking about relatively modern classical music (written in the last one hundred years or so), it is quite a common technique in folk music, especially in eastern Europe.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Brazil

... the major European ethnic stock of Brazil was once Portuguese, subsequent waves of immigration have contributed to a diverse ethnic and cultural heritage. Brazil is the ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 38 ms