释义 |
serialism
se·ri·al·ism S0280500 (sîr′ē-ə-lĭz′əm)n. Music 1. Serial compositions.2. The theory or composition of serial music. se′ri·al·ist n.serialism (ˈsɪərɪəˌlɪzəm) n (Music, other) (in 20th-century music) the use of a sequence of notes in a definite order as a thematic basis for a composition and a source from which the musical material is derived. See also twelve-tonese•ri•al•ism (ˈsɪər i əˌlɪz əm) n. a technique for composing music in which tones are used in fixed sequences of arbitrary placement without regard for tonality. [1960–65] se′ri•al•ist, n. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | serialism - 20th century music that uses a definite order of notes as a thematic basis for a musical compositionserial musicmusic - an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner12-tone music, 12-tone system, twelve-tone music, twelve-tone system - a type of serial music introduced by Arnold Schoenberg; uses a tone row formed by the twelve semitones of the chromatic scale (and inverted or backward versions of the row) | TranslationsEncyclopediaSeeserial musicserialism Related to serialism: Total serialismSynonyms for serialismnoun 20th century music that uses a definite order of notes as a thematic basis for a musical compositionSynonymsRelated Words- music
- 12-tone music
- 12-tone system
- twelve-tone music
- twelve-tone system
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