Definition of dodecaphonic in English:
dodecaphonic
adjective ˌdəʊdɛkəˈfɒnɪkdoʊˌdɛkəˈfɑnɪk
Music another term for twelve-note
Example sentencesExamples
- One thinks of Bloch's music as having a distinctive voice, despite a fairly wide range of idiom - from neo-Romantic to neoclassical to dodecaphonic to something entirely individual.
- I studied the piece from a dodecaphonic, serial point of view, which yields some remarkable insights into the work, but I don't think such an exclusive adherence necessary.
- The composer began as a Schoenberg disciple and produced a lovely piano concerto in the dodecaphonic style.
- The liner notes make a big deal of the fact that some of the music of the finale follows dodecaphonic practice.
- Fifty-five years after his death, Anton Webern still leads listeners through a musical underworld where even dodecaphonic and atonal rules simply don't apply.
Definition of dodecaphonic in US English:
dodecaphonic
adjectivedōˌdekəˈfänikdoʊˌdɛkəˈfɑnɪk
Music another term for twelve-tone
Example sentencesExamples
- The composer began as a Schoenberg disciple and produced a lovely piano concerto in the dodecaphonic style.
- I studied the piece from a dodecaphonic, serial point of view, which yields some remarkable insights into the work, but I don't think such an exclusive adherence necessary.
- Fifty-five years after his death, Anton Webern still leads listeners through a musical underworld where even dodecaphonic and atonal rules simply don't apply.
- One thinks of Bloch's music as having a distinctive voice, despite a fairly wide range of idiom - from neo-Romantic to neoclassical to dodecaphonic to something entirely individual.
- The liner notes make a big deal of the fact that some of the music of the finale follows dodecaphonic practice.