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tone row
noun
a series of tones in which no tone is duplicated, and in which the tones generally recur in fixed sequence, with variations in rhythm and pitch, throughout a composition.
tone row
noun
Also called: note row. music a group of notes having a characteristic pattern or order that forms the basis of the musical material in a serial composition, esp one consisting of the twelve notes of the chromatic scale See also serialism twelve-tone
Word History and Origins
Origin of tone row1
Example Sentences
Michael Kennedy, a biographer and friend, recalled that he liked to pronounce “tone row,” impishly, as if it rhymed with “cow.”
“They’re just more fun. When you have the whole arsenal of the tone row in your head, you can just have a lot more freedom to mess around with it.”
The tone row I used in my composition was F#-A-E-D-C#-F-B-G-G#-A#-D#-C.
The first interval in my tone row, F#-A, is an ascending minor third or a descending major sixth, depending on whether the composer chooses the A to be higher or lower than the F#.
The full sequence of intervals in my tone row is 3-7-10-11-8-6-1-2-5-9.
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