Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

About: Prolation

An Entity of Type: Thing, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Prolation is a term used in the theory of the mensural notation of medieval and Renaissance music to describe its rhythmic structure on a small scale, as opposed to tempus, which described a larger scale. The term "prolation" is derived from the Latin prolatio ("enlargement"/"prolongation"), first used by Philippe de Vitry in describing Ars Nova, a musical style that came about in 14th-century France.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Prolación es un término usado en la teoría de la música medieval para describir la estructura rítmica en una pequeña escala. El término deriva del latín prolatio, usado por primera vez por Philippe de Vitry en la descripción que hizo en su tratado , del estilo musical homónimo que se desarrollará en Francia alrededor del siglo XIV. Prolación, junto a tempus, corresponden aproximadamente al concepto de compás en la música moderna. La prolación describía que una semibreve era igual a dos mínimas (prolación menor o prolación imperfecta) o si era igual a tres mínimas (prolación mayor o prolación perfecta) La música antigua fue estructurada en subdivisiones de tres, mientras que el valor de las notas en la música moderna está inequívocamente dividido en dos partes, lo que significa que solo la prolación menor ha sobrevivido en la indicación de compás actual. Actualmente indicamos las subdivisiones de tres por modificación del la duración de la nota a través de los puntos o los tresillos. (es)
  • Prolation is a term used in the theory of the mensural notation of medieval and Renaissance music to describe its rhythmic structure on a small scale, as opposed to tempus, which described a larger scale. The term "prolation" is derived from the Latin prolatio ("enlargement"/"prolongation"), first used by Philippe de Vitry in describing Ars Nova, a musical style that came about in 14th-century France. Prolation, together with tempus, corresponds roughly to the concept of time signature in modern music. Prolation describes whether a semibreve (whole note) is equal in length to two minims (half notes) (minor prolation or imperfect prolation; in Latin "prolatio minor") or, like a tuplet, three minims (major prolation or perfect prolation; in Latin "prolatio maior"). Tempus similarly describes the relationship between the breve and semibreve. These may be compared to the additive rhythm and divisive rhythm, rhythmic divisions and rhythmic groupings which define time signatures. Early medieval music was often structured in subdivisions of three, while the note values in modern music are most often subdivided into two parts, 4/4 being the most common time signature, meaning that minor prolation has primarily survived in our time signature system, while major prolation has been replaced by notation modifying note values with dots or triplets. The history of written medieval music shows a gradual shift from major to minor prolation being common. The equivalent term in the Italian notation of the fourteenth century is "divisio", which covers both tempus and prolation. Italian divisiones, first described by Marchetto da Padova, can also allow four minims within a semibreve. For instance octonaria and duodenaria place eight and twelve minims in a breve respectively divided into two or three "major" semibreves. (en)
  • Prolazione è un termine usato nella teoria della musica medioevale per descrivere la sua struttura ritmica su una piccola scala. Il termine deriva dal latino prolatio, usato per la prima volta da Philippe de Vitry nel descrivere l'Ars nova, uno stile musicale che si sviluppo in Francia nel XIV secolo. (it)
  • Прола́ция (лат. prolatio — расширение, букв. — «произнесение, проговаривание») в мензуральной ритмике западноевропейского средневековья и Возрождения — способ деления мензуры на счётные доли. Термин был введён в 20-х годах XIV века в трактате Филиппа де Витри «Ars nova» и был подхвачен другими (главным образом, французскими) теоретиками музыки. (ru)
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 1715950 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 2494 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1042686975 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:date
  • September 2021 (en)
dbp:reason
  • What's the term for four minims? Quad...? (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
rdfs:comment
  • Prolazione è un termine usato nella teoria della musica medioevale per descrivere la sua struttura ritmica su una piccola scala. Il termine deriva dal latino prolatio, usato per la prima volta da Philippe de Vitry nel descrivere l'Ars nova, uno stile musicale che si sviluppo in Francia nel XIV secolo. (it)
  • Прола́ция (лат. prolatio — расширение, букв. — «произнесение, проговаривание») в мензуральной ритмике западноевропейского средневековья и Возрождения — способ деления мензуры на счётные доли. Термин был введён в 20-х годах XIV века в трактате Филиппа де Витри «Ars nova» и был подхвачен другими (главным образом, французскими) теоретиками музыки. (ru)
  • Prolación es un término usado en la teoría de la música medieval para describir la estructura rítmica en una pequeña escala. El término deriva del latín prolatio, usado por primera vez por Philippe de Vitry en la descripción que hizo en su tratado , del estilo musical homónimo que se desarrollará en Francia alrededor del siglo XIV. (es)
  • Prolation is a term used in the theory of the mensural notation of medieval and Renaissance music to describe its rhythmic structure on a small scale, as opposed to tempus, which described a larger scale. The term "prolation" is derived from the Latin prolatio ("enlargement"/"prolongation"), first used by Philippe de Vitry in describing Ars Nova, a musical style that came about in 14th-century France. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Prolación (es)
  • Prolazione (it)
  • Prolation (en)
  • Пролация (ru)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License