Английская Википедия:Diminution

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Шаблон:About

Файл:Trattado p.5.JPG
Extract from Diego Ortiz's El Primo Libro ... Nel qual si tratta delle Glose depicting rhythm and generic intervals. Observe the diminution (i.e. division) process suggested by the composer, in reference to the rhythmic figures in the upper and lower musical parts.
Файл:Trattado p.5 bottom.png
A realization of the bottom line of the above Diego Ortiz extract in modern notation, completed with an arbitrarily chosen clef and a time signature. Шаблон:Audio

In Western music and music theory, diminution (from Medieval Latin diminutio, alteration of Latin deminutio, decrease) has four distinct meanings. Diminution may be a form of embellishment in which a long note is divided into a series of shorter, usually melodic, values (also called "coloration"; Ger. Kolorieren). Diminution may also be the compositional device where a melody, theme or motif is presented in shorter note-values than were previously used. Diminution is also the term for the proportional shortening of the value of individual note-shapes in mensural notation, either by coloration or by a sign of proportion. A minor or perfect interval that is narrowed by a chromatic semitone is a diminished interval, and the process may be referred to as diminution (this, too, was sometimes referred to as "coloration").

Diminution as embellishment

Diminution is a form of embellishment or melodic variation in which a long note or a series of long notes is divided into shorter, usually melodic, values, as in the similar practices of breaking or division in England, passaggio in Italy, double in France and glosas or diferencias in Spain.Шаблон:R It is thoroughly documented in written sources of the sixteenth, seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, and enjoyed a remarkable flowering in Venice from about 1580–1620. It is an integral aspect of modern performance practice; Donington describes the consequences of failing to add "necessary figuration" as "disastrous".Шаблон:R

Italian literature of the sixteenth and early seventeenth century

Spanish literature

English literature

German literature

Dutch literature

For Heinrich Schenker, "all foreground is diminution".[1] "All diminution must be secured firmly to the total work by means which are precisely demonstrable and organically verified by the inner necessities of the voice-leading".[2] This conception has been essential to Schenker's theory from some of his earliest writings.[3] In Schenkerian analysis a diminution is an elaboration by which an event formed of notes of longer value is expressed in notes of smaller value. See nonchord tone.

Diminution in composition

A melody or series of notes is diminished if the lengths of the notes are shortened; diminution is thus the opposite of augmentation, where the notes are lengthened. A melody originally consisting of four crotchets (quarter-notes) for example, is diminished if it later appears with four quavers (eighth-notes) instead. In the following theme from Beethoven's Leonora no. 3 Overture, the melodic ideas in bars 3 and 5 recur at twice the speed in bars 7-8:

Файл:Beethoven, Leonora no. 3 overture, bars 69-76.wav
Beethoven, Leonora no. 3 overture, bars 69-76
Файл:Leonora no 3.png
Leonora no 3

This technique is often used in contrapuntal music, as in the "canon by diminution" ("per diminutionem"), in which the notes in the following voice or voices are shorter than those in the leading voice, usually half the length.[4]

Файл:Contrapunctus VII from Bach's Art of Fugue.wav
Contrapunctus VII from Bach's Art of Fugue
Файл:Art de la fugue exemple04.png
Contrapuntus VII from Bach's Art of Fugue. Observe the lower voice of the canon in halved (i.e. diminished) note values.

In jazz, Thelonious Monk's composition "Brilliant Corners" consists of a theme that is repeated at twice the speed, an effect known as "double time."

Diminution of note values

In mensural notation, diminution of the duration of note shapes is the most common function of coloration. Diminution is most often by one-third of the note-value, so that three colored notes fit into the time of two uncolored notes of the same shape; it is thus often found in notation of triplet or hemiola figures.Шаблон:R

Diminution may also be achieved by a sign of proportion. Thus a sign such as Шаблон:Music is in proportional notation not a modern time signature, but a proportional signature indicating diminutio sesquialtera, that is, that after the sign each three notes of the basic note value integer valor occupy the time of two such notes elsewhere in the piece, either previously in the same voice, or simultaneously in another voice.[5]

Diminution of intervals

A diminished interval is an interval obtained from a minor interval or perfect interval by narrowing it by a chromatic semitone, meaning that the interval is narrowed by a semitone, but the staff positions are not changed (only an accidental is changed); the process may occasionally be referred to as diminution For example, a diminished fifth is a chromatic semitone narrower than the perfect fifth: starting with the interval from C to G, which is a perfect fifth, seven semitones wide, both the intervals from C to GШаблон:Music, and from CШаблон:Music to G are diminished fifths, spanning six semitones, but the same staff lines. By contrast, the interval from DШаблон:Music to G is not a diminished fifth (it is an augmented fourth): even though it is six semitones wide, it spans four staff positions, and is thus a fourth, not a fifth; it is a diatonic semitone narrower than a perfect fifth. The standard abbreviations for diminished intervals are dX, such that a diminished third = d3.[6] The diminished fifth (d5) is the only diminished interval that appears in diatonic scales (in C major it occurs between B and F).

Diminished intervals on C
Diminished second Diminished third Diminished fourth Diminished fifth Diminished sixth Diminished seventh Diminished octave
Файл:Diminished second on C.png Файл:Diminished third on C.png Файл:Diminished fourth on C.png Файл:Diminished fifth on C.png Файл:Diminished sixth on C.png Файл:Diminished seventh on C.png Файл:Diminished octave on C.png
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Diminished chords

Файл:Diminished triad on C.png
Diminished triad on C Шаблон:Audio.

A diminished triad consists of two superposed minor thirds, and thus contains a diminished fifth. In classical repertoire the usual symbol is the degree, Шаблон:Music, as in viiШаблон:Music. In lead sheets and popular music books it is usually written Cdim or CШаблон:Music.

Файл:Diminished seventh chord on C.png
Diminished seventh chord on C Шаблон:Audio.

A diminished seventh chord consists of three superposed minor thirds, and thus has all successive notes a minor third apart; it contains two diminished fifths. In jazz theory, a diminished seventh chord has four available tensions, each a major ninth above the chord tones, and thus forming a diminished seventh chord a whole tone (or major ninth) above the root chord. Because any chord tone of the diminished seventh can be heard as the root, the tensions are not numbered as ninth, eleventh and so on. The usual notation is Cdim7 or CШаблон:Music7, but some lead sheets or popular music books may omit the 7.

Файл:Half-diminished seventh chord on C.png
Half-diminished seventh chord on C (Шаблон:Audio).

A diminished triad with a minor seventh is a half-diminished chord, usually notated either Cm7(Шаблон:Music5) or Cø7. A diminished triad played over a root a major third away creates a Dominant 7th chord, notated C7, with a C Major triad on the bottom, and an E° from the chord third of C (C E G BШаблон:Music). A minor third below would give a fully diminished 7th chord which is made entirely of minor thirds that evenly divide an octave. This even division of the octave leaves us with only three unique diminished 7th chords: C EШаблон:Music GШаблон:Music BШаблон:Music, CШаблон:Music E G BШаблон:Music, and D F AШаблон:Music CШаблон:Music, as all other diminished 7th chords are inversions of one of those three.

Файл:Diminishedchords.png
Diminished chords with sheet music and tab.

Diminished scales

Файл:Octatonic scales on C.png
Octatonic scales on C Шаблон:Audio.

Several scales may be referred to as diminished. One of the more common is the Octatonic scale constructed from CШаблон:Music7 and its tensions (transposed into the same octave), which has alternating tone and semitone intervals.

Файл:Half diminished scale C.png
Half diminished scale on C Шаблон:Audio.

See also

References

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  1. Шаблон:Cite book
  2. Шаблон:Cite book
  3. Шаблон:Cite book
  4. Jeppesen, Knud. Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century. trans. Glen Haydon. New York: Dover Publications. 1992. p. 235 Шаблон:Cite book
  5. Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок bowers не указан текст
  6. Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок B&S не указан текст