Dictionary Definition
melody
Noun
1 a succession of notes forming a distinctive
sequence; "she was humming an air from Beethoven" [syn: tune, air, strain, melodic
line, line, melodic
phrase]
2 the perception of pleasant arrangements of
musical notes [syn: tonal
pattern]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Melody
English
Etymology
melodie, from melodie, from melodia, from sc=Grek, from sc=Grek + sc=Grek, contracted form sc=Grek.Noun
- tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase
Synonyms
Translations
sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase
- Bosnian: melodija
- Bulgarian: мелодия
- Chinese: 曲调, 歌曲
- Croatian: melodija
- Czech: melodie
- Dutch: melodie
- Esperanto: melodio
- Estonian: meloodia
- Finnish: melodia, sävel
- French: mélodie
- German: Melodie
- Greek, Modern: μελωδία (melodia)
- Kurdish: ئاواز
- Hungarian: dallam, melódia
- Italian: melodia
- Japanese: 歌曲, 調べ, 旋律
- Latin: melodia
- Norwegian: melodi
- Portuguese: melodia
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: мелодија
- Roman: melodija
- Cyrillic: мелодија
- Slovene: melodija
- Spanish: melodía
- Swedish: melodi
- Turkish: melodi
Extensive Definition
- This article is about melody in music. For other senses of this word, see melody (disambiguation).
In music, a melody (from Greek
μελῳδία - melōidía, "singing, chanting"), also tune, voice, or
line, is a series of linear events or a succession, not a simultaneity as in a
chord (see
harmony). However, this
succession must contain change of some kind and be perceived as a
single entity (possibly Gestalt) to be
called a melody. Most specifically this includes patterns of
changing pitches and
durations, while most
generally it includes any interacting patterns of changing events
or quality. "Melody is
said to result where there are interacting patterns of changing
events occurring in time."
Change is necessary for events "to be understood
as related or unrelated." Melodies often consist of one or more
musical phrases,
motifs, and
are usually repeated throughout a song or piece in
various forms. Melodies may also be described by their melodic
motion or the pitches or the intervals
between pitches (predominantly conjuct or disjunct or with further
restrictions), pitch range, tension
and release, continuity and coherence, cadence,
and shape. "Many extant explanations [of melody] confine us [sic]
to specific stylistic models, and they are too exclusive."
Elements
The melodies in most European music written
before the 20th century features recurring "events, often periodic,
at all structural levels" and "recurrence of durations and patterns
of durations" are also important in 20th century music.
While in the 20th century pitch includes "those
aspects of sound that are classed as having highness or lowness"
earlier music included almost exclusively sounds having "fixed and
easily discernible frequency patterns" and composers have "utilized
a greater variety of pitch resources than has been the custom in
any other historical period of Western music." While materials from
the diatonic
scale are still used, the twelve-tone
scale became "widely employed."
DeLone states "The essential elements of any
melody are duration, pitch, and quality [timbre, texture, and loudness].".
However, quality is not an essential element of melody, as the same
melody is recognizable when played with a wide variety of timbres,
textures, and loudness.
Melodies in the 20th century where increasingly
reliant "upon the qualitative dimensions" with those dimensions "in
pre-twentieth century music were almost exclusively reserved for
pitch and rhythm" such as being an "element of linear ordering"
rather than a highlight to "the more predominant pitch and rhythmic
aspects." See Klangfarbenmelodie
and Musique
concrète.
Examples
Different musical styles use melody in different ways. For example:- Rock music, melodic music, and other forms of popular music and folk music tend to pick one or two melodies (verse and chorus) and stick with them; much variety may occur in the phrasing and lyrics. "Gino Stefani makes appropriation the chief criterion for his 'popular' definition of melody (Stefani 1987a). Melody, he argues, is music 'at hand'; it is that dimension which the common musical competence extracts (often with little respect for the integrity of the source), appropriates and uses for a variety of purposes: singing, whistling, dancing, and so on."
- In western classical music, composers often introduce an initial melody, or theme, and then create variations. Classical music often has several melodic layers, called polyphony, such as those in a fugue, a type of counterpoint. Often melodies are constructed from motifs or short melodic fragments, such as the opening of Beethoven's Fifth. Richard Wagner popularized the concept of a leitmotif: a motif or melody associated with a certain idea, '''person or place.
- While in both most popular music and classical music of the common practice period pitch and duration are of primary importance in melodies, the contemporary music of the 20th and 21st centuries pitch and duration have lessened in importance and quality has gained importance, often primary. Examples include musique concrete, klangfarbenmelodie, Elliott Carter's Eight Etudes and a Fantasy which contains a movement with only one note, the third movement of Ruth Crawford-Seeger's String Quartet 1931 (later reorchestrated as Andante for string orchestra) in which the melody is created from an unchanging set of pitches through "dissonant dynamics" alone, and György Ligeti's Aventures in which recurring phonetics create the linear form.
- Jazz musicians use the melody line, called the "lead" or "head", as a starting point for improvisation.
- Indian classical music relies heavily on melody and rhythm, and not so much on harmony as the above forms.
- Balinese gamelan music often uses complicated variations and alterations of a single melody played simultaneously, called heterophony.
See also
- Unified field
- Parsons code, a simple notation used to identify a piece of music through melodic motion—the motion of the pitch up and down.
- Appropriation (music)
Further reading
- Apel, Willi. Harvard Dictionary of Music, 2nd edition, p.517-19. Includes "a capsule definition of melody." (Delone et al 1975, p.270)
- Edwards, Arthur C. The Art of Melody, p.xix-xxx. Includes "a catalog of sample definitions." (ibid)
- Holst, Imogen. Tune, Faber and Faber, London, 1962.
- Smits van Waesberghe, J. A Textbook of Melody. Includes "an attempt to formulate a theory of melody." (ibid)
References
External links
melody in Bosnian: Melodija
melody in Bulgarian: Мелодия
melody in Catalan: Melodia
melody in Czech: Melodie
melody in Danish: Melodi
melody in German: Melodie
melody in Estonian: Meloodia
melody in Spanish: Melodía
melody in Esperanto: Melodio
melody in Persian: لحن (موسیقی)
melody in French: Mélodie (succession de
hauteurs)
melody in Galician: Melodía
melody in Croatian: Melodija
melody in Italian: Melodia
melody in Hebrew: מלודיה
melody in Latvian: Melodija
melody in Lithuanian: Melodija
melody in Malay (macrolanguage): Melodi
melody in Dutch: Melodie
melody in Japanese: メロディ
melody in Norwegian: Melodi
melody in Norwegian Nynorsk: Melodi
melody in Polish: Melodia
melody in Portuguese: Melodia
melody in Romanian: Melodie
melody in Quechua: Takina
melody in Russian: Мелодия
melody in Simple English: Melody
melody in Slovak: Melódia (hudba)
melody in Slovenian: Melodija
melody in Serbian: Мелодија
melody in Finnish: Melodia
melody in Swedish: Melodi
melody in Ukrainian: Мелодія
melody in Chinese: 旋律
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
air,
aria, bel canto, canto, cantus, descant, diapason, dulcetness, euphoniousness, euphony, harmony, lay, line, lyrics, measure, mellifluence, mellifluousness,
melodia, melodic line,
melodiousness,
musical quality, musical sound, musicality, note, refrain, solo, solo part, song, soprano part, strain, sweetness, theme, tonality, tone, treble, tune, tunefulness, warble