... powerful influence in transforming the rhythm of words, parallels of construction might be expected when the rhythm of the two is in complete accord. Ouseley, in writing on Melody, mentions tonality as the first fundamental principle, symmetry as... A Treatise on Musical Form and General Composition - Page 7by Frederick Arthur Gore Ouseley - 1875 - 149 pagesFull view - About this book
| Johannes Carl Andersen - English language - 1928 - 246 pages
...first fundamental principle, symmetry as the second; it is in symmetry that music and poetry agree. Every regular melody may be divided into Periods, Phrases, and Strains. These Ouseley calls the prosody of music. He illustrates these terms by quoting the beginning of the Huntsman's... | |
| Johannes Carl Andersen - English language - 1928 - 246 pages
...first fundamental principle, symmetry as the second; it is in symmetry that music and poetry agree. Every regular melody may be divided into Periods, Phrases, and Strains. These Ouseley calls the prosody of music. He illustrates these terms by quoting the beginning of the Huntsman's... | |
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