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chordal

[ UK /kˈɔːdə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. relating to or consisting of or emphasizing chords
    chordal assonance in modern music
    chordal rather than contrapuntal music

How To Use chordal In A Sentence

  • Yet the music is anything but predictable, and Mr. McHenry utilizes different approaches with the same group, from conventional chordal improvisation to noisier free-form pieces. The Jazz Scene: Sultry Styles and 50 Years of the Rumble
  • A similar pair of parachordal cartilages develop posteriorly from mesoderm, flanking the notochord.
  • Klein seems content to settle into mostly chordal work on his Rhodes, leaving the more intricate piano solo work to Goldberg, who is a wellspring of ideas. Ralph A. Miriello: Aaron Goldberg and Guillermo Klein Join Forces to Create the Compelling Beinestan
  • Never one to resort to simple open chord strums, Matthews spryly plucked circular ostinatos and buoyant chordal riffs to power the band's string of memorable hits. Tuesday Tune: 'Satellite' by The Dave Matthews Band
  • chordal rather than contrapuntal music
  • All pieces are written in a melody and accompaniment style, with the right hand playing the melody and the left hand playing chordal figures or arpeggiations.
  • Never one to resort to simple open chord strums, Matthews spryly plucked circular ostinatos and buoyant chordal riffs to power the band's string of memorable hits. Tuesday Tune: 'Satellite' by The Dave Matthews Band
  • The basso continuo, an abbreviated chordal notation, called for one or more singers to be accompanied by a single chordal instrument, while allowing for variation and improvisation in the accompanying instrumental harmonies.
  • No. 9 in F Major / Allegro - A chordal study with the primary melody first presented in legato form and then altered to staccato.
  • There is no common normal in the conical involute gear and the fixed chordal tooth thickness can not be measured accurately because of the coexistence of helix angle and taper.
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