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Homophony grew popular during these years in instrumental music as well.
There was similarly little record of homophony during the Renaissance period.
It is often sufficient to break the homophony in one voice only to give this added touch of interest.
The lower voices are set mostly in homophony with two exceptions.
If they are singing notes at different pitches but with the same rhythm this is called homophony.
The existing vocal parts suggest that the choral writing was mostly in homophony.
The main style was the homophony, where prominent melody and accompaniment are clearly distinct.
The final lines are sung in homophony, as if the four, one separate voices have aligned under the grace of God.
In homophony, the melody is usually but not always voiced in the highest notes.
Some of these are based on homophony or near-homophony.
One of the most effective and simple choral textures is homophony, in which all parts move together, melody with harmony.
Homophony means music in which the voices or instruments sing or play chords.
Further in a number of words consonant shift has been dropped to avoid homophony, thus gen. pl.
If a melody is accompanied by chords, the texture is homophony.
Much of the homophony that followed he felt belongs to a less serious and less spiritual period of art.
Homophony is probably the commonest choral texture of all, and has been used in all periods.
Each part is so busy with different rhythmic movements that the simple directness of homophony is lost.
Yeísmo produces homophony in a number of cases.
To preserve the homophony in this case, the number 10 has also been spelled out in Pinyin. "
Due to the homophony, "fish" mythically becomes equated with "abundance".
However, because manuscript was expensive to produce, there is little record of Medieval homophony, most notated music being monophonic.
Homophony in music is a texture in which multiple voices move together in harmony.
The musics of some cultures where there is a melodic line with rhythmic accompaniment must be considered homophony.
Music left an emphasis on chanting and simple melodies to polyphony and homophony.
No one around here has dealt with harmony in a couple of centuries, and the whole concept of homophony seems beyond everyone."