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MONODY

  • Monody
  • Poetic or musical vocal style

    In music, monody refers to a solo vocal style distinguished by having a single melodic line and instrumental accompaniment. Although such music is found

    Monody

    Monody

    Monody

  • Monody (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    A monody is a piece of music sung by one voice with instrumental accompaniment. Monody may also refer to: Monody (lament), Byzantine genre Monody (band)

    Monody (disambiguation)

    Monody_(disambiguation)

  • Monody (lament)
  • In Byzantine literature, a monody (μονῳδία, monodia) was a funerary oration, usually addressed to the deceased, praising their virtues and lamenting their

    Monody (lament)

    Monody_(lament)

  • Monody (band)
  • Monody is a 3-member synthpop / EBM / Futurepop band from the United States. Formed in 2006 in Portland, Oregon. In 2008, Monody released 4 debut singles

    Monody (band)

    Monody_(band)

  • Monody on the Death of Chatterton
  • Poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1790)

    "Monody on the Death of Chatterton" was composed by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in 1790 and was rewritten throughout his lifetime. The poem deals with the

    Monody on the Death of Chatterton

    Monody_on_the_Death_of_Chatterton

  • Monody (album)
  • 2010 studio album by Mantler

    Monody is the fourth album by Canadian artist Mantler (Chris A. Cummings), released in 2010. Described as "teeming with slow jams, a love for the '70s

    Monody (album)

    Monody_(album)

  • Azerbaijan
  • Country in Eastern Europe and West Asia

    traditions that reach back nearly a thousand years, evolving around the badge of monody, producing rhythmically diverse melodies. The music has a branchy mode system

    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijan

  • Goat's tongue
  • Possible medieval torture method

    in 1537. The method was mentioned in 1115 by Guibert de Nogent in his Monodies, with translator Jay Rubenstein annotating that the torture developed in

    Goat's tongue

    Goat's tongue

    Goat's_tongue

  • Symphony of Monody
  • The Symphony of Monody is a 2005 composition by the Persian composer Mehdi Hosseini, performed and recorded in Saint Petersburg on 3 June 2007 by the Saint

    Symphony of Monody

    Symphony_of_Monody

  • Chorale monody
  • Early German Baroque sacred composition

    Italian style of monody. Almost all examples of chorale monodies were written in the first half of the 17th century. A chorale monody used the text of

    Chorale monody

    Chorale_monody

  • Baroque music
  • Style of Western classical music

    and instrumental music, and discussed such ancient Greek music devices as monody, which consisted of a solo singing accompanied by a kithara (an ancient

    Baroque music

    Baroque music

    Baroque_music

  • Paean
  • Song or poem expressing triumph or gratitude

    performed by a chorus, but some examples seem intended for an individual voice (monody). It comes from the Greek παιάν/paian (also παιήων/paeion or παιών/paion)

    Paean

    Paean

  • Music of Azerbaijan
  • the Azerbaijan Republic. Azerbaijani music has evolved under the badge of monody, producing rhythmically diverse melodies. Music from Azerbaijan has a branch

    Music of Azerbaijan

    Music of Azerbaijan

    Music_of_Azerbaijan

  • Saint Martial school
  • Medieval school of music composition

    compositions rubrified as such. One example for a style somehow inbetween monody and polyphony as well as inbetween organum and discant is the versus «Senescente

    Saint Martial school

    Saint_Martial_school

  • Catalonia
  • Nationality and autonomous community of Spain

    The main Western musical trends have marked these productions, medieval monodies or polyphonies, with the work of Abbot Oliba in the eleventh century or

    Catalonia

    Catalonia

    Catalonia

  • Homophony
  • Texture in music

    support. Monody is similar to melody-dominated homophony in that one voice becomes the melody, while another voice assumes the underlying harmony. Monody, however

    Homophony

    Homophony

    Homophony

  • Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher
  • 1935 oratorio by Arthur Honegger

    and Earth, past and present, for mixing styles and using musical tools — monody, harmony and counterpoint — to build sculpted blocks of sound. One detail

    Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher

    Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher

    Jeanne_d'Arc_au_bûcher

  • Alessandro Peretti di Montalto
  • Italian Catholic Cardinal Bishop

    He retained several musicians in his service and encouraged the art of monody or solo song. His portrait bust by Gian Lorenzo Bernini is at the Hamburg

    Alessandro Peretti di Montalto

    Alessandro Peretti di Montalto

    Alessandro_Peretti_di_Montalto

  • Classical music
  • Broad tradition of Western art music

    Towards the end of the period, the early dramatic precursors of opera such as monody, the madrigal comedy, and the intermedio are seen. Around 1597, Italian

    Classical music

    Classical music

    Classical_music

  • Florence
  • Largest city in Tuscany, Italy

    the late 16th century when Jacopo Peri's Dafne an opera in the style of monody, was premiered. Opera spread from Florence throughout Italy and eventually

    Florence

    Florence

    Florence

  • Giulio Caccini
  • Italian composer (1551–1618)

    the mix of intellects and talents, the Camerata developed the concept of monody—an emotionally affective solo vocal line, accompanied by relatively simple

    Giulio Caccini

    Giulio Caccini

    Giulio_Caccini

  • Monophony
  • Musical texture

    lines at the same time), homophony (a melody accompanied by chords), or monody (a single melodic line with instrumental accompaniment) elements throughout

    Monophony

    Monophony

    Monophony

  • Chorale setting
  • Types of musical settings for chorales

    ricercare) Chorale concerto Chorale fantasia Chorale fugue Chorale mass Chorale monody Chorale motet Chorale partita (usually interchangeable with chorale variations)

    Chorale setting

    Chorale_setting

  • Francesco Rasi
  • Italian opera singer

    including in the anthology La cetra di sette corde, and a good deal of monody which survives in the anthologies Vaghezze di musica (1608) and Madrigali

    Francesco Rasi

    Francesco_Rasi

  • Emilio de' Cavalieri
  • Italian composer (c.1550–1602)

    the Roman School of composers, he was an influential early composer of monody, and wrote what is usually considered to be the first oratorio. Cavalieri

    Emilio de' Cavalieri

    Emilio_de'_Cavalieri

  • Julian (emperor)
  • Roman emperor from 361 to 363, Neoplatonic philosopher

    the emperor: containing Gregory Nazianzen's two Invectives and Libanius' Monody : with Julian's extant theosophical works., Translated by C.W. King. George

    Julian (emperor)

    Julian (emperor)

    Julian_(emperor)

  • The Station (song)
  • 2018 single by Oneohtrix Point Never

    No. Title Length 1. "The Station" 4:19 2. "Monody" 4:15 3. "Blow by Blow" 5:28 4. "Trance 1" 3:53

    The Station (song)

    The_Station_(song)

  • Chris A. Cummings
  • Canadian musician

    "Exclaim!: Monody review". Exclaim.cxa. Retrieved November 30, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) "Mantler – Monody". Thelineofbestfit

    Chris A. Cummings

    Chris_A._Cummings

  • Florentine Camerata
  • Group of humanists

    style which developed from these early experiments was called monody. In the 1590s, the monody developed into a vehicle capable of extended dramatic expression

    Florentine Camerata

    Florentine_Camerata

  • Owen Pallett
  • Canadian composer, violinist, keyboardist, and vocalist

    string arrangements, conductor on "The Man Who Stole a Leopard" Mantler Monody brass arrangements 2011 The Luyas Too Beautiful to Work strings and string

    Owen Pallett

    Owen Pallett

    Owen_Pallett

  • John Anagnostes
  • τελευταίας άλώσεως τῆς Θεσσαλονίχης), which he wrote with an accompanying monody lamenting the city's fall. Thessalonica had been captured by the Ottomans

    John Anagnostes

    John_Anagnostes

  • Theatre
  • Collaborative form of performing art

    modern oboe), as were some of the actors' responses and their 'solo songs' (monodies). Modern musical theatre is a form of theatre that also combines music

    Theatre

    Theatre

    Theatre

  • Lord Byron
  • British poet (1788–1824)

    Wikisource) The Destruction of Sennacherib (1815) (text on Wikisource) Monody on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. Sheridan (1816) (text on Wikisource)

    Lord Byron

    Lord Byron

    Lord_Byron

  • Lycidas
  • Elegiac poem written by John Milton

    pleasure had he not known its author." Though commonly considered to be a monody, "Lycidas" in fact features two distinct voices, the first of which belongs

    Lycidas

    Lycidas

    Lycidas

  • Empiricism
  • Idea that knowledge comes only/mainly from sensory experience

    Vincenzo Galilei (c. 1520 – 1591), father of Galileo and the inventor of monody, made use of the method in successfully solving musical problems, firstly

    Empiricism

    Empiricism

  • Renaissance music
  • Western musical period between the 15th and 17th centuries

    Towards the end of the period, the early dramatic precursors of opera such as monody, the madrigal comedy, and the intermedio are heard. According to Margaret

    Renaissance music

    Renaissance music

    Renaissance_music

  • Chorale
  • German Protestant church hymn

    Saint-Saëns's Third Symphony) Such tune with a harmonic accompaniment (e.g. chorale monody, chorales included in Schemellis Gesangbuch) Such a tune presented in a

    Chorale

    Chorale

    Chorale

  • Cor anglais
  • Double-reed woodwind instrument

    Hindemith's Sonata for English Horn and Piano (1941) Charles Koechlin's Monody for English Horn, Op. 216, Nr. 11 (1947–48) Franz Krommer's Trio for 2 oboes

    Cor anglais

    Cor anglais

    Cor_anglais

  • Euripides
  • 5th-century BC Athenian playwright

    lyrical duets, as well as replacing some of the chorus's functions with monodies. At the same time, choral odes began to take on something of the form of

    Euripides

    Euripides

    Euripides

  • Origins of opera
  • underlying prerequisite for the creation of opera proper was the practice of monody. Monody is the solo singing/setting of a dramatically conceived melody, designed

    Origins of opera

    Origins of opera

    Origins_of_opera

  • Christchurch Dragon
  • Legend

    he had done. The background story to the canons’ visit is described in Monodies (Book 3), a contemporary document written by Guibert de Nogent. This mentions

    Christchurch Dragon

    Christchurch_Dragon

  • TheFatRat
  • German DJ and record producer

    singles The Arcadium "Telescope" Taking You Higher Seeking Blue Pharisade "Monody" (featuring Laura Brehm) Non-album singles The Arcadium "The Calling" (featuring

    TheFatRat

    TheFatRat

    TheFatRat

  • Procopius of Gaza
  • Byzantine sophist and rhetorician (c. 465–528)

    the Roman Emperor Anastasius I Dicorus (his longest preserved work), two monodies, an epithalamium, two ekphraseis, four dialexeis, and four ethopoeiae.

    Procopius of Gaza

    Procopius_of_Gaza

  • Nine Lyric Poets
  • Group of ancient Greek poets

    LLC, 2007 ISBN 1434491307 [Retrieved 2015-05-06]. Cf. esp. M. Davies's "Monody, Choral Lyric, and the Tyranny of the Hand-Book" in Classical Quarterly

    Nine Lyric Poets

    Nine_Lyric_Poets

  • Italian opera
  • Operas in Italy or in the Italian language

    underlying prerequisite for the creation of opera proper was the practice of monody. Monody is the solo singing/setting of a dramatically conceived melody, designed

    Italian opera

    Italian opera

    Italian_opera

  • Frottola
  • Italian song of the late 15th and early 16th century

    to the madrigal, but to much later practices in the Baroque era such as monody, since it anticipates chordal accompaniment, has the melody in the highest

    Frottola

    Frottola

    Frottola

  • Greek lyric
  • Body of lyric poetry written in dialects of Ancient Greek

    different kinds, and can be of varying lengths. Some lyric meters were used for monody (solo songs), such as some of the poems of Sappho and Alcaeus; others were

    Greek lyric

    Greek lyric

    Greek_lyric

  • Monodies (Mehdi Hosseini)
  • Composition by Mehdi Hosseini

    The Monodies by Iranian composer Mehdi Hosseini was completed in 2011. The work is scored for flute, clarinet, piano, violin and violoncello. The world

    Monodies (Mehdi Hosseini)

    Monodies_(Mehdi_Hosseini)

  • 526 Antioch earthquake
  • Earthquake striking Syria and Antioch in 526

    pray for an hour. The sophist Procopius of Gaza wrote among his works a monody on the event. In Constantinople, Emperor Justin I reportedly reacted to

    526 Antioch earthquake

    526_Antioch_earthquake

  • André (play)
  • Play written by William Dunlap

    auspices of Anna Seward, who had done much to romanticize the affair in her Monody on Major André of 1781. (Actually, Honora Sneyd had died of consumption

    André (play)

    André_(play)

  • Le nuove musiche
  • 1602 collection of songs by Giulio Caccini

    Le nuove musiche ("The New Musics") is a collection of monodies and songs for solo voice and basso continuo by the composer Giulio Caccini, published in

    Le nuove musiche

    Le nuove musiche

    Le_nuove_musiche

  • Andronikos V Palaiologos
  • Byzantine co-emperor from 1403 to 1407

    manuscripts, one containing a monody and the other containing a consolatory letter to an emperor from a bishop. The monody is titled "Monody on the death of the

    Andronikos V Palaiologos

    Andronikos V Palaiologos

    Andronikos_V_Palaiologos

  • Niketas Eugenianos
  • Byzantine rhetor and writer

    Niketas wrote several works both in prose and in verse, including three monodies for the death of his teacher Theodore Prodromos (one in prose, two in verse)

    Niketas Eugenianos

    Niketas_Eugenianos

  • Thomas Linley the younger
  • English composer and violinist (1756–1778)

    1780. A monody, the words by Sheridan". British Library. ROYAL MUSIC COLLECTION. Linley (Thomas). Verses to the Memory of Garrick; 1780. A monody, the words

    Thomas Linley the younger

    Thomas Linley the younger

    Thomas_Linley_the_younger

  • Sigismondo d'India
  • Italian composer (c1582 – before 1629)

    Roman School, the attempts to recover the music of the ancient world in monody and its larger vehicle, the newly developing opera, as well as the mannered

    Sigismondo d'India

    Sigismondo_d'India

  • Girolamo Mei
  • Italian historian and humanist

    century, the new recitative style (stile recitativo) from which developed monody, the first music dramas, and eventually opera. Galilei and the others in

    Girolamo Mei

    Girolamo Mei

    Girolamo_Mei

  • The Pilgrim Woman
  • Stage play

    some of the most virtuosic vocal writing of the period, early examples of monody. The opening aria, Dalle piu alte sfere, is believed to be by Emilio de'

    The Pilgrim Woman

    The Pilgrim Woman

    The_Pilgrim_Woman

  • Et je reverrai cette ville étrange
  • 1981 composition by Claude Vivier

    ensemble by Canadian composer Claude Vivier. It is an extreme manifestation of monody, with all instruments playing in unison with a continuous melodic line throughout

    Et je reverrai cette ville étrange

    Et_je_reverrai_cette_ville_étrange

  • Arioso
  • Category of classical solo vocal piece

    term arose in the 16th century along with the aforementioned styles and monody. It is commonly confused with recitativo accompagnato. Arioso is similar

    Arioso

    Arioso

  • Italian Renaissance
  • Italian cultural movement from the 14th to 17th century

    moved north into Germany; in Florence, the Florentine Camerata developed monody, the important precursor to opera, which itself first appeared around 1600;

    Italian Renaissance

    Italian Renaissance

    Italian_Renaissance

  • Claudio Monteverdi
  • Italian composer (1567–1643)

    subordinated to the text. Solo singing with instrumental accompaniment, or monody, acquired greater significance towards the end of the 16th century, replacing

    Claudio Monteverdi

    Claudio Monteverdi

    Claudio_Monteverdi

  • Theatre of ancient Greece
  • drama Didascaliae Didaskalos Eisodos Ekkyklêma Episode Epode Kommós Mêchanê Monody Ode Epinikion Onomastì komodèin Parabasis Phlyax play Sparagmos Stásimon

    Theatre of ancient Greece

    Theatre of ancient Greece

    Theatre_of_ancient_Greece

  • Vespro della Beata Vergine
  • Musical composition by Claudio Monteverdi

    the Song of Songs 1:4. It is written for tenor solo in the new style of monody (a melodic solo line with accompaniment). Laudate pueri Psalm 113 begins

    Vespro della Beata Vergine

    Vespro della Beata Vergine

    Vespro_della_Beata_Vergine

  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • English poet, literary critic and philosopher (1773–1834)

    Lamb's schoolfriend Robert Favell. Among the poems were Religious Musings, "Monody on the Death of Chatterton" and an early version of "The Eolian Harp" entitled

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge

    Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge

  • Claudio Saracini
  • Italian composer

    Baroque era. He was one of the most famous and distinguished composers of monody. Saracini was born to a noble family, probably in Siena. Little is known

    Claudio Saracini

    Claudio_Saracini

  • Vincenzo Galilei
  • Italian musician and music theorist (1520–1591)

    opera is widely attributed to Galilei, since he was one of the inventors of monody, the musical style closest to recitative. Galilei died on 2 July 1591. Galilei

    Vincenzo Galilei

    Vincenzo Galilei

    Vincenzo_Galilei

  • List of classical music genres
  • elaborates on a chorale melody, often with intricate counterpoint. Chorale monody – Chorale for solo voice and accompanying instruments, usually basso continuo

    List of classical music genres

    List_of_classical_music_genres

  • In This Room
  • 1997 studio album by The 3rd and the Mortal

    No. Title Length 1. "Stream" 4:25 2. "Monody" 3:47 3. "So Pure" 4:02 4. "The Wooden Lodge" 2:37 5. "Sophisticated Vampires" 4:11 6. "Harvest" 4:25 7. "Did

    In This Room

    In_This_Room

  • Ancient Greek literature
  • Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-02359-8. M. Davies's "Monody, Choral Lyric, and the Tyranny of the Hand-Book" in Classical Quarterly

    Ancient Greek literature

    Ancient Greek literature

    Ancient_Greek_literature

  • Venetian School (music)
  • Group of composers working in Venice during the Renaissance

    introduced by the Venetian school, along with the contemporary development of monody and opera in Florence, together define the end of the musical Renaissance

    Venetian School (music)

    Venetian School (music)

    Venetian_School_(music)

  • List of Baroque composers
  • festivals ensembles historically informed performance Figured bass Folk baroque monody notes inégales polychoral style Stile antico / Seconda pratica stile concertato

    List of Baroque composers

    List_of_Baroque_composers

  • Madrigal
  • Secular vocal music composition of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras

    madrigals in the solo continuo style, compositions technically related to monody and descended from the experimental music of the Florentine Camerata (1573–1587)

    Madrigal

    Madrigal

    Madrigal

  • Transition from Renaissance to Baroque in instrumental music
  • Historical period of Western classical music

    contrapuntal polyphony, in which all voices are theoretically equal, to monody and treble-bass polarity, along with the development of basso continuo.

    Transition from Renaissance to Baroque in instrumental music

    Transition_from_Renaissance_to_Baroque_in_instrumental_music

  • Anacreon
  • 6th century BC Greek lyric poet

    music, usually the lyre. Anacreon's verses were primarily in the form of monody rather than for a chorus. In keeping with Greek poetic tradition, his poetry

    Anacreon

    Anacreon

    Anacreon

  • Bartolomeo Barbarino
  • Italian composer and singer

    falsettist, and one of the most enthusiastic composers of the new style of monody. Nothing is known about his early life; his birthdate is inferred from the

    Bartolomeo Barbarino

    Bartolomeo_Barbarino

  • Giovanni de' Bardi
  • Italian literary critic, writer, composer and soldier

    and music at the time. The result of the association was the invention of monody, and shortly thereafter, opera; in addition, the innovations brought to

    Giovanni de' Bardi

    Giovanni de' Bardi

    Giovanni_de'_Bardi

  • Arboretum Cycle
  • Film cycle by Nathaniel Dorsky

    filmmaker Nathaniel Dorsky. The films—Elohim, Abaton, Coda, Ode, September, Monody, and Epilogue—were shot in 2017 at the Strybing Arboretum in San Francisco

    Arboretum Cycle

    Arboretum_Cycle

  • Michael Italikos
  • 1147 and 1166 he served as the Archbishop of Philippopolis. He wrote a monody on the death of Andronikos, son of Alexios I. He delivered basilikoi logoi

    Michael Italikos

    Michael_Italikos

  • Alessandro Grandi
  • Italian composer

    composers using the continuo in the first decades of the 17th century wrote monodies, or preferred more homophonic textures. Grandi experimented with extreme

    Alessandro Grandi

    Alessandro_Grandi

  • Euthymios Tornikios
  • Byzantine ecclesiastical official and writer

    his panegyric on the failure of the coup of John Komnenos the Fat, or monodies on the death of his father and of his close friend and relative, the metropolitan

    Euthymios Tornikios

    Euthymios_Tornikios

  • Sappho
  • Ancient Greek lyric poet (c. 630–c. 570 BC)

    and choral performance. With Alcaeus, she pioneered a new style of sung monody (single-line melody) that departed from the multi-part choral style that

    Sappho

    Sappho

    Sappho

  • Theodora Kantakouzene (wife of Alexios IV of Trebizond)
  • Empress consort of Trebizond

    celebrated by her compatriot, the scholar Basilios Bessarion, in the three monodies he dedicated to his benefactress, and in a special discourse of consolation

    Theodora Kantakouzene (wife of Alexios IV of Trebizond)

    Theodora_Kantakouzene_(wife_of_Alexios_IV_of_Trebizond)

  • Recitative
  • Ordinary speech-like singing in opera, cantata, mass or oratorio

    see accentus. The first use of recitative in opera was preceded by the monodies of the Florentine Camerata in which Vincenzo Galilei, father of the astronomer

    Recitative

    Recitative

    Recitative

  • Magnentius
  • Roman usurper

    the Emperor: Containing Gregory Nazianzen's Two Invectives and Libanius' Monody with Julian's Extant Theosophical Works. Translated by C. W. King. London:

    Magnentius

    Magnentius

    Magnentius

  • 1799 in music
  • Sonatas Nos. 9 and 10 (Op. 14, No. 1 and 2) Benjamin Carr – Dead March and Monody Joseph Haydn – String Quartets Op. 77 Antonio Salieri – "Der Tyroler Landsturm"

    1799 in music

    1799_in_music

  • StepManiaX
  • 2017 video game

    Mozquito Launch ⭐ Million Feelings (Dance Mix) Chriss Floren Launch ♣️ Monody TheFatRat feat. Laura Brehm Launch ♣️ Moonstone Virgill Launch ⭐ My Freedom

    StepManiaX

    StepManiaX

    StepManiaX

  • List of Magnificat composers
  • polyphony, performance alternating verses sung in polyphony and verses sung in monody according to the church tone. In such alternatim settings the even verses

    List of Magnificat composers

    List_of_Magnificat_composers

  • Rudens
  • Ancient Roman comedy

    copied from a play by Diphilus, rich in mythological allusion and tragic monody. In this play, when the young man catches up with the pimp, he takes him

    Rudens

    Rudens

    Rudens

  • Bertha-Eudokia
  • 10th-century Byzantine empress

    probably no later than 950. She was probably not 10 years old. There is a monody written in the name of Romanos II lamenting her death and lauding her quick

    Bertha-Eudokia

    Bertha-Eudokia

    Bertha-Eudokia

  • Akira Nishimura
  • Japanese composer (1953–2023)

    (1995); Canticle of Light (1996); Flame and Shadow, viola concerto (1996); Monody (1996); Padma Incarnation (1997); A Stream—After Dark for Piano and Chamber

    Akira Nishimura

    Akira_Nishimura

  • Andronikos Komnenos (son of Alexios I)
  • Byzantine prince and military commander (1091–1130/31)

    troops in his brother's campaign against the Pechenegs. According to a monody by Michael Italikos, he was crucial in turning the tide of the battle and

    Andronikos Komnenos (son of Alexios I)

    Andronikos_Komnenos_(son_of_Alexios_I)

  • Felice Anerio
  • Italian composer (1560–1614)

    quick melodic passages in the bass line (which were an influence from monody). In addition, he sometimes used quickly changing textures, alternating

    Felice Anerio

    Felice Anerio

    Felice_Anerio

  • Corpus Christi Carol
  • Middle or Early Modern English hymn

    deir hert, young Jesus sweit" by James, John and Robert Wedderburn in his "Monody for Corpus Christi", for soprano, flute, violin and horn, in 1959. It was

    Corpus Christi Carol

    Corpus_Christi_Carol

  • Canzonetta
  • Popular Italian secular vocal composition that originated around 1560

    changed from a madrigalian, a cappella genre to something more akin to a monody, or even a cantata. Eventually, the canzonetta became a type of song for

    Canzonetta

    Canzonetta

  • Air de cour
  • Secular vocal music in France in the late Renaissance and early Baroque period

    surprisingly little influence from the Italian early Baroque trends of monody and the madrigal, either in its polyphonic or its concertato form. This

    Air de cour

    Air_de_cour

  • Ibycus
  • 6th-century BC Greek lyric poet

    style of the Lesbian poets. It is not certain that he ever in fact composed monody (lyrics for solo performance), but the emotional and erotic quality of his

    Ibycus

    Ibycus

  • Kontostephanos
  • Byzantine noble family

    anonymous children. John in turn had three anonymous children mentioned in a monody by Constantine Manasses. Andronikos' brother Alexios had a number of children

    Kontostephanos

    Kontostephanos

    Kontostephanos

  • Mehdi Hosseini
  • Persian composer

    advanced study in contemporary music and creative exchange Symphony of Monody (2005); Concerto for String Quartet and Chamber Orchestra (2008) The Baluch

    Mehdi Hosseini

    Mehdi Hosseini

    Mehdi_Hosseini

  • Barbican tube station
  • London Underground station

    roof was replaced with awnings. This urged John Betjeman to write his poem Monody on the Death of Aldersgate Station. Increasing traffic by other companies

    Barbican tube station

    Barbican tube station

    Barbican_tube_station

  • Threnody
  • Song, hymn or poem of mourning

    Lancaster and Robin Lumley "Threnody" by Goldmund "In Trenodia" by Ville Valo Monody Sentimental ballad The Oxford Companion to Music (2010). "Threnody". Online

    Threnody

    Threnody

    Threnody

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MONODY

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Online names & meanings

  • Rishabha | ரீஷபா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Rishabha | ரீஷபா

    Excellent

  • SENGA
  • Female

    Scottish

    SENGA

    Scottish name, probably derived from the Gaelic word seang, SENGA means "slender."

  • Paraga | பராக
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Paraga | பராக

    Uplifter of the poor

  • Sugriv
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Sugriv

    Handsome neck

  • Agadhbodh
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Agadhbodh

    Having Unfathomable Knowledge

  • Susanne
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew American French

    Susanne

    Graceful lily.

  • Baal-meon
  • Boy/Male

    Biblical

    Baal-meon

    Idol or master of the house.

  • GUNVOR
  • Female

    Scandinavian

    GUNVOR

    Scandinavian form of Old Norse Gunnvarr, GUNVOR means "war-vigilant." 

  • Bhini
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Bhini

    Humid

  • Darbee
  • Girl/Female

    British, English

    Darbee

    Park with Deer

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Other words and meanings similar to

MONODY

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing MONODY

MONODY

  • Monodist
  • n.

    A writer of a monody.

  • Monodies
  • pl.

    of Monody

  • Monody
  • n.

    A species of poem of a mournful character, in which a single mourner expresses lamentation; a song for one voice.

  • Monodical
  • a.

    Belonging to a monody.

  • Monodynamism
  • n.

    The theory that the various forms of activity in nature are manifestations of the same force.

  • Monodynamic
  • a.

    Possessing but one capacity or power.