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fugue

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fugue

In music, a contrapuntal form where two or more (usually four) parts or voices (principal melodies for voices or instruments) are woven together. The voices enter one after the other in strict imitation of each other. They may be transposed to a higher or lower key, or combined in augmented form (larger note values). The fugue is the highest form of contrapuntal composition as heard in works such as Johann Sebastian Bach's Das musikalische Opfer/The Musical Offering (1747), on a theme of Frederick II of Prussia, and Die Kunst der Fuge/The Art of the Fugue published in 1751, and Ludwig van Beethoven's Grosse Fuge/Great Fugue for string quartet (1825–26).

fugue

In psychology, an abnormal state in which a person under emotional stress suddenly leaves home, apparently forgetting everything about his or her normal life, and assumes a new identity. The state is usually temporary and is probably due to repression.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
And what was played was a fugue- though Petya had not the least conception of what a fugue is.
In three minutes she was deep in a very difficult, very classical fugue in A, and over her face came a queer remote impersonal expression of complete absorption and anxious satisfaction.
The sense of mutual fitness that springs from the two deep notes fulfilling expectation just at the right moment between the notes of the silvery soprano, from the perfect accord of descending thirds and fifths, from the preconcerted loving chase of a fugue, is likely enough to supersede any immediate demand for less impassioned forms of agreement.
 
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