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hexachord
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hexachord

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The three hexachords on G, C, and F respectively.

In music, not a chord in the true sense, but a group of six individual notes. Introduced in the 11th century as a method of sight-singing, a series of overlapping scalar hexachords embraced the entire compass of notes. In the 20th century the term was redefined by composers using the twelve-tone system, particularly Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern, as being half of a twelve-tone (twelve-note) row, allowing further compositional manipulation.



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The first work in which I use symmetrical hexachords is the Fantasy in Two Movements for solo violin that I wrote for Yehudi Menuhin, and there you'll find the symmetrical hexachord idea, and you'll find also permutations of that idea.
 
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