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- Hypodorian_mode abstract "The Hypodorian mode, a musical term literally meaning 'below Dorian', derives its name from a tonos or octave species of ancient Greece which, in its diatonic genus, is built from a tetrachord consisting (in rising direction) of a semitone followed by two whole tones. The rising scale for the octave is a single tone followed by two conjoint tetrachords of this type. This is roughly the same as playing all the white notes of a piano from A to A: A | B C D E | (E) F G A. Although this scale in medieval theory was employed in Dorian and Hypodorian, from the mid-sixteenth century and in modern music theory they came to be known as the Aeolian and Hypoaeolian modes.The term Hypodorian came to be used to describe the second mode of Western church music. This mode is the plagal counterpart of the authentic first mode, which was also called Dorian. The ecclesiastical Hypodorian mode was defined in two ways: (1) as the diatonic octave species from A to A, divided at the mode final D and composed of a lower tetrachord of tone–semitone–tone, ending on D, plus a pentachord tone–semitone–tone–tone continuing from D, and (2) as a mode whose final was D and whose ambitus was G–B♭ (that is, with B♮ below the final and B♭ above it). In addition, the note F, corresponding to the reciting note or tenor of the second psalm tone, was regarded as an important secondary center (Powers 2001).".
- Hypodorian_mode thumbnail Aeolian_mode_A.png?width=300.
- Hypodorian_mode wikiPageID "1616238".
- Hypodorian_mode wikiPageRevisionID "542562327".
- Hypodorian_mode hasPhotoCollection Hypodorian_mode.
- Hypodorian_mode subject Category:Modes.
- Hypodorian_mode type Abstraction100002137.
- Hypodorian_mode type Attribute100024264.
- Hypodorian_mode type Manner104928903.
- Hypodorian_mode type Modes.
- Hypodorian_mode type Property104916342.
- Hypodorian_mode comment "The Hypodorian mode, a musical term literally meaning 'below Dorian', derives its name from a tonos or octave species of ancient Greece which, in its diatonic genus, is built from a tetrachord consisting (in rising direction) of a semitone followed by two whole tones. The rising scale for the octave is a single tone followed by two conjoint tetrachords of this type. This is roughly the same as playing all the white notes of a piano from A to A: A | B C D E | (E) F G A.".
- Hypodorian_mode label "Hypodorian mode".
- Hypodorian_mode label "Hypodorischer Modus".
- Hypodorian_mode label "Modo hipodórico".
- Hypodorian_mode label "Skala hypodorycka".
- Hypodorian_mode label "ヒポドリア旋法".
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs Hypodorischer_Modus.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs Modo_hipodórico.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs ヒポドリア旋法.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs Skala_hypodorycka.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs m.05gy3g.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs Q842766.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs Q842766.
- Hypodorian_mode sameAs Hypodorian_mode.
- Hypodorian_mode wasDerivedFrom Hypodorian_mode?oldid=542562327.
- Hypodorian_mode depiction Aeolian_mode_A.png.
- Hypodorian_mode isPrimaryTopicOf Hypodorian_mode.