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Type of chord in Ancient Greek music
Pyknon (Greek: πυκνόν), sometimes also transliterated as pycnon (πυκνός, 'close, close-packed, crowded, condensed'; Latin: spissus) in the music theory
Pyknon
Classification in ancient Greek music theory
than the remaining (incomposite) interval, the three-note group is called pyknon (meaning "compressed"). The positioning of these two notes defined three
Genus_(music)
Musical ratio of 3:2
as the hemiolic chromatic pyknon, which is one-and-a-half times the size of the semitone comprising the enharmonic pyknon. Cross-beat Syncopation Henry
Hemiola
Musical compositions from Ancient Greece
The technical term for a group of closely spaced notes like this is a pyknon. The photograph below shows part of verse 2 and the beginning of verse 3
Delphic_Hymns
Classification of musical key or scale in ancient Greek music theory
both cases has the pyknon or, in the diatonic genus, the semitone, at the bottom and, similarly, the lower interval of the pyknon must be smaller or equal
Octave_species
Series of four notes separated by three intervals
the remaining (incomposite) interval, the three-note group is called the pyknón (from pyknós, meaning "compressed"). This is the case for the chromatic
Tetrachord
Harmonic theorist of the 3rd century BC
from which one can place a pyknon on the lower side, the oxypyknos, conversely, is that from which one can place a pyknon on the upper side, and the amphipyknos
Archestratus_(music_theorist)
Overview of ancient Greek music theory
contrast to his predecessors, Ptolemy's scales employed a division of the pyknon in the ratio of 1:2, melodic, in place of equal divisions. Ptolemy, in his
Musical system of ancient Greece
Musical_system_of_ancient_Greece
Terms in music theory to characterize scales
other two tunings, whose lower two intervals were referred to as πυκνόν (pyknón), from πυκνός (pyknós, "dense, compressed"). For more information, especially
Diatonic_and_chromatic
the following context: Let us assume that given a systēma, whether pyknon or non-pyknon, no interval less than the remainder of the first concord can be
Incomposite_interval
intense diatonic scale Public domain music Pulse Punctualism Pygmy music Pyknon Pythagorean comma Pythagorean hammers Pythagorean interval Pythagorean tuning
Index_of_music_articles
Philodemus In Barker 2009, pp. 394–395, 410–411 Tetrachord theory concerning the pyknon Ptolemais of Cyrene Perhaps fl. 250 BCE Greek Πυθαγορικὴ τῆς μουσικῆς στοιχείωσις
List_of_music_theorists
of Epirus Ptolemy of Thebes Ptolichus Ptoon Painter Pyanopsia Pygmalion Pyknon Pylades Pylaemenes Pylaeus Pylaon Pylene Pylos Combat Agate Pylus Pyracmus
Index of ancient Greece-related articles
Index_of_ancient_Greece-related_articles
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Female
Irish
Feminine form of Irish Gaelic Féidhlim, possibly FÉIDHELM means "hospitable." In Irish legend, this was the name of a daughter of Conchobhar.
Male
Greek
(ΛεφτÎÏις) Short form of Greek Eleftherios, LEFTERIS means "the liberator."
Boy/Male
Gaelic Scottish
Son of the Father or Abbott.
Girl/Female
Indian
A queen of Saba in the days
Boy/Male
Australian, Finnish, French, German
Ready for Battle; Noble; Ready
Female
Swiss
, grace.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name for someone from Crewe in Cheshire, named with Old Welsh criu ‘weir’. This denoted a wickerwork fence that was stretched across a river to catch fish.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Sanskrit, Telugu
Shining Celestial Goddess
Surname or Lastname
English
English : patronymic from a pet form of Sill.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
King of the Land; Great Minded
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