Hocket vs Hocketed - What's the difference?
hocket | hocketed |
hiccup
* 1977 , Lloyd Ultan, Music theory: problems and practices in the Middle Ages and Renaissance , U of Minnesota Press, page 91:
(music) In medieval music, hocket is the rhythmic linear technique using the alternation of notes, pitches, or chords. A single melody is shared between two (or occasionally more) voices such that alternately one voice sounds while the other rests.
* 1977 , Lloyd Ultan, Music theory: problems and practices in the Middle Ages and Renaissance , U of Minnesota Press, page 91:
(music) Employing hockets.
* {{quote-news, year=2008, date=March 7, author=Ben Ratliff, title=Giving an Unpredictable Force His Due, work=New York Times
, passage=His “Frontline” had a ping-ponging, hocketed section for the band’s four horns at the beginning and end. }}
In lang=en terms the difference between hocket and hocketed
is that hocket is in medieval music, hocket is the rhythmic linear technique using the alternation of notes, pitches, or chords. A single melody is shared between two (or occasionally more) voices such that alternately one voice sounds while the other rests while hocketed is employing hockets.As a noun hocket
is hiccup.As an adjective hocketed is
employing hockets.hocket
English
(Hocket)Noun
(en noun)- All of these tend to produce something of a hiccough effect we know as hocket and which Reese suggests has a long history dating back to primitive instruments.
- Hocket is a contrapuntal technique described by the early fourteenth-century Walter Odington as "A truncation … made over the tenor … in such a way that one voice is always silent while the other sings."
Derived terms
* hocketing * hockettorReferences
* ----hocketed
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation