List of pieces that use the whole-tone scale

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This is a list of notable musical works which use the whole tone scale.

List of pieces that use the whole-tone scale
Whole tone scale in Debussy's Voiles , mm. 1–4

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chamber music</span> Form of classical music composed for a small group of instruments

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In music, perpetuum mobile, moto perpetuo (Italian), mouvement perpétuel (French), movimento perpétuo (Portuguese) movimiento perpetuo (Spanish), is a term used to describe a rapidly executed and persistently maintained figuration, usually of notes of equal length. Over time it has taken on two distinct applications: first, as describing entire musical compositions or passages within them that are characterised by a continuous stream of notes, usually but not always at a rapid tempo; and second, as describing entire compositions, or extended passages within them that are meant to be played in a repetitious fashion, often an indefinite number of times.

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In music, quartal harmony is the building of harmonic structures built from the intervals of the perfect fourth, the augmented fourth and the diminished fourth. For instance, a three-note quartal chord on C can be built by stacking perfect fourths, C–F–B.

The Piano Concerto No. 3 in E major, Sz. 119, BB 127 of Béla Bartók is a musical composition for piano and orchestra. The work was composed in 1945 during the final months of his life, as a surprise birthday present for his second wife Ditta Pásztory-Bartók.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Viola Concerto (Bartók)</span>

The Viola Concerto, Sz. 120, BB 128 was one of the last pieces Béla Bartók wrote. He began composing it while living in Saranac Lake, New York, in July 1945. It was commissioned by William Primrose, a respected violist who knew that Bartók could provide a challenging piece for him to perform. He said that Bartók should not "feel in any way proscribed by the apparent technical limitations of the instrument". Bartók was suffering the terminal stages of leukemia when he began writing the piece and left only sketches at the time of his death.

References

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  2. Antokoletz 1984, 263.
  3. Antokoletz 1984, 88.
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  32. 1 2 Hull 1915, 57.
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  40. Salzer and Schachter 1989, 215, 217–218.
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  43. Moreira 2014, 53.
  44. Tarasti 2009, 231–232.
  45. Perone 2006, 40.

Sources