释义 |
Definition of cadential in English: cadentialadjective kəˈdɛnʃ(ə)lˌkāˈden(t)SH(ə)l Relating to a cadenza or cadence. (与)华彩段(或句)(有关)的;(与)节奏(有关)的 I can see little musical advantage in excessive cadential ritardandos Example sentencesExamples - They should bring to life the droning intonations and cadential prolongation his music shares with the undulating rhythms of Russian prayer.
- One hears other evocations of the 18th century, particularly in cadential trills from the strings, in little minuets, and in passages of ‘Turkish’ music, that Classical-early Romantic craze.
- The former is a cadential passage in the dominant.
- Poetry is the domain of the lovers, and the contrast between their inflated cadential tropes and the poet's neatly articulated phrase endings, where musical and verbal sense perfectly coincide, points up the difference.
- What is likely to arrest this stepwise progress is the need to form a cadence: leaps are generally felt to be necessary to provide the decisive articulation that best performs the cadential function.
- The final measure vividly transmutes the symphony's opening theme (full of upward fourths) to an idea both melodic and harmonically cadential and thus brings the work to a great, substantial close.
- He is quick to reassure: his twin rejoinders could scarcely be more tender, his cadential harmonies more ravishing, or the intervening scintillating cascade more bewitching.
- If you do take time over the second subject because it contains more melodic high, large intervals, you make up the time later when you reach that cadential point that marks the return to the home key, and you're rushing home to the close.
- At bars 143-45 of his anthem what appears to be a de facto tenor-register part, bearing the crucial cadential 4-3 suspension, is transmitted in the Durham organ part but is conspicuously absent from the extant voice parts.
- The G-based octachord which seems to be the harmonic goal of the piece is framed by quiet chanting, the voice supported by the unearthly koto and the severely cadential chimes of the ensemble.
- Yes; but the talk was about rhythm, and cadential six-four chords have rhythmic implications - they determine strong beats.
- In plainchant melodies the commonest cadential close is a descending step to the final from the note above; other formulas, such as a descending 3rd or an ascending 2nd, are also found.
- I represents the formal and cadential structure of the Allegro under this different interpretation.
- For instance, two of his sonatas, one for violin, gamba and continuo and the other for two violins, gamba and continuo contain similarly decorated cadential material.
- Sometimes, sonorities more remotely related to the tropos are incorporated to produce a sense of harmonic instability and cadential delay.
OriginMid 19th century: from cadence, on the pattern of pairs such as essence, essential. Rhymesconfidential, consequential, credential, deferential, differential, essential, evidential, existential, experiential, exponential, influential, intelligential, irreverential, jurisprudential, penitential, pestilential, potential, preferential, presidential, providential, prudential, quintessential, referential, residential, reverential, sapiential, sciential, sentential, sequential, tangential, torrential Definition of cadential in US English: cadentialadjectiveˌkāˈden(t)SH(ə)l Relating to a cadenza or cadence. (与)华彩段(或句)(有关)的;(与)节奏(有关)的 I can see little musical advantage in excessive cadential ritardandos Example sentencesExamples - I represents the formal and cadential structure of the Allegro under this different interpretation.
- Yes; but the talk was about rhythm, and cadential six-four chords have rhythmic implications - they determine strong beats.
- For instance, two of his sonatas, one for violin, gamba and continuo and the other for two violins, gamba and continuo contain similarly decorated cadential material.
- The final measure vividly transmutes the symphony's opening theme (full of upward fourths) to an idea both melodic and harmonically cadential and thus brings the work to a great, substantial close.
- Poetry is the domain of the lovers, and the contrast between their inflated cadential tropes and the poet's neatly articulated phrase endings, where musical and verbal sense perfectly coincide, points up the difference.
- One hears other evocations of the 18th century, particularly in cadential trills from the strings, in little minuets, and in passages of ‘Turkish’ music, that Classical-early Romantic craze.
- He is quick to reassure: his twin rejoinders could scarcely be more tender, his cadential harmonies more ravishing, or the intervening scintillating cascade more bewitching.
- At bars 143-45 of his anthem what appears to be a de facto tenor-register part, bearing the crucial cadential 4-3 suspension, is transmitted in the Durham organ part but is conspicuously absent from the extant voice parts.
- What is likely to arrest this stepwise progress is the need to form a cadence: leaps are generally felt to be necessary to provide the decisive articulation that best performs the cadential function.
- If you do take time over the second subject because it contains more melodic high, large intervals, you make up the time later when you reach that cadential point that marks the return to the home key, and you're rushing home to the close.
- The former is a cadential passage in the dominant.
- They should bring to life the droning intonations and cadential prolongation his music shares with the undulating rhythms of Russian prayer.
- In plainchant melodies the commonest cadential close is a descending step to the final from the note above; other formulas, such as a descending 3rd or an ascending 2nd, are also found.
- Sometimes, sonorities more remotely related to the tropos are incorporated to produce a sense of harmonic instability and cadential delay.
- The G-based octachord which seems to be the harmonic goal of the piece is framed by quiet chanting, the voice supported by the unearthly koto and the severely cadential chimes of the ensemble.
OriginMid 19th century: from cadence, on the pattern of pairs such as essence, essential. |