What are the songs called Rounds?
wheels are carefully designed songs for more artists who each sing exactly the same words and melody. This only melodic line, sings at the same distributed intervals, creates its own harmony.
The wheels can sing two, three or four singers. In addition, several variations are possible. The end of the song can come from every voice that stops, so the song shows the effects of adding at the beginning and subtraction at the end. Alternatively, all voices can stop at a specific chord. Some wheels also have an instrumental or vocal accompaniment providing other performers than those who take the only melody that makes the bike. The bike in the middle of the thirteenth century, which is still sung to this day, is "Sumer is Icumen." The name Round has been considered as a day since the beginning of the 15th century. The term catch was used in the sixteenth to nineteenth century to indicate comics.
Wheels are often used in teaching music. Although they simply learn it because every ZPIt is the same part, still allow participants to feel singing in harmony. Also attractive to younger students may not see music and bikes are great for the development of independence and the ability to stick to one's parts.
popular wheels include:
• 2-voice rounds "Line, Line, Row Your Boat", "Music in itself" and "Shaveri";
• 3-voice wheels "Chair to repair", "waters of Babylon" and "Don Nobis Pacem"; and
• 4-voice wheels "Kookaburra sit in the old tree of gums" and "frère jacques", called "More like"? " in English.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote dozens of rounds and some also wrote Ludwig van Beethoven, and also include a round structure in more important works such as his Opera Fidelio and his sixth symphones. Gustav Mahler also used a bike in the symphony, not his symphony. 1. Benjamin Britten included a bike in his opera Peter Grimes.