How does "modal chromaticism" in the jazz context compare to "polymodal chromaticism", the latter defined as:
"In music, polymodal chromaticism is the use of any and all musical modes sharing the same tonic simultaneously or in succession and thus creating a texture involving all twelve notes of the chromatic scale (total chromatic). Alternately it is the free alteration of the other notes in a mode once its tonic has been established.
The term was coined by composer, ethnomusicologist, and pianist Béla Bartók. The technique became a means in Bartók's composition to avoid, expand, or develop major-minor tonality (i.e. common practice harmony). This approach differed from that used by Arnold Schoenberg and his followers in the Second Viennese School and later serialists."
Also defines: A chromatic scale is only one more because no matter where you start it makes the same sequence, whereas a mode is a type of musical scale coupled with a set of characteristic melodic and harmonic behaviors.
Maybe modal and polymodal are interchangable terms?
Examples would also be helpful. Thanks!
"In music, polymodal chromaticism is the use of any and all musical modes sharing the same tonic simultaneously or in succession and thus creating a texture involving all twelve notes of the chromatic scale (total chromatic). Alternately it is the free alteration of the other notes in a mode once its tonic has been established.
The term was coined by composer, ethnomusicologist, and pianist Béla Bartók. The technique became a means in Bartók's composition to avoid, expand, or develop major-minor tonality (i.e. common practice harmony). This approach differed from that used by Arnold Schoenberg and his followers in the Second Viennese School and later serialists."
Also defines: A chromatic scale is only one more because no matter where you start it makes the same sequence, whereas a mode is a type of musical scale coupled with a set of characteristic melodic and harmonic behaviors.
Maybe modal and polymodal are interchangable terms?
Examples would also be helpful. Thanks!