Voicing (music) in the context of "Upper structure"


Voicing (music) in the context of "Upper structure"

Voicing (music) Study page number 1 of 1

Answer the Voicing (music) Trivia Question!

or

Skip to study material about Voicing (music) in the context of "Upper structure"


⭐ Core Definition: Voicing (music)

In music theory, voicing refers to two closely related concepts:

  1. How a musician or group distributes, or spaces, notes and chords on one or more instruments
  2. The simultaneous vertical placement of notes in relation to each other; this relates to the concepts of spacing and doubling

It includes the instrumentation and vertical spacing and ordering of the musical notes in a chord: which notes are on the top or in the middle, which ones are doubled, which octave each is in, and which instruments or voices perform each note.

↓ Menu
HINT:

👉 Voicing (music) in the context of Upper structure

In jazz, the term upper structure or "upper structure triad" refers to a voicing approach developed by jazz pianists and arrangers defined by the sounding of a major or minor triad in the uppermost pitches of a more complex harmony.

↓ Explore More Topics
In this Dossier