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Editionsbericht
Literatur: A Dictionary of Music
Literatur: Ode
ODE. A Greek word signifying an air or song. The Ode, which is of ancient invention, consists of unequal verses, distinguished into stanzas, or strophes. The Odes of the ancient Greeks preserved a regular return of the same kind of verse, and a similar quantity of syllables in the analogous parts of the verses: an uniformity not observed by modern poets, and which, to use the words of a learned writer, "makes every stanza a different song."
The ancient Odes were generally in honour of the gods, as are many of those of Pindar and Horace. Originally the Ode had but one stanza or strophe; but it was afterwards divided into three parts, strophe, antistrophe, and epode. This kind of lyric poetry, as now written, and generally set to music, forms an exalted species of song, and seems to rank between the sublime solemnity of the oratorio and the florid delicacy of the serious opera.
Druckvorlage
Thomas Busby: A Dictionary of Music,
Theoretical and Practical.
Fourth Edition. London: Phillips 1813; unpaginiert.
Editionsrichtlinien.
URL: https://books.google.fr/books?id=kcOt_0kaWmoC
PURL: https://hdl.handle.net/2027/chi.45289014
Literatur: A Dictionary of Music
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Edition
Lyriktheorie » R. Brandmeyer