Incomplete repetition
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Incomplete repetition is a musical form featuring two large sections, the second being a partial or incomplete re-presentation or repetition of the first. (Nettl 1956)
This form is used throughout the traditional Plains-Pueblo Native American music where the first section uses vocables and the second uses meaningful words or lyrics. Typical formal schemes include ABC, BC, AABC, and ABC and each section uses a tile type melodic contour. (ibid)
[edit] Source
- Nettl, Bruno (1956). Music in Primitive Culture. Harvard University Press