Consonance and dissonance

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Revision as of 07:43, 6 March 2016 by Wikispaces>xenwolf (**Imported revision 576687831 - Original comment: **)
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This revision was by author xenwolf and made on 2016-03-06 07:43:17 UTC.
The original revision id was 576687831.
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Original Wikitext content:

[[Joe Monzo]] considers [[consonance]] and [[dissonance]] to be opposite poles of a continuum of sensation, which he calls "[[http://www.tonalsoft.com/enc/s/sonance.aspx|sonance]]". However he was not the first who used the term **sonance**: also [[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Keller_%28Komponist%29|Wilhelm Keller]] distinguishes between //sonanzmodal// and //distanzmodal// aspects when analysing sounds, see his //Handbuch der Tonsatzlehre// from 1957.

Original HTML content:

<html><head><title>sonance</title></head><body><a class="wiki_link" href="/Joe%20Monzo">Joe Monzo</a> considers <a class="wiki_link" href="/consonance">consonance</a> and <a class="wiki_link" href="/dissonance">dissonance</a> to be opposite poles of a continuum of sensation, which he calls &quot;<a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.tonalsoft.com/enc/s/sonance.aspx" rel="nofollow">sonance</a>&quot;. However he was not the first who used the term <strong>sonance</strong>: also <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Keller_%28Komponist%29" rel="nofollow">Wilhelm Keller</a> distinguishes between <em>sonanzmodal</em> and <em>distanzmodal</em> aspects when analysing sounds, see his <em>Handbuch der Tonsatzlehre</em> from 1957.</body></html>