Blind octave
Music composition and performance technique
In music, a blind octave is the alternate doubling above and below a successive scale or trill notes: "the passage being played...alternately in the higher and lower octave."[1] According to Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, the device is not to be introduced into the works of "older composers" (presumably those preceding Liszt).[2]
Blind octave passage
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Alternately, a blind octave may occur "in a rapid octave passage when one note of each alternate octave is omitted."[3] The effect is to simulate octave doubling using a solo instrument.
References
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Voicing in music
- Blind octave
- Block chord
- Close and open harmony
- Common tone
- Doubling
- Root position and Inversion (1st, 2nd, 3rd, and higher inversions)
- Octave
- Voice
- Voice leading
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