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#REDIRECT ] |
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{{Other uses|Phaser (disambiguation){{!}}Phaser}} |
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{{Redirect category shell| |
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'''Phasing''' is a ] in which the same part (a repetitive phrase) is played on two ]s, in steady but not identical ]. Thus, the two instruments gradually shift out of unison, creating first a slight echo as one instrument plays a little behind the other, then a doubling with each note heard twice, then a complex ringing effect, and eventually coming back through doubling and echo into unison. Phasing is the rhythmic equivalent of cycling through the phase of two waveforms as in ]. Note that the tempi of the two instruments are almost identical, so that both parts are perceived as being in the same tempo: the changes only separate the parts gradually. In some cases, especially live performance where gradual separation is extremely difficult, phasing is accomplished by periodically inserting an extra note (or temporarily removing one) into the phrase of one of the two players playing the same repeated phrase, thus shifting the phase by a single beat at a time, rather than gradually. |
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{{R from related word}} |
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{{R with history}} |
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It was popularized by composer ]. In Reich's ], where the composer sets off several copies of the same tape loop simultaneously on different machines. Over time, the slight differences in the speed of the different tape machines causes a ] effect and then rhythmic separation to occur. Examples include Reich's '']'' and '']''. This technique was then extended to acoustic instruments in his '']'', Reich's first attempt at applying the phasing technique to live performance, and later the change in phase was made immediate, rather than gradual, as in Reich's '']''. |
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As the cycle unfolds, often other melodies will be created by the differing instances of the original phrase being played together. As in Steve Reich's ''Violin Phase'', the composer will sometimes have an additional instrument or live performer with the tape who playing these secondary, extracted melodies to accentuate them.{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}} |
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Music writer ] has pointed out on later use of phase shifting technique: "Though not widely used in minimalist works per se, it survived as an important archetype in postminimal music (e.g. ]'s ''The Time Curve Preludes'', ]'s ''Dream in White on White'', ]'s ''Time Does Not Exist'')." <ref></ref> |
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An example of phasing in ] is "The True Wheel" on ]'s album '']''.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}} Another one is the final track on ]' '']''.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}} |
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The playing of different repeated phrases in the same tempo but having different metrical lengths (beats in the bar), as in the music of ] and others, is not phasing but may be considered ]s.{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}} |
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The effect is similar to that heard when a ] station undergoes fading. As the signal takes multiple paths through the ionosphere, the different time delays cause the signal to exhibit the characteristic phasing sound.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}} |
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==Origins== |
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In 1965, influenced by ] use of ]ing and ], the American composer ] started experimenting with looping techniques and accidentally discovered the potential of gradual phase shifting as a compositional resource.<ref>Mertens (1983:37 & 48)</ref> |
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In discussing the technicalities of what has been termed a "phase shifting process" Reich has stated that it is related to ] or ] in ]. The difference between phase music and traditional rounds, where two or more identical ] are played with one starting after the other, is that the ] are generally short repeating patterns with the imitation being variable instead of fixed.<ref>Mertens, Wim. 1983. ''American Minimal Music: La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, Philip Glass'', p.48. Translated by J. Hautekiet; preface by Michael Nyman. London: Kahn & Averill; New York: Alexander Broude. ISBN 0-900707-76-3</ref> |
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==See also== |
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* ] |
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* ] |
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* ] |
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* ] |
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* ] |
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* ] |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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==External links== |
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* streamed for free from ] |
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* - more examples made with Bounce Metronome Pro - a program which can apply phasing to rhythms. |
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{{music technology}} |
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