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In music, especially Schenkerian analysis, a voice exchange (German: Stimmtausch; also called voice interchange) is the repetition of a contrapuntal passage with the voices' parts exchanged; for instance, the melody of one part appears in a second part and vice versa. It differs from invertible counterpoint in that there is no octave displacement; therefore it always involves some voice crossing. If scored for equal instruments or voices, it may be indistinguishable from a repeat, although because a repeat does not appear in any of the parts, it may make the music more interesting for the musicians. It is a characteristic feature of rounds, although not usually called such.
Patterns of voice exchange are sometimes schematized using letters for melodic patterns. A double voice exchange has the pattern:
Voice 1: a b Voice 2: b a
A triple exchange would thus be written:
Voice 1: a b c Voice 2: c a b Voice 3: b c a
The first use of the term "Stimmtausch" was in 1903-4 in an article by Friedrich Ludwig, while its English calque was first used in 1949 by Jacques Handschin. The term is also used, with a related but distinct meaning, in Schenkerian theory.
"When a piece is entirely conceived according to the system of Stimmtausch, it belongs to the rondellus type."