tonal balance - определение. Что такое tonal balance
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Что (кто) такое tonal balance - определение

ARRANGEMENTS OF PITCHES OR CHORDS TO INDUCE A HIERARCHY OF PERCEIVED RELATIONS, STABILITIES, AND ATTRACTIONS
Tonal music; Tonal theory; Functional tonality; Extended tonality; Major-minor tonality; Diatonic tonality; Tonal harmony; Tonal Music
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  • The tonic feels more or less natural after each note of, for example, Mozart's ''The Magic Flute''

Color balance         
  • South Arm]], [[Tasmania]], Australia. The white balance has been adjusted towards the warm side for creative effect.
  • Photograph of a [[ColorChecker]] as a reference shot for color balance adjustments.
  • Example of color balancing
  • Two photos of a high-rise building shot within a minute of each other with an entry-level point-and-shoot camera. Left photo shows a "normal", more accurate color balance, while the right side shows a "vivid" color balance, in-camera effects and no post-production besides black background.
  • A white-balanced image of Mount Sharp (Aeolis Mons) on Mars
  • Mount Sharp (Aeolis Mons)]] on [[Mars]]
ADJUSTMENT OF THE INTENSITIES OF THE COLORS
White balance; Colour balance; White Balance; White balancing; Gray balance; Whitebalance; Auto white balance; Auto White Balance; Automatic White Balance
In photography and image processing, color balance is the global adjustment of the intensities of the colors (typically red, green, and blue primary colors). An important goal of this adjustment is to render specific colors – particularly neutral colors like white or grey – correctly.
Balance bicycle         
  • 1820}})
  • Toddler on metal balance bike
TRAINING BICYCLE FOR CHILDREN
Balance bike; Run bike; Wooden balance bike
A balance bicycle, run bike or no pedal bike or dandy horse is a training bicycle that helps children learn balance and steering. It has no foot pedals, no drivetrain, no chain, no gears, no gear shifters, no derailleurs, and no freewheel.
Balance wheel         
  • Balance wheel in a 1950s alarm clock, the Apollo, by Lux Mfg. Co. showing the balance spring (1) and regulator (2)
  • Early balance wheel with spring in an 18th-century French watch
  • ETA]] 1280 movement from a Benrus Co. watch made in the 1950s
  • Modern balance wheel in a watch movement
  • Marine chronometer balance wheels from the mid-1800s, with various 'auxiliary compensation' systems to reduce middle temperature error
  • Perhaps the earliest existing drawing of a balance wheel, in [[Giovanni de Dondi]]'s [[astronomical clock]], built 1364, Padua, Italy. The balance wheel (crown shape, top) had a beat of 2 seconds.  Tracing of an [https://books.google.com/books?id=o8Nb5KLBxVQC&dq=balance+wheel&pg=PA106 illustration] from his 1364 clock treatise, ''Il Tractatus Astrarii''.
  •  Bimetallic temperature-compensated balance wheel, from an early 1900s pocket watch. 17 mm dia. (1) Moving opposing pairs of weights closer to the ends of the arms increases temperature compensation. (2) Unscrewing pairs of weights near the spokes slows the oscillation rate. Adjusting a single weight changes the poise, or balance.
  • Foliot ''(horizontal bar with weights)'' from De Vick clock, built 1379, Paris
MECHANISM IN CLOCKS
Compensation balance; Auxiliary temperature compensation; Compensation-Balance
·- A wheel which imparts regularity to the movements of any engine or machine; a fly wheel.
II. Balance wheel ·- A wheel which regulates the beats or pulses of a watch or chronometer, answering to the pendulum of a clock;
- often called simply a balance.
III. Balance wheel ·- A ratchet-shaped scape wheel, which in some watches is acted upon by the axis of the balance wheel proper (in those watches called a balance).

Википедия

Tonality

Tonality is the arrangement of pitches and/or chords of a musical work in a hierarchy of perceived relations, stabilities, attractions and directionality. In this hierarchy, the single pitch or triadic chord with the greatest stability is called the tonic. The root of the tonic chord forms the name given to the key, so in the key of C major, the note C can be both the tonic of the scale and the root of the tonic chord (when it is C–E–G). The tonic can be a different note in the same scale, when the work is said to be in one of the modes of the scale.

Simple folk music songs often start and end with the tonic note. The most common use of the term "is to designate the arrangement of musical phenomena around a referential tonic in European music from about 1600 to about 1910". Contemporary classical music from 1910 to the 2000s may practice or avoid any sort of tonality—but harmony in almost all Western popular music remains tonal. Harmony in jazz includes many but not all tonal characteristics of the European common practice period, usually known as "classical music".

"All harmonic idioms in popular music are tonal, and none is without function." Tonality is an organized system of tones (e.g., the tones of a major or minor scale) in which one tone (the tonic) becomes the central point for the remaining tones. The other tones in a tonal piece are all defined in terms of their relationship to the tonic. In tonality, the tonic (tonal center) is the tone of complete relaxation and stability, the target toward which other tones lead. The cadence (a rest point) in which the dominant chord or dominant seventh chord resolves to the tonic chord plays an important role in establishing the tonality of a piece. "Tonal music is music that is unified and dimensional. Music is unified if it is exhaustively referable to a precompositional system generated by a single constructive principle derived from a basic scale-type; it is dimensional if it can nonetheless be distinguished from that precompositional ordering".

The term tonalité originated with Alexandre-Étienne Choron and was borrowed by François-Joseph Fétis in 1840. According to Carl Dahlhaus, however, the term tonalité was only coined by Castil-Blaze in 1821. Although Fétis used it as a general term for a system of musical organization and spoke of types de tonalités rather than a single system, today the term is most often used to refer to major–minor tonality, the system of musical organization of the common practice period. Major-minor tonality is also called harmonic tonality (in the title of Carl Dahlhaus, translating the German harmonische Tonalität), diatonic tonality, common practice tonality, functional tonality, or just tonality.