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Topic: Clausula


  
  CLAUSULA
Clausula is a professional group of musical artists performing on instruments as widely-varied as piano, organ, flute, accordion, electronics of various types, household objects, and more.
They perform music from a wide variety of music styles, sometimes improvised and sometimes "written-out", all inspired by ancient and baroque through 21st century Western and other world musics, freely mixing the art of improvisation with more 'statically' written-out inspirations and traditions.
The word 'clausula' refers to a style of music originating in the 12th and 13th centuries which took older sources of music and fitted them with further musical elaboration.
www.clausula.org   (147 words)

  
  The Clausula Vera
The clausula vera had much the same function as the cadence in common-practice music
All compositions ended with a clausula vera, and it was used at the ends of all phrases
The clausula vera is almost always preceded by a suspension (7-6 or 2-3)
www.robertkelleyphd.com /clausula.htm   (245 words)

  
  Western Music - Motet   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The term clausula refers to a grammatical close and, by estension, to a prose or musical phrase (a "clause").
Clausula in the Notre Dame manuscripts are sections of polyphonic music in modal rhythm that contrasted with their surrounding sections, which were typically monophonic or organum purum.
They were written down in separate manuscripts, which also contributed to their exapnsion in size (frequently necessitating the repetition of the tenor, which anticipates the technique of isorhythm) and led to their becoming separate compositions.
www.uky.edu /~ldnels00/exams/motet.html   (383 words)

  
 Clausula
A clausula is a dyadic or intervallic, rather than chordal or harmonic, cadence.
Instead, the half step was avoided in clausulas because it lacked clarity as an interval." Beginning in the 13th century cadences begin to require motion in one voice by half step and the other a whole step in contrary motion.
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www.mp3.fm /Clausula.htm   (446 words)

  
 Clausula rebus sic stantibus
These circumstances can consist either in a material breach of a given treaty by one of the States Parties (Article 60), in a permanent disappearance of an object indispensable for the execution of the treaty (Article 61) or in a fundamental change of circumstances (Article 62,
clausula rebus sic stantibus understood in a narrow sense).
A fundamental change of circumstances can also occur in the case of the outbreak of hostilities between the States Parties (see Article 73).
www.walter.gehr.net /rebusstantibus.html   (257 words)

  
 Dionysios P. Flambouras
clausula rebus sic stantibus in the 1980 Vienna Convention
Clausula Rebus Sic Stantibus and Related Theories: Economic Impossibility,
Since the majority opinion considers that the mentioned events are not within the scope of CISG Article 79, it is apparent that the CISG does not adopt the clausula rebus sic stantibus doctrine [61] under which the validity of a contract depends upon the continuance of the surrounding circumstances at the time of its formation.
www.cisg.law.pace.edu /cisg/biblio/flambouras1.html   (9913 words)

  
 Definition of clausula - Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
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m-w.com /dictionary/clausula   (31 words)

  
 clausula - Definitions from Dictionary.com
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
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