Definition of harmolodics in English:
harmolodics
plural nounˌhaːməˈlɒdɪksˌhärməˈlädiks
treated as singular A form of free jazz in which musicians improvise simultaneously on a melodic line at various pitches.
Example sentencesExamples
- Despite this, the sheer volume of sound serves as a uniting force and in some ways it seems to suggest a sort of free jazz guitar version of Ornette Coleman harmolodics.
- The latters skewed Delta Blues harmolodics are evoked in ‘Somewhere in the East’, where a spot of retuning gives the guitar a sour, oud like sound (even though the melody hints at ‘Strangers in the Night’).
- Despite the commercial viability of both genres, he has had no desire to replicate harmolodics any more than straightforward bebop.
Derivatives
adjective
The album concludes with ‘Count-Off,’ a swinging harmolodic ditty with Mitchell featured on tenor, paying apparent homage to Ornette Coleman.
Example sentencesExamples
- Threadgill used two (!) tubas in an earlier group, Very Very Circus, often combining them with two electric guitars for some delightfully ragged harmolodic funk.
- The harmolodic rough n’ tumble of ‘Uten Forbindelse’ leaves the strings behind for cut and thrust avant bebop, with Seim whipping out his claraphone (a tenor sax with bass clarinet mouthpiece).
- Essentially, the tenets of his harmolodic theory was the elimination of bar lines and a set harmonic progression.
- Throughout the album, traditional song structures are forsaken for acreage of Hagerty's bleating, harmolodic guitar, neck-snapping male/female vocal tag-teams, and frantic, inscrutable lyrics I couldn't even hope to transcribe.
Origin
1970s: coined by the American saxophonist Ornette Coleman (born 1930) and said to be a blend of harmony, movement, and melodic.