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− | crowd = chord | + | * '''triad:''' in music, a chord consisting of three notes → see [[every crowd has its several tones]] for further commentary on the musical allusions in this paragraph |
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− | trade = triad
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− | This appears in an allusion to music:
| + | [[Category: Music]] |
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− | "every crowd has its several tones and every trade has its clever mechanics and each harmonical has a point of its own, Olaf's on the rise and Ivor's on the lift and Sitric's place's between them"
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− | The triad is the rudiment of western harmony: three notes forming a chord, consisting of a first, a third (flat or natural, i.e., major or minor), and a fifth (natural/perfect, augmented, or diminished).
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− | Apparently, Ivor = the first, Sitric (a name containing "tri") = the third, and Olaf = the fifth: first-third-fifth on a keyboard is, visually, left ("on the lift") middle ("place is between them") and right ("on the rise").
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− | Intriguingly, placed in that order, Ivor-Sitric-Olaf creates the acronym "ISO."
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− | ISO my refer to Isolde. The myth of Tristan and Isolde is frequently referred to in Wake (e.g., page one: Tristram). And . . .
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− | Perhaps the most famous chord in music, at least in Joyce's time, was the so-called "Tristan chord" -- the first chord in Wagner's opera "Tristan and Isolde". (To verify its fame, see http://www.answers.com/%22Tristan%20chord%22 )
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− | Perhaps in response to the "Tristan chord", Joyce here creates an "Iso" chord.
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