
thumb|350px|This melody for the traditional song "Pop Goes the Weasel" is monophonic as long as it is performed without chordal [[accompaniment. ]]
thumb|350px|This melody for the traditional song "Pop Goes the Weasel" is monophonic as long as it is performed without chordal [[accompaniment. ]]
In music, monophony is the simplest of musical textures, consisting of a melody (or "tune"), typically sung by a single singer or played by a single instrument player (e.g., a flute player) without accompanying harmony or chords. Many folk songs and traditional songs are monophonic. A melody is also considered to be monophonic if a group of singers (e.g., a choir) sings the same melody together at the unison (exactly the same pitch) or with the same melody notes duplicated at the octave (such as when men and women sing together). If an entire melody is played by two or more instruments or sung by a choir with a fixed interval, such as a perfect fifth, it is also said to be monophony (or "monophonic"). The musical texture of a song or musical piece is determined by assessing whether varying components are used, such as an accompaniment part or polyphonic melody lines (two or more independent lines).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).