In music, the 'northern lights' chord is an eleven-note chord from Ernst Krenek's Cantata for Wartime (1943), that represents the Northern Lights. Krenek's student Robert Erickson cited the chord as an example of a texture arranged so as to "closely approach the single-object status of fused-ensemble timbres, for example, the beautiful 'northern lights'...chord, in a very interesting distribution of pitches, produces a fused sound supported by a suspended cymbal roll".[1] "The 'northern lights' sounds, so icy and impersonal and menacing, are a brilliant orchestral invention."[2]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Northern_Lights_chord.png/220px-Northern_Lights_chord.png)
At eleven notes the chord is one pitch shy of the total chromatic. Every note except E is sounded.
References
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