1 \input texinfo @c -*- coding: utf-8; mode: texinfo; -*-
2 @setfilename music-glosssary.info
3 @settitle Music Glossary
4 @documentencoding UTF-8
11 @c see lilypond.tely for info installation note
14 * Glossary: (lilypond/music-glossary). Glossary of music terms.
24 This document is also available in
25 @uref{source/Documentation/user/music-glossary.pdf,PDF}
26 and as @uref{source/Documentation/user/music-glossary-big-page.html,one big page}.
31 @author Christian Mondrup @c Original author of LilyPond glossary
33 @author François Pinard @c Original glossary of GNU music project,
35 @author Mats Bengtsson @c Swedish glossary
36 @author David González @c Spanish glossary
37 @author Bjoern Jacke @c German glossary
38 @author Neil Jerram @c English glossary translations
39 @author Heikki Junes @c Finnish glossary
40 @author Kurtis Kroon @c English glossary maintenance, beg. Oct. 2007
41 @author Adrian Mariano @c Italian glossary
42 @author Han-Wen Nienhuys @c Dutch glossary
43 @author Jan Nieuwenhuizen @c Dutch glossary
45 @c Fixes by Jean-Pierre Coulon and `Dirk', alphabetized by last name, KK, 10/07
46 @c Updates to the German translation by Till Rettig, 12/07
48 Copyright @copyright{} 1999--2008 by the authors
50 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
51 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
52 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation,
53 without Invariant Sections.
58 @c TODO: multiple omfcreators?
60 @omfcreator Christian Mondrup, Kurt Kroon
61 @omfdescription Glossary of musical terms with translations
63 @omfcategory Applications|Publishing
70 This glossary was brought you by
72 @multitable {Jan Nieuwenhuizen} {Original glossary of GNU music project, French glossary,}
73 @item Adrian Mariano @tab Italian glossary,
74 @item Bjoern Jacke @tab German glossary,
75 @item Christian Mondrup @tab Original author of LilyPond glossary, Danish glossary,
76 @item David González @tab Spanish glossary,
77 @item François Pinard @tab Original glossary of GNU music project, French glossary,
78 @item Han-Wen Nienhuys @tab Dutch glossary,
79 @item Heikki Junes @tab Finnish glossary translations,
80 @item Jan Nieuwenhuizen @tab Dutch glossary,
81 @item Kurtis Kroon @tab English glossary,
82 @item Mats Bengtsson @tab Swedish glossary,
83 @item Neil Jerram @tab English glossary translations.
86 Copyright 1999--2008 by the authors
88 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
89 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
90 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation,
91 without Invariant Sections.
97 @c @everyheading @| @thispage @|
98 @c @evenheading @thispage @| @|
99 @c @oddheading @| @| @thispage @|
101 This is the Music Glossary (MG) for GNU LilyPond version @version{}.
102 For more information about how this fits with the other
103 documentation, see @rlearning{About the documentation}.
110 @w{@expansion{}@strong{\word\}}@c
113 @expansion{}@ref{\word\, @strong{\word\}}@c
118 * Musical terms A-Z::
119 * Duration names notes and rests::
123 @node Musical terms A-Z
124 @chapter Musical terms A-Z
126 Languages in this order.
128 @item UK - British English (where it differs from American English)
155 * ancient minor scale::
160 * ascending interval::
162 * augmented interval::
198 * compound interval::
202 * conjunct movement::
216 * descending interval::
219 * diminished interval::
223 * disjunct movement::
225 * dissonant interval::
229 * dominant ninth chord::
230 * dominant seventh chord::
232 * dot (augmentation dot)::
234 * double appoggiatura::
236 * double dotted note::
239 * double time signature::
246 * ecclesiastical mode::
253 * equal temperament::
274 * functional harmony::
294 * inverted interval::
309 * long appoggiatura::
315 * meantone temperament::
322 * mensural notation::
326 * metronomic indication::
339 * multi-measure rest::
369 * polymetric time signature::
374 * Pythagorean comma::
404 * sixty-fourth note::
405 * sixty-fourth rest::
436 * thirty-second note::
437 * thirty-second rest::
444 * transposing instrument::
499 Abbreviated @notation{a2} or @notation{a 2}.
503 @item An indication in orchestral scores that a single part notated on a single
504 staff that normally carries parts for two players (e.g. first and second oboes)
505 is to be played by both players.
507 @item Or conversely, that two pitches or parts notated on a staff that normally
508 carries a single part (e.g. first violin) are to be played by different players,
509 or groups of players (@q{desks}).
523 F: accelerando, en accélérant,
524 D: accelerando, schneller werden,
528 FI: accelerando, kiihdyttäen.
530 [Italian: @q{speed up, accelerate}.]
545 FI: aksentti, korostus.
547 The stress of one tone over others.
559 @section acciaccatura
561 A grace note which takes its time from the rest or note preceding the
562 principal note to which it is attached. The acciaccatura is drawn as a
563 small eighth note (quaver) with a line drawn through the flag and
568 @ref{appoggiatura}, @ref{grace notes}, @ref{ornament}.
574 ES: alteración accidental,
576 F: altération accidentelle,
577 D: Versetzungszeichen, Akzidenz,
578 NL: toevallig (verplaatsings)teken,
580 S: tillfälligt förtecken,
581 FI: tilapäinen etumerkki.
583 An accidental has the effect of an @ref{alteration} of a note. A
584 sharp raises a tone by a @ref{semitone}, a double sharp raises it by a
585 @ref{whole tone}, a flat lowers it by a semitone and a double flat
586 lowers it by a whole tone. A natural cancels the effect of a previous
587 accidental, or a sharp or flat in the key signature.
589 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
590 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
592 \context Staff \relative c'' {
593 \set Staff.extraNatural = ##f
594 gisis1 gis g! ges geses
597 \override Lyrics .LyricText #'self-alignment-X = #-1
598 "db. sharp" sharp natural flat "db. flat"
614 FI: adagio, hitaasti.
616 [Italian: @q{comfortable, easy}.]
620 @item Slow tempo, slower -- especially in even meter -- than
621 @ref{andante} and faster than @ref{largo}.
623 @item A movement in slow tempo, especially the second (slow) movement
624 of @ref{sonata}s, symphonies, etc.
641 [Italian: @q{to nothing}.] Used with @notation{decrescendo} to indicate
642 that the sound should fade away to nothing.
644 @notation{Al niente} is indicated by circling the tip of the hairpin:
646 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
648 \override Hairpin #'circled-tip = ##t
655 or with the actual phrase @notation{al niente}. This may be easier with
656 text markup, rather than as part of the @notation{decrescendo} text:
658 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
663 c\!-\markup { \italic "al niente" }
667 Since one does not crescendo @emph{to} nothing, it is not correct to use
668 @notation{al niente} with the word @notation{crescendo}. Instead, one
669 should use @emph{dal niente} (@notation{@b{from} nothing}).
673 @ref{crescendo}, @ref{decrescendo}, @ref{hairpin}.
682 D: Allegro, Schnell, Fröhlich, Lustig,
686 FI: allegro, nopeasti.
688 [Italian: cheerful.] Quick tempo. Also used as a title for pieces in a quick
689 tempo, especially the first and last movements of a @ref{sonata}.
699 NL: verhoging of verlaging,
704 An alteration is the modification, raising or lowering, of a note's
705 pitch. It is established by an @ref{accidental}.
718 FI: altto, matala naisääni.
720 A female voice of low range (@emph{contralto}). Originally the alto
721 was a high male voice (hence the name), which by the use of falsetto
722 reached the height of the female voice. This type of voice is also
723 known as @ref{countertenor}.
729 ES: clave de do en tercera,
730 I: chiave di contralto,
731 F: clef d'ut troisième ligne,
732 D: Altschlüssel, Bratschenschlüssel,
738 C clef setting middle C on the middle line of the staff.
755 FI: ambitus, ääniala, soitinala.
757 [Latin: past participle of @emph{ambire}, @q{to go around}; plural: ambitus]
758 Denotes a range of pitches for a given voice in a part of music. It may
759 also denote the pitch range that a musical instrument is capable of playing.
760 Sometimes anglicized to @emph{ambit} (pl. @emph{ambits}).
775 An anacrusis (also known as pickup or upbeat) is an incomplete measure
776 of music before a section of music. It also refers to the initial
777 note(s) of a melody occurring in that incomplete measure.
781 @ref{measure}, @ref{meter}.
783 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
787 \partial 4 f4 | bes4. a8 bes4 c |
788 bes( a) g f | bes4. a8 bes4 c | f,2. \bar "||" }
792 @node ancient minor scale
793 @section ancient minor scale
795 ES: escala menor natural,
796 I: scala minore naturale,
797 F: forme du mode mineur ancien, troisème mode, mode hellénique,
798 D: reines Moll, natürliches Moll,
799 NL: authentieke mineurtoonladder,
802 FI: luonnollinen molliasteikko.
804 Also called @q{natural minor scale}.
806 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
807 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
814 @ref{diatonic scale}.
829 Walking tempo/character.
833 @section appoggiatura
837 F: appoggiature, (port de voix),
838 D: Vorschlag, Vorhalt
842 FI: appoggiatura, etuhele.
844 Ornamental note, usually a second, that is melodically connected with
845 the main note following it. In music before the 19th century
846 appoggiature were usually performed on the beat, after that mostly
847 before the beat. While the short appoggiatura is performed as a short
848 note regardless of the duration of the main note the duration of the
849 long appoggiatura is proportional to that of the main note.
851 @lilypond[line-width=13.0\cm]
852 \context Voice \relative c'' {
856 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
857 <d a fis>4_"notation" r
858 { \override Stem #'flag-style = #'()
860 \revert Stem #'flag-style
863 { \override Stem #'flag-style = #'()
865 \revert Stem #'flag-style
868 \cadenzaOn a4 \bar "||" \cadenzaOff
870 <d, a fis>4_"performance" r g16 ( fis) e fis a ( g) fis g |
871 \cadenzaOn a4 \bar "||" \cadenzaOff
875 An appoggiatura may have more notes preceding the main note.
877 @lilypond[line-width=13.0\cm]
881 % \override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
882 \grace { bes16 } as8_"notation" as16 bes as8 g |
883 \grace { as16[( bes] } < c as >4-)
884 \grace { as16[( bes] } < c as >4-) \bar "||"
885 \grace { bes16 } as8_"performance" as16 bes as8 g |
886 << \context Voice = va { \stemUp\tieUp as32 bes c8. as32 bes c8. }
887 \context Voice = vb { \stemDown\tieDown as16 ~ as8. as16 ~ as8. } >>
899 D: Arpeggio, Akkordbrechungen, gebro@-chener Akkord,
901 DK: arpeggio, akkordbrydning,
903 FI: arpeggio, murtosointu.
905 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
906 \context PianoStaff <<
907 \context Staff = SA \relative c'' {
910 r8 g16 c e g, c e r8 g,16 c e g, c e |
911 r8 a,16 d f a, d f r8 a,16 d f a, d f \bar "||" }
912 \context Staff = SB \relative c' {
914 << \context Voice = va {
916 r16 e8. ( e4) r16 e8. ( e4) |
917 r16 d8. ( d4) r16 d8. ( d4) }
918 \context Voice = vb {
927 @section articulation
936 FI: artikulaatio, ilmaisu.
938 Articulation refers to notation which indicates how a note or notes
939 should be played. Slurs, accents, staccato, and legato are all
940 examples of articulation.
943 @node ascending interval
944 @section ascending interval
946 ES: intervalo ascendente,
947 I: intervallo ascendente,
948 F: intervalle ascendant,
949 D: steigendes Intervall,
950 NL: stijgend interval,
951 DK: stigende interval,
952 S: stigande intervall,
953 FI: nouseva intervalli.
955 A distance between a starting lower note and a higher ending note.
958 @node augmented interval
959 @section augmented interval
961 ES: intervalo aumentado,
962 I: intervallo aumentato,
963 F: intervalle augmenté,
964 D: übermäßiges Intervall,
965 NL: overmatig interval,
966 DK: forstørret interval,
967 S: överstigande intervall,
968 FI: ylinouseva intervalli.
976 @section augmentation
987 @c TODO: add definition.
989 This is a placeholder for augmentation (wrt mensural notation).
993 @ref{diminution}, @ref{mensural notation}.
1001 F: manuscrit, autographe
1002 D: Autograph, Handschrift,
1004 DK: håndskrift, autograf,
1006 FI: käsinkirjoitettu nuotti.
1010 @item A manuscript written in the composer's own hand.
1012 @item Music prepared for photoreproduction by freehand drawing, with
1013 the aid of a straightedge ruler and T-square only, which attempts to
1014 emulate engraving. This required more skill than did engraving.
1035 @ref{H}, @ref{Pitch names}
1057 ES: barra, línea divisoria,
1058 I: stanghetta, barra (di divisione),
1059 F: barre (de mesure),
1077 FI: baritoni, keskikorkuinen miesääni.
1079 The male voice intermediate between the @ref{bass} and the
1082 @c F: clef de troisième ligne dropped
1086 @section baritone clef
1088 ES: clave de fa en tercera,
1089 I: chiave di baritono,
1090 F: clef d' Ut cinquième ligne, clef de Fa troisième,
1091 D: Baritonschlüssel,
1097 C or F clef setting middle C on the upper staff line.
1101 @ref{C clef}, @ref{F clef}.
1114 FI: basso, matala miesääni.
1118 @item The lowest male voice.
1120 @item Sometimes, especially in jazz music, used as an abbreviation for
1133 ES: clave de fa en cuarta,
1135 F: clef de fa quatrième ligne,
1142 A clef setting with middle C on the first top ledger line.
1161 Line connecting a series of notes (shorter than a quarter note). The
1162 number of beams determines the note value of the connected notes.
1164 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
1165 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
1166 %\override TextScript #'font-style = #'large
1168 g8_"1/8"[ g g g] s16
1169 g16_"1/16"[ g g g] s16
1170 g32_"1/32"[ s32 g32 s32 g32 s32 g32] s16
1171 g64_"1/64"[ s32 g64 s32 g64 s32 g64] s32 }
1176 @ref{feathered beam}.
1182 ES: tiempo, parte (de compás)
1185 D: Takt, Taktschlag, Zeit (im Takt),
1191 Note value used for counting, most often half-, fourth-, and eighth
1192 notes. The base counting value and the number of them per measure is
1193 indicated at the start of the music.
1195 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
1198 \relative c'' { g4 c b a | g1 \bar "||"}
1200 \relative c'' { g8 d' c | b c a | g4. \bar "||"}
1205 @section beat repeat
1209 @ref{percent repeat}.
1223 ES: llave, corchete,
1226 D: Klammer, Akkolade,
1227 NL: accolade, teksthaak,
1230 FI: yhdistävä sulkumerkki.
1232 Symbol at the start of a system connecting staves.
1234 Curly braces are used for connecting piano staves, and sometimes for connecting
1235 the staves of like instruments in an orchestral score when written on different
1236 staves (e.g. first and second flutes):
1238 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
1239 \context GrandStaff <<
1240 \relative c''\context Staff = SA { \clef treble g4 e c2 }
1241 \relative c \context Staff = SB { \clef bass c1 \bar "|." } >>
1244 Angular brackets for connecting parts in an orchestral or choral score:
1246 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
1247 \context StaffGroup <<
1248 % \set StaffGroup.minVerticalAlign = #12
1249 \relative c'' \context Staff = SA { \clef treble g4 e c2 }
1250 \relative c \context Staff = SB { \clef bass c1 \bar "|." } >>
1277 NL: koper (blazers),
1280 S: brassinstrument, mässingsinstrument,
1283 A family of blown musical instruments made of brass, all using a cup
1284 formed mouth piece. The brass instruments commonly used in a symphony
1285 orchestra are trumpet, trombone, french horn, and tube.
1289 @section breath mark
1294 D: Atemzeichen, Trennungszeichen,
1295 NL: repercussieteken,
1296 DK: vejrtrækningstegn,
1300 Indication of where to breathe in vocal and wind instrument parts.
1306 ES: cuadrada, breve,
1313 FI: brevis, kaksoiskokonuotti.
1315 Note value twice as long as a whole note. Mainly used in pre-1650 music.
1316 The shortest note value generally used in white mensural notation, hence the
1317 name, which originally meant @q{of short duration}.
1319 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
1320 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
1321 \relative c'' { g\breve }
1326 @ref{mensural notation}, @ref{note value}.
1360 Clef symbol indicating the position of the middle C. Used on all note
1363 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
1364 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
1365 \override Score.Clef #'full-size-change = ##t
1367 \context Staff \relative c' {
1369 \clef mezzosoprano c
1374 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
1375 \override Lyrics .LyricText #'self-alignment-X = #-1
1376 "Soprano " "Mezzosoprano " "Alto " "Tenor " Baritone
1392 FI: kadenssi, lopuke.
1396 @ref{harmonic cadence}, @ref{functional harmony}.
1409 FI: kadenssi, lopuke.
1411 An extended, improvisatory style section inserted near the end of
1412 movement. The purpose of a cadenza is to give singers or players a
1413 chance to exhibit their technical skill and -- not last -- their
1414 ability to improvise. Since the middle of the 19th century, however,
1415 most cadenzas have been written down by the composer.
1428 FI: kaanon, tarkka jäljittely.
1445 FI: sentti, puolisävelaskeleen sadasosa tasavireisessä
1446 viritysjärjestelmässä.
1448 Logarithmic unit of measurement. 1@tie{}cent is 1/1200 of an octave
1449 (1/100 of an equally tempered @ref{semitone}).
1453 @ref{equal temperament}.
1476 Three or more tones sounding simultaneously. In traditional European music
1477 the base chord is a @emph{triad} consisting of two thirds. @emph{Major}
1478 (major + minor third) as well as @emph{minor} (minor + major third) chords
1479 may be extended with more thirds. Four-tone @emph{seventh chords} and
1480 five-tone @emph{ninth} major chords are most often used as dominants
1481 (functional harmony). Chords having no third above the lower notes to
1482 define their mood are a special case called @q{open chords}. The lack of
1483 the middle third means their quality is ambivalent: neither major nor minor.
1485 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
1486 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
1487 %\override TextScript #'font-style = #'large
1489 \context Staff \relative c'' {
1490 \set Staff.extraNatural = ##f
1511 @ref{functional harmony}, @ref{interval}, @ref{inversion}, @ref{quality},
1515 @node chromatic scale
1516 @section chromatic scale
1518 ES: escala cromática,
1520 F: gamme chromatique,
1521 D: chro@-ma@-ti@-sche Tonleiter,
1522 NL: chromatische toonladder,
1523 DK: kromatisk skala,
1525 FI: kromaattinen asteikko.
1527 A scale consisting of all 12 @ref{semitone}s.
1529 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
1530 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
1531 \relative c' { c1 cis d dis e f fis g gis a ais b c }
1536 @section chromaticism
1547 Use of tones extraneous to a @ref{diatonic scale} (minor, major).
1551 @section church mode
1553 ES: modo eclesiástico,
1554 I: modo ecclesiastico,
1555 F: mode ecclésiastique,
1560 FI: moodi, kirkkosävellaji.
1564 @ref{diatonic scale}.
1573 D: Schlüssel, Notenschlüssel,
1577 FI: avain, nuottiavain.
1581 @ref{C clef}, @ref{F clef}, @ref{G clef}.
1583 The clef indicates which lines of the staff correspond to which
1584 pitches. The three clef symbols in common use are:
1586 @lilypond[ragged-right,quote]
1589 \line { "The Treble or G clef: " \musicglyph #"clefs.G" }
1590 \line { "The Bass or F clef: " \musicglyph #"clefs.F" }
1591 \line { "The Alto or C clef: " \musicglyph #"clefs.C" }
1596 Imagine a large staff of 11 lines centered on middle C, sometimes
1597 called a @q{grand staff}, with the bottom line representing low G and
1598 the top line high F:
1600 @lilypond[ragged-right,quote]
1603 %-- Treble Staff --%
1605 % Allow this staff to be placed close to the others
1606 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(-2 . 2)
1607 % Allow the treble clef to overlap the lower staves:
1608 % \override Staff.Clef #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1609 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f % No clef required
1611 s1^\markup { "g," \transparent "g" }
1612 s^ \markup { "b," \transparent "g" }
1613 s^ \markup { "d" \transparent "g" }
1614 s^ \markup { "f" \transparent "g" }
1615 s^ \markup { "a" \transparent "g" }
1616 s^ \markup { \with-color #red c' \transparent "g"}
1617 e'^\markup { "e'" \transparent "g" }
1618 g'^\markup { "g'" \transparent "g" }
1619 b'^\markup { "b'" \transparent "g" }
1620 d''^\markup { "d''" \transparent "g" }
1621 f''^\markup { "f ''" \transparent "g" }
1624 %-- Alto Staff reduced to a single line on middle C --%
1626 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'line-count = 1 % One line only
1627 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'color = #red % Coloured red
1628 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f % No clef required
1631 % Allow this staff to be placed close to the others
1632 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1633 % Specify height to give correct spacing between treble and bass staves
1634 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'Y-extent = #'(-1 . 1)
1636 s1 s s s s % Space along to align horizonatally
1637 \override NoteHead #'color = #red
1639 s1 s s s s s % Keep staff (ie the red line) showing
1643 % Allow this staff to be placed close to the others
1644 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(-3 . 2)
1645 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f % No clef required
1648 s s s s s s s % Keep staff showing
1652 % Reduce horizontal spacing so semibreves can be used without exceeding 1 line
1653 \context { \Score \override SpacingSpanner #'base-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1 1)
1655 % Reduce apparent vertical size of note heads to permit them to overlap other grobs vertically
1656 \context { \Score \override NoteHead #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1658 % Remove all barlines
1659 \context { \Score \override BarLine #'stencil = ##f
1661 % Remove time signature from all staves
1662 \context { \Staff \remove Time_signature_engraver
1668 Staves of five lines are usually used, and the clef superimposed on
1669 them indicates which five lines have been selected from this
1670 @samp{grand staff}. For example, the treble or G clef indicates that
1671 the top five lines have been selected:
1673 @lilypond[ragged-right,quote]
1676 %-- Treble Staff --%
1678 % Allow this staff to be placed close to the others
1679 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup
1680 #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1681 % Allow the treble clef to overlap the lower staves:
1682 % \override Staff.Clef #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1683 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f % No clef required here
1685 s1^\markup { "g," \transparent "g" }
1686 s^ \markup { "b," \transparent "g" }
1687 s^ \markup { "d" \transparent "g" }
1688 s^ \markup { "f" \transparent "g" }
1689 s^ \markup { "a" \transparent "g" }
1690 s^ \markup { \with-color #red c' \transparent "g"}
1691 \stopStaff \startStaff
1692 \clef "C" % Dummy to force next clef to be printed
1693 s % Need at least one note for \clef to take effect
1694 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##t % Clef now required
1695 \override Staff.Clef #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0) % Permit overlap
1697 e'^\markup { "e'" \transparent "g" }
1698 g'^\markup { "g'" \transparent "g" }
1699 b'^\markup { "b'" \transparent "g" }
1700 d''^\markup { "d''" \transparent "g" }
1701 f''^\markup { "f ''" \transparent "g" }
1703 %-- Alto Staff reduced to a single line on middle C --%
1705 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'line-count = 1 % One line only
1706 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'color = #red % Coloured red
1707 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f % No clef required
1710 % Allow this staff to be placed close to the others
1711 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup
1712 #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1713 % Specify height to give correct spacing between the staves
1714 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'Y-extent = #'(-1 . 1)
1716 s1 s s s s % Space along to align horizonatally
1717 \override NoteHead #'color = #red
1719 % s1 s s s s % Keep staff (ie the red line) showing
1723 % Allow this staff to be placed close to the others
1724 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup
1725 #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1726 \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f % No clef required
1729 % s s s s s s % Keep staff showing
1733 % Reduce horizontal spacing so semibreves can be used
1734 % without exceeding 1 line
1735 \context { \Score \override SpacingSpanner
1736 #'base-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1 1)
1738 % Reduce apparent vertical size of note heads to
1739 % permit them to overlap other grobs vertically
1740 \context { \Score \override NoteHead #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1742 % Remove all barlines
1743 \context { \Score \override BarLine #'stencil = ##f
1745 % Remove time signature from all staves
1746 \context { \Staff \remove Time_signature_engraver
1752 The @q{curl} of the G clef is centered on the line that represents the
1755 In the same way, the bass or F clef indicates that the bottom five
1756 lines have been selected from the @samp{grand staff}, and the alto or
1757 C clef indicates the middle five lines have been selected. This
1758 relationship is shown below, where the notes show an arpeggio on a C
1761 @lilypond[ragged-right,quote]
1764 %-- Treble Staff --%
1765 \new Staff = "G" \with {
1766 \remove Time_signature_engraver
1769 % The following two overrides are required to make the two middle C's overlap
1770 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1771 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'Y-extent = #'(-2 . 2)
1773 \override Staff.Clef #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1775 s1 s s s s e' g' c''
1778 \new Staff = "C" \with {
1779 \remove Time_signature_engraver
1782 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'line-count = 1
1783 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'stencil = ##f
1784 \once \override Staff.Clef #'stencil = ##f
1785 \clef "G" % A frig. This clef is invisible; use G to force the later C clef to be shown
1786 \override Score.BarLine #'stencil = ##f
1788 % The following two overrides are required to align the C staff to the G and F staves
1789 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1790 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'Y-extent = #'(-1 . 1)
1793 \stopStaff \startStaff
1794 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'Y-extent = #'(-1 . 1)
1795 \revert Staff.StaffSymbol #'stencil
1796 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'color = #red
1797 b'1 % A frig. This really shows as a middle C in the score
1799 \stopStaff \startStaff
1800 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'line-count = 5
1801 \override Staff.StaffSymbol #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1802 \override Staff.Clef #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1803 \revert Staff.StaffSymbol #'color
1804 \stopStaff \startStaff
1806 s1 s s c e g c' e' g' c''
1809 \new Staff = "F" \with {
1810 \remove Time_signature_engraver
1813 \override Staff.Clef #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1814 % The following two overrides are required to make the two middle C's overlap
1815 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1816 \override Staff.VerticalAxisGroup #'Y-extent = #'(-2 . 2)
1824 \Score \override SpacingSpanner #'base-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 2 1)
1827 \Score \override NoteHead #'Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1830 \Score \override NoteHead #'minimum-Y-extent = #'(0 . 0)
1847 FI: klusteri, cluster.
1849 A @emph{cluster} is a range of simultaneously sounding pitches that
1850 may change over time. The set of available pitches to apply usually
1851 depends on the acoustic source. Thus, in piano music, a cluster
1852 typically consists of a continuous range of the semitones as provided
1853 by the piano's fixed set of a chromatic scale. In choral music, each
1854 singer of the choir typically may sing an arbitrary pitch within the
1855 cluster's range that is not bound to any diatonic, chromatic or other
1856 scale. In electronic music, a cluster (theoretically) may even cover
1857 a continuous range of pitches, thus resulting in colored noise, such
1860 Clusters can be denoted in the context of ordinary staff notation by
1861 engraving simple geometrical shapes that replace ordinary notation of
1862 notes. Ordinary notes as musical events specify starting time and
1863 duration of pitches; however, the duration of a note is expressed by
1864 the shape of the note head rather than by the horizontal graphical
1865 extent of the note symbol. In contrast, the shape of a cluster
1866 geometrically describes the development of a range of pitches
1867 (vertical extent) over time (horizontal extent). Still, the
1868 geometrical shape of a cluster covers the area in which any single
1869 pitch contained in the cluster would be notated as an ordinary note.
1871 @lilypond[fragment,relative=2,ragged-right]
1872 \makeClusters { <c e> <b f'> <b g'> <c g> <f e> }
1886 FI: komma, korvinkuultava ero äänenkorkeudessa.
1888 Difference in pitch between a note derived from pure tuning and the
1889 same note derived from some other tuning method.
1893 @ref{didymic comma}, @ref{Pythagorean comma}, @ref{syntonic comma},
1898 @section common meter
1908 @section common time
1919 4/4 time. The symbol, which resembles a capital letter C, derives from
1924 @ref{mensural notation}, @ref{meter}.
1930 ES: intervalo invertido,
1932 F: intervalle complémentaire,
1933 D: Komplementärintervall,
1934 NL: complementair interval,
1935 DK: komplementærinterval,
1936 S: komplementärintervall (?),
1937 FI: täydentävä intervalli.
1941 @ref{inverted interval}.
1944 @node compound interval
1945 @section compound interval
1947 ES: intervalo compuesto,
1948 I: intervallo composto,
1949 F: intervalle composé,
1950 D: weites Intervall,
1951 NL: samengesteld interval,
1952 DK: sammensat interval,
1953 S: sammansatt intervall,
1954 FI: oktaavia laajempi intervalli.
1956 Intervals larger than an octave.
1963 @node compound meter
1964 @section compound meter
1966 ES: compás compuesto, compás de subdivisión ternaria,
1975 A meter that includes a triplet subdivision within the beat, such as
1980 @ref{meter}, @ref{simple meter}.
1984 @section compound time
1986 ES: compás compuesto, compás de amalgama (def. 2),
1998 A meter that includes a triplet subdivision within the beat: see
1999 @ref{compound meter}.
2002 A time signature that additively combines two or more unequal meters, e.g.
2003 "3/8 + 2/8" instead of "5/8". Sometimes called additive time signatures.
2005 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
2006 #(define (compound-time grob one two three num)
2008 (ly:grob-layout grob)
2009 '(((baseline-skip . 2)
2011 (font-family . number)))
2013 #:line ( #:column (one) "+" #:column (two num) "+" #:column (three)))))
2017 #(set-time-signature 8 8 '(3 2 3))
2018 \override Staff.TimeSignature #'stencil
2019 = #(lambda (grob) (compound-time grob "3" "2" "3" "8"))
2020 #(override-auto-beam-setting '(end 1 8 8 8) 3 8)
2021 #(override-auto-beam-setting '(end 1 8 8 8) 5 8)
2022 \set Staff.beatGrouping = #'(3 2 3)
2024 c8 d e f4 d8 c bes | c4 g'8 e c f4. \bar "||"
2032 @ref{compound meter}, @ref{meter}.
2036 @section concert pitch
2038 ES: en Do, afinación de concierto,
2047 The pitch at which the piano and other nontransposing instruments play: such
2048 instruments are said to be @q{in C}. The following list includes some (but not
2049 all) instruments that play in concert pitch:
2063 @item tenor trombone
2078 The trombones are a special case: although they are said to be @q{in F} (alto or
2079 bass) or @q{in B-flat} (tenor), this refers to their fundamental note, not to
2080 their parts' transposition. (In fact, the trombones' parts are written at
2081 concert pitch with an appropriate clef -- alto, tenor or bass.) This differs
2082 from other instruments @q{in F}, @q{in B-flat}, and so on, which are transposing
2085 Instruments that play @q{in C} but in a different octave than what is written
2086 are, technically speaking, @emph{transposing instruments}:
2090 @item piccolo (plays an octave higher)
2091 @item celesta (plays an octave higher)
2092 @item double-bass (plays an octave lower)
2098 @ref{transposing instrument}.
2101 @node conjunct movement
2102 @section conjunct movement
2104 ES: movimiento conjunto,
2106 F: mouvement conjoint,
2107 D: schritt@-weise, stufenweise Bewegung,
2108 NL: stapsgewijze, trapsgewijze beweging,
2109 DK: trinvis bevægelse,
2111 FI: asteittainen liike.
2113 Progressing melodically by intervals of a second. The opposite of a
2114 @ref{disjunct movement}.
2116 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
2117 \key g \major \time 4/4
2118 \relative c'' { g4 g g a | b2 a | g4 b a a | g1 \bar "||" }
2132 FI: konsonanssi, sopusointi.
2157 @section copying music
2159 A music copyist did fast freehand scores and parts on preprinted staff
2160 lines for performance. Some of their conventions (e.g., the placement
2161 of note heads on stems) varied slightly from those of engravers. Some
2162 of their working methods were superior and could well be adopted by
2165 @c Copying music required more skill than engraving. Flagged for NPOV
2169 @section counterpoint
2178 FI: kontrapunkti, ääni ääntä vastaan.
2180 From Latin @emph{punctus contra punctum}, note against note. The
2181 combination into a single musical fabric of lines or parts which have
2182 distinct melodic significance. A frequently used polyphonic technique
2183 is imitation, in its strictest form found in the canon needing only
2184 one part to be written down while the other parts are performed with a
2185 given displacement. Imitation is also the contrapunctal technique
2186 used in the @emph{fugue} which, since the music of the baroque era,
2187 has been one of the most popular polyphonic composition methods.
2189 @lilypond[fragment,staffsize=12,line-width=13.0\cm]
2190 \set Score.implicitTimeSignatureVisibility = #all-invisible
2191 \override Score.TimeSignature #'break-visibility = #all-invisible
2192 \context PianoStaff <<
2193 \context Staff = SA \relative c' {
2197 << \context Voice = rha {
2199 r1 | r2 r8 g'8 bes d, |
2200 cis4 d r8 e!16 f g8 f16 e |
2201 f8 g16 a bes8 a16 g a8
2203 \context Voice = rhb {
2209 \context Staff = SB \relative c' {
2212 << \context Voice = lha {
2214 r8 d es g, fis4 g | r8 a16 bes c8 bes16 a bes4 g |
2215 r8 a16 g f8 g16 a bes8 g e! cis' |
2218 \context Voice = lhb {
2228 @section countertenor
2233 D: Countertenor, Kontratenor,
2236 S: kontratenor, counter tenor,
2250 D: Crescendo, lauter werden,
2254 FI: cresendo, voimistuen.
2256 Increasing volume. Indicated by a rightwards opening horizontal wedge
2257 (hairpin) or the abbreviation @notation{cresc.}.
2259 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
2260 \key g \major \time 4/4
2261 \relative c'' { g4 \< a b c | d1\! \bar "|." }
2270 F: petites notes précédent l'entrée d'un instrument, réplique,
2277 In a separate part notes belonging to another part with the purpose of
2278 hinting when to start playing. Usually printed in a smaller type.
2287 D: Notenzeiger, Custos,
2293 A custos (plural: custodes) is a staff symbol that appears at the end
2294 of a staff line with monophonic musical contents (i.e., with a single
2295 voice). It anticipates the pitch of the first note of the following
2296 line and thus helps the player or singer to manage line breaks during
2297 performance, thus enhancing readability of a score.
2299 Custodes were frequently used in music notation until the 16th
2300 century. There were different appearences for different notation
2301 styles. Nowadays, they have survived only in special forms of musical
2302 notation such as via the Editio Vaticana dating back to the beginning
2308 % \override Staff.Custos #'neutral-position = #4
2309 \override Staff.Custos #'neutral-direction = #down
2310 \override Staff.Custos #'style = #'hufnagel
2318 \consists Custos_engraver
2350 F: da capo, depuis le commencement,
2351 D: da capo, von Anfang,
2355 FI: da capo, alusta.
2357 Abbreviated @notation{D.C.}. Indicates that the piece is to be repeated from
2358 the beginning to the end or to a certain place marked @emph{fine}.
2373 [Italian: @q{from nothing}.] Used with @notation{crescendo} to indicate
2374 that the sound should gradually increase from nothing.
2386 F: dal segno, depuis le signe,
2387 D: dal segno, ab dem Zeichen,
2391 FI: dal segno, lähtien merkistä.
2393 Abbreviated @notation{D.S.}. Repetition, not from the beginning, but from
2394 another place frequently near the beginning marked by a sign
2397 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
2398 %\override TextScript #'font-style = #'large
2399 \override TextScript #'font-shape = #'italic
2400 \key g \major \time 4/4
2405 \line { "D.S. " \tiny \raise #1 \musicglyph #"scripts.segno" } }
2412 @section decrescendo
2416 D: Decrescendo, leiser werden,
2420 FI: decresendo, hiljentyen.
2422 Decreasing tone volume. Indicated by a leftwards opening horizontal
2423 wedge (hairpin) or the abbreviation @notation{decresc.}.
2425 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
2427 \key g \major \time 4/4
2428 d4 \> c b a | g1 \! \bar "|."
2433 @node descending interval
2434 @section descending interval
2436 ES: intervalo descendente,
2437 I: intervallo discendente,
2438 F: intervalle descendant,
2439 D: fallendes Intervall, absteigendes Intervall,
2440 NL: dalend interval,
2441 DK: faldende interval,
2442 S: fallande intervall,
2443 FI: laskeva intervalli.
2445 A distance between a starting higher note and a lower ending note.
2448 @node diatonic scale
2449 @section diatonic scale
2451 ES: escala diatónica,
2453 F: gamme diatonique,
2454 D: diatonische Tonleiter,
2455 NL: diatonische toonladder,
2456 DK: diatonisk skala,
2458 FI: diatoninen asteikko.
2460 A scale consisting of 5@w{ }@ref{whole tone}s and 2@w{ }@ref{semitone}s (S).
2461 Scales played on the white keys of a piano keybord are diatonic; and these
2462 scales are sometimes called, somewhat inaccurately, @q{church modes}).
2464 These @q{modes} are used in Gregorian chant and in pre-baroque early music
2465 but also to some extent in newer jazz music.
2467 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2468 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2469 %\override Score.LyricText #'font-style = #'large
2470 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
2472 \context Staff \relative c' {
2474 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2475 e^"~~ S" f g a b^"~~ S" c
2477 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
2483 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2484 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2486 \context Staff \relative c' {
2488 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2489 e^"~~ S" f g a b^"~~ S" c d
2497 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2498 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2501 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2502 e1^"~~ S" f g a b^"~~ S" c d e
2510 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2511 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2515 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2516 b^"~~ S" c d e^"~~ S" f
2524 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2525 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2529 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2530 b^"~~ S" c d e^"~~ S" f g }
2537 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2538 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2539 %\override Score.LyricText #'font-style = #'large
2540 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
2544 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2545 b^"~~ S" c d e^"~~ S" f g a
2553 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2554 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2555 %\override Score.LyricText #'font-style = #'large
2556 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
2559 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2560 b1^"~~ S" c d e^"~~ S" f g a b
2568 From the beginning of the 17th century the scales used in European
2569 compositional music are primarily the major and the minor scales. In
2570 the harmonic minor scale type an augmented second (A) occurs between
2571 the 6th and 7th tone.
2573 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2574 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2578 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2579 e^"~~ S" f g a b^"~~ S" c
2587 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2588 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2592 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2593 b^"~~ S" c d e^"~~ S" f g a
2601 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
2602 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2606 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2607 b^"~~ S" c d e^"~~ S" f!^"~~ A" gis^"~~ S" a
2609 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
2615 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
2616 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2617 %\override Score.LyricText #'font-style = #'large
2618 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
2622 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2623 b^"~~ S" c d e fis gis^"~~ S" a
2626 "Melodic minor ascending"
2631 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
2632 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
2633 %\override Score.LyricText #'font-style = #'large
2634 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
2638 \override TextScript #'padding = #-4
2639 a g! f!^"~~ S" e d c^"~~ S" b a
2642 "Melodic minor descending"
2649 @section didymic comma
2653 @ref{syntonic comma}.
2656 @node diminished interval
2657 @section diminished interval
2659 ES: intervalo disminuido,
2660 I: intervallo diminuito,
2661 F: intervalle diminué,
2662 D: vermindertes Intervall,
2663 NL: verminderd interval,
2664 DK: formindsket interval,
2665 S: förminskat intervall,
2666 FI: vähennetty intervalli.
2683 FI: diminuendo, hiljentyen.
2702 @c TODO: add definition
2704 This is a placeholder for diminution (wrt mensural notation).
2708 @ref{augmentation}, @ref{mensural notation}.
2728 @node disjunct movement
2729 @section disjunct movement
2731 ES: movimiento disjunto,
2733 F: mouvement disjoint,
2734 D: sprunghafte Bewegung,
2735 NL: sprongsgewijze beweging,
2736 DK: springende bevægelse,
2737 S: hoppande rörelse,
2738 FI: melodian hyppivä liike.
2740 Progressing melodically by intervals larger than a major second, as
2741 opposed to @ref{conjunct movement}.
2743 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
2748 a4. gis8 b a e cis |
2749 fis2 d4. \bar "||" }
2756 @ref{dissonant interval}.
2759 @node dissonant interval
2760 @section dissonant interval
2762 ES: intervalo disonante, disonancia,
2763 I: intervallo dissonante, dissonanza,
2766 NL: dissonant interval, dissonant,
2767 DK: dissonerende interval, dissonans,
2769 FI: dissonanssi, dissonoiva intervalli, riitasointi.
2788 [Latin: @q{division}: pl. @emph{divisiones}] In Gregorian chant, a
2789 vertical stroke through part or all of the staff that serves to
2790 structure a chant into phrases and sections. There are four types:
2794 @item @emph{divisio minima}, a short pause
2796 @item @emph{divisio maior}, a medium pause
2798 @item @emph{divisio maxima}, a long pause
2800 @item @emph{finalis}, to indicate the end of a chant, or the end of a
2801 section in a long antiphonal or responsorial chant.
2805 TODO: musical example here?
2824 Indicator for a indeterminately rising pitch bend. Compare with
2825 @emph{glissando}, which has determinate starting and ending pitches.
2829 @ref{fall}, @ref{glissando}.
2842 FI: dominantti, huippusointu.
2844 The fifth @ref{scale degree} in @ref{functional harmony}.
2847 @node dominant ninth chord
2848 @section dominant ninth chord
2850 ES: acorde de novena de dominante,
2851 I: accordo di nona di dominante,
2852 F: accord de neuvième dominante,
2853 D: Domi@-nant@-nonen@-akkord,
2854 NL: dominant noon akkoord,
2855 DK: dominantnoneakkord,
2856 S: dominantnonackord,
2857 FI: dominanttinoonisointu.
2861 @ref{chord}, @ref{functional harmony}.
2864 @node dominant seventh chord
2865 @section dominant seventh chord
2867 ES: acorde de séptima de dominante,
2868 I: accordo di settima di dominante,
2869 F: accord de septième dominante,
2870 D: Dominantseptakkord,
2871 NL: dominant septiem akkoord,
2872 DK: dominantseptimakkord,
2873 S: dominantseptimackord,
2874 FI: dominanttiseptimisointu.
2878 @ref{chord}, @ref{functional harmony}.
2882 @section dorian mode
2887 D: dorisch, dorischer Kirchenton,
2888 NL: dorische toonladder,
2895 @ref{diatonic scale}.
2898 @node dot (augmentation dot)
2899 @section dot (augmentation dot)
2902 I: punto (di valore),
2904 D: Punkt (Verlängerungspunkt),
2912 @ref{dotted note}, @ref{note value}.
2916 @section dotted note
2918 ES: nota con puntillo,
2922 NL: gepuncteerde noot,
2925 FI: pisteellinen nuotti.
2932 @node double appoggiatura
2933 @section double appoggiatura
2935 ES: apoyatura doble,
2936 I: appoggiatura doppia,
2937 F: appoggiature double,
2938 D: doppelter Vorschlag,
2939 NL: dubbele voorslag,
2940 DK: dobbelt forslag,
2942 FI: kaksoisappogiatura, kaksoisetuhele.
2949 @node double bar line
2950 @section double bar line
2956 NL: dubbele maatstreep,
2959 FI: kaksoistahtiviiva.
2961 Indicates the end of a section within a movement.
2964 @node double dotted note
2965 @section double dotted note
2967 ES: nota con doble puntillo,
2968 I: nota doppiamente puntata,
2969 F: note doublement pointée,
2970 D: doppelt punktierte Note,
2971 NL: dubbelgepuncteerde noot,
2972 DK: dob@-belt@-punk@-te@-ret node,
2973 S: dub@-bel@-punk@-te@-rad not,
2974 FI: kaksoispisteellinen nuotti.
2982 @section double flat
2991 FI: kaksoisalennusmerkki.
2999 @section double sharp
3001 ES: doble sostenido,
3006 DK: dob@-belt@-kryds,
3008 FI: kaksoisylennysmerkki.
3015 @node double time signature
3016 @section double time signature
3029 @ref{polymetric time signature}.
3033 @section double trill
3039 NL: dubbele triller,
3044 A simultaneous trill on two notes, usually in the distance of a third.
3048 @section duple meter
3053 D: in zwei, grader Takt,
3054 NL: tweedelige maatsoort,
3091 FI: kesto, aika-arvo.
3101 ES: dinámica, matices,
3104 D: Dynamik, Lautstärke,
3110 The aspect of music relating to degrees of loudness, or changes from
3111 one degree to another. The terms, abbreviations, and symbols used to
3112 indicate this information are called dynamic marks.
3116 @ref{piano}, @ref{forte}, @ref{crescendo}, @ref{decrescendo},
3139 @node ecclesiastical mode
3140 @section ecclesiastical mode
3148 @section eighth note
3155 @item D: Achtel, Achtelnote
3156 @item NL: achtste noot
3157 @item DK: ottendedelsnode
3158 @item S: åttondelsnot
3159 @item FI: kahdeksasosanuotti
3168 @section eighth rest
3171 @item UK: quaver rest
3172 @item ES: silencio de corchea
3173 @item I: pausa di croma
3174 @item F: demi-soupir
3175 @item D: Achtelpause
3176 @item NL: achtste rust
3177 @item DK: ottendedelspause
3178 @item S: åttonddelspaus
3179 @item FI: kahdeksasosatauko
3190 @c TODO: add languages
3201 More properly synalepha [New Lat. > Gr. συναλοιφη, from Greek συναλοιφην @q{to
3204 The singing of several syllables on a single note. Elision may be indicated
3205 by a lyric tie, which is looks like (and serves the same function) as a
3214 @section embellishment
3227 D: Notenstich, Notendruck
3233 Engraving means incising or etching a metal plate for printing.
3234 Photoengraving means drawing music with ink in a manner similar to
3235 drafting or engineering drawing, using similar tools.
3237 The traditional process of music printing is done through cutting in a
3238 plate of metal. Now also the term for the art of music typesetting.
3253 Two notes, intervals, or scales are enharmonic if they have different
3254 names but equal pitch.
3256 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
3257 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
3259 \context Staff \relative c'' {
3260 gis1 as <des g,!> <cis g!>
3262 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
3263 \override Lyrics .LyricText #'self-alignment-X = #-1
3264 "g sharp " "a flat " "dim fifth " "augm fourth"
3270 @node equal temperament
3271 @section equal temperament
3273 ES: temperamento igual,
3274 I: temperamento equabile,
3275 F: tempérament égal,
3276 D: gleichschwebende Stimmung,
3277 NL: ge@-lijk@-zwe@-ven@-de temperatuur,
3278 DK: ligesvævende temperatur,
3279 S: liksvävande temperatur,
3282 Tuning system dividing the octave into 12 equal @ref{semitone}s
3283 (precisely 100 @ref{cent}s).
3290 @node expression mark
3291 @section expression mark
3294 I: segno d'espressione,
3295 F: signe d'expression, indication de nuance,
3297 NL: voordrachtsteken,
3298 DK: foredragsbetegnelse,
3299 S: föredragsbeteckning,
3300 FI: nyanssiosoitus, esitysmerkki.
3302 Performance indications concerning:
3306 @item volume, dynamics (for example @ref{forte}, @ref{crescendo}),
3308 @item tempo (for example @ref{andante}, @ref{allegro}).
3314 @section extender line
3316 ES: línea de extensión [de melisma, de bajo cifrado, etc.],
3318 F: ligne d'extension [de mélisme, de basse chiffrée, etc.],
3325 The generic term for a line (or dash) of arbitrary length that extends
3326 text (without indicating the musical @emph{function} of that text).
3328 Used in many contexts, for example:
3332 @item In vocal music to indicate the syllable for a melisma. Called
3333 @q{extension} in the
3334 @uref{http://www.dolmetsch.com/defse1.htm,Dolmetsch Online Music
3338 In figured bass to indicate that:
3342 @item The extended note should be held through a change in harmony, when applied
3343 to one figure --OR--
3344 @item The chord thus represented should be held above a moving bass line, when
3345 applied to more than one figure.
3346 @item These uses were not completely standardized, and some composers used a
3347 single extender line to indicate the latter case.
3352 In string music to indicate that all notes in the passage thus indicated should
3353 be played on the same string. On the violin, for example, a series of notes to
3354 be played on the G string would be indicated @notation{sul G}, another series to be
3355 played on the D string would be indicated @notation{sul D}, and so on.
3358 With an octave mark to indicate that a passage is to be played higher or lower
3359 by the given number of octaves.
3365 @ref{melisma}, @ref{sul G}, @ref{thorough bass}, @ref{octave mark}, @ref{octave
3400 The position between the dots of the key symbol is the line of the F
3401 below central@w{ }C. Used on the third, fourth and fifth note line.
3402 A digit@w{ }8 above the clef symbol indicates that the notes must be
3403 played an octave higher (for example, bass recorder) while 8@w{ }below
3404 the clef symbol indicates playing an octave lower (for example, on
3405 double bass @ref{strings}).
3407 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
3408 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
3409 \override Staff.Clef #'full-size-change = ##t
3437 @c F: 'point d'orgue' on a note, 'point d'arret' on a rest.
3452 Indicator for a indeterminately falling pitch bend. Compare with
3453 @emph{glissando}, which has determinate starting and ending pitches.
3457 @ref{doit}, @ref{glissando}.
3460 @node feathered beam
3461 @section feathered beam
3465 F: liens de croches en soufflet,
3466 D: gespreizter Balken,
3472 A type of beam used to indicate that a small group of notes should be
3473 played at an increasing or decreasing tempo -- depending on the
3474 direction of @q{feathering} -- but without changing the overall tempo
3479 Internals Reference: @ruser{Manual beams}
3487 F: point d'orgue, point d'arrêt,
3492 FI: fermaatti, pidäke.
3494 Prolonged note or rest of indefinite duration.
3496 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
3499 a4 b c2^\fermata \bar "|."
3522 @section figured bass
3525 I: basso continuo, basso numerato,
3526 F: basse chiffrée, basse continue,
3527 D: Generalbass, bezifferter Bass,
3528 NL: basso continuo, becijferde bas
3531 FI: kenraalibasso, numeroitu basso.
3533 Also called @q{thorough bass}.
3535 A method of indicating an accompaniment part by the bass notes only, together
3536 with figures designating the chief @ref{interval}s and @ref{chord}s to be played
3537 above the bass notes.
3539 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
3540 \context GrandStaff <<
3541 \context Staff = lh \relative c'' {
3545 << \context Voice = rha {
3548 \context Voice = rhb {
3550 < bes g >8 as < as f > g < g es > f < d f > es | < g es >4 }
3554 \context Staff = rh \relative c' {
3557 es8 c d bes c as bes16 as g f | es4
3559 \figures { s8 <6> s <4 2> s <6> s16 s <6> <4 2> }
3577 The methodical use of fingers in the playing of instruments.
3584 I: coda (uncinata), bandiera,
3592 Ornament at the end of the stem of a note used for notes with values
3593 less than a quarter note. The number of flags determines the
3596 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
3597 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
3598 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
3620 An articulation for string players that means the note or passage is to
3621 be played in harmonics.
3627 @item A duct flute similar to the recorder.
3629 @item An organ stop of flute scale at 1' or 2' pitch.
3635 @ref{articulation}, @ref{harmonics}.
3673 FI: forte, voimakkaasti.
3675 [Italian: @q{loud}.]
3677 Abbreviated @notation{@b{f}}. Variants include:
3680 @item @emph{mezzo forte}, medium loud (notated @notation{@b{mf}}),
3681 @item @emph{fortissimo}, very loud (notated @notation{@b{ff}}).
3701 @node Frenched score
3702 @section Frenched score
3704 ES: partitura a la francesa,
3713 A @q{condensed} score, produced by omitting staves for instruments that are not
3714 playing at the moment, and by moving up additional systems from following pages
3715 to take up the space thus liberated, which reduces the total number of pages
3716 used to print the work.
3718 The specific rules for @q{frenching} a score differ from publisher to publisher.
3719 If you are producing scores for eventual publication by a commercial publisher,
3720 you may wish to procure a copy of their style manual.
3724 @ref{Frenched staff}.
3727 @node Frenched staff
3728 @section Frenched staff
3730 ES: pentagrama a la francesa,
3739 Analogous to Frenched scores (@emph{q.v}), a Frenched staff has unneeded
3740 measures or sections removed. This would be useful for producing, for example,
3741 an @emph{ossia} staff.
3748 @node Frenched staves
3749 @section Frenched staves
3751 ES: pentagramas a la francesa,
3760 The plural of @ref{Frenched staff}, @emph{q.v.}.
3780 @node functional harmony
3781 @section functional harmony
3783 ES: armonía funcional,
3784 I: armonia funzionale,
3785 F: étude des functions,
3787 NL: functionele harmonie,
3788 DK: funktionsanalyse, funktionsharmonik,
3790 FI: harmoniajärjestelmä.
3792 A system of harmonic analysis. It is based on the idea that, in a
3793 given key, there are only three functionally different chords: tonic
3794 (T, the chord on the first note of the scale), subdominant (S, the
3795 chord on the fourth note), and dominant (D, the chord on the fifth
3796 note). Others are considered to be variants of the base chords.
3798 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
3799 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
3801 \context Voice \relative c'' {
3802 <g e c >1 < a f d > < b g e >
3803 <c a f > < d b g > < e c a > < f d b > }
3804 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
3805 T Sp Dp S D Tp \markup{ D\translate #(cons -2 0) {"|"} } }
3835 D: G-Schlüssel, Violinschlüssel,
3841 A clef symbol indicating the G above middle@w{ }C. Used on the first
3842 and second note lines. A digit 8 above the clef symbol indicates that
3843 the notes must be played an octave higher while 8 below the clef
3844 symbol indicates playing or singing an octave lower (most tenor parts
3845 in choral scores are notated like that).
3847 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
3849 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
3850 \override Staff.Clef #'full-size-change = ##t
3853 \set Score.proportionalNotationDuration = #(ly:make-moment 1 8)
3863 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
3864 \override Lyrics . LyricText #'X-offset = #-5
3865 "french violin clef"
3884 FI: glissando, liukuen.
3886 Letting the pitch slide fluently from one note to the other.
3890 @section grace notes
3892 ES: notas de adorno,
3895 D: Verzierungen, Vorschläge, Vor@-schlags@-noten,
3901 Notes printed in small types to indicate that their time values are not
3902 counted in the rhythm of the bar.
3906 @ref{acciaccatura}, @ref{appoggiatura}, @ref{grace notes},
3911 @section grand staff
3913 ES: sistema de piano,
3916 D: Akkolade, Klaviersystem,
3919 S: ackolad, böjd klammer,
3920 FI: kaksoisnuottiviivasto.
3922 A combination of two staves with a brace. Usually used for piano music.
3939 FI: grave, raskaasti.
3966 Letter name used for @notation{B natural} in German and Scandinavian
3967 usage. In the standard usage of these countries, @notation{B} means
3972 @ref{Pitch names}, @ref{B}.
3978 Graphical version of the @notation{crescendo} and @notation{decrescendo}
3981 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
3991 @ref{crescendo}, @ref{decrescendo}.
4001 D: Halbe, halbe Note,
4016 ES: silencio de blanca,
4030 @node harmonic cadence
4031 @section harmonic cadence
4033 ES: cadencia (armónica),
4034 I: cadenza (armonica),
4035 F: cadence harmonique,
4037 NL: harmonische cadens,
4038 DK: harmonisk kadence,
4039 S: (harmonisk) kadens,
4040 FI: harmoninen kadenssi.
4042 A sequence of chords that terminates a musical phrase or section.
4044 @ref{functional harmony}.
4046 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
4047 \context PianoStaff <<
4048 \context Staff = SA \relative c'' {
4052 \partial 4 < c g e >4 |
4053 < c a f > < b g d > < c g e >2
4056 \context Staff = SB \relative c {
4058 \partial 4 c4 | f, g c2
4073 ES: sonidos del flautín,
4075 F: flageolet, sons harmoniques,
4082 The general class of pitches produced by sounding the second or higher
4083 harmonic of a tone producer: string, column of air, and so on.
4085 On stringed instruments, these pitches sound rather flute-like; hence,
4086 their name in languages other than English. They are produced by
4087 lightly touching the string at a node for the desired mode of vibration
4088 while it is being bowed or plucked.
4090 For instruments of the violin family, there are two types of harmonics:
4091 natural harmonics, which are those played on the open string; and
4092 artificial harmonics, which are produced on stopped strings.
4101 D: Harmonie, Zusammenklang,
4105 FI: harmonia, yhteissointi.
4107 Tones sounding simultaneously. Two note harmonies fall into the
4108 categories @emph{consonances} and @emph{dissonances}.
4112 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4113 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4114 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
4115 \context Voice \relative c'' {
4128 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4129 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4130 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
4131 \context Voice \relative c'' {
4132 <g a>1_"second " s s
4133 <g f'>_"seventh " s s
4138 Three note harmony @ref{chord}.
4153 [From Greek: in Latin, @emph{sesquialtera}] The ratio 3:2. Refers to
4154 the use of three notes of equal value in the time normally occupied by
4155 of two notes of equal value. The resulting rhythm can be expressed in
4156 modern terms as a substitution (for example) of a bar in 3/2 for one
4157 of 6/4, or of a bar in 3/4 for one of 6/8. During the Baroque era,
4158 hemiola is most frequently as a special effect (or @emph{affect}) at
4161 For example, this phrase in 6/4 time
4163 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
4167 c2. e | d2 c d | c1. \bar "||" }
4170 may be thought of having alternating time signatures
4172 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
4176 c2. e | \time 3/2 d2 c d | \time 6/4 c1. \bar "||" }
4179 and is therefore a polymeter (second definition) of considerable antiquity.
4183 @ref{mensural notation}, @ref{meter}, @ref{polymeter}.
4196 FI: homofonia, yksiäänisyys.
4198 Music in which one voice leads melodically followed by the other
4199 voices more or less in the same rhythm. In contrast to
4215 A group or list of numbers that indicate the number of syllables in a
4216 line of a hymn's verse. Different hymnals have different ways of noting
4217 the hymn meter -- consider a hymn having four lines in two couplets that
4218 alternate between eight and seven syllables. The @emph{English Hymnal}
4219 notes this as 87.@w{ }87. Other hymnals may note it as 8787, 87.87, or
4220 8@w{ }7@w{ }8@w{ }7.
4222 Some frequently-used hymn meters have traditional names:
4226 @item 66.86 is called Short Meter (abbreviated SM or S.M.)
4228 @item 86.86 is called Common Meter (CM or C.M.)
4230 @item 88.88 is called Long Meter (LM or L.M.)
4234 Some hymns and their tunes are doubled versions of a simpler meter: for
4235 easier reading, a hymn with a meter of 87.87.87.87 is usually written
4236 87.87D. The traditional names above also have doubled versions:
4240 @item 66.86.66.86 is Double Short Meter (DSM or D.S.M.)
4242 @item 86.86.86.86 is Double Common Meter (DCM or D.C.M.)
4244 @item 88.88.88.88 is Double Long Meter (DLM or D.L.M.)
4260 FI: intervalli, kahden sävelen korkeusero.
4262 Difference in pitch between two notes. Intervals may be perfect,
4263 minor, major, diminished, or augmented. The augmented fourth and the
4264 diminished fifth are identical (@ref{enharmonic}) and are called
4265 @emph{tritonus} because they consist of three @ref{whole tone}s. The
4266 addition of such two intervals forms an octave.
4268 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4269 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4271 \context Voice \relative c'' {
4281 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
4282 "unison " "second " "second " "second "
4283 "third " "third " "third " "third"
4288 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4289 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4291 \context Staff \relative c'' {
4302 "fourth " "fourth " "fifth " "fifth "
4303 "sixth " "sixth " "sixth " "sixth"
4308 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4309 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4311 \context Staff \relative c'' {
4312 < gis f'! >1^"dimin"
4321 \context Lyrics \lyrics {
4322 "seventh " "seventh " "seventh " "octave "
4323 "ninth " "ninth " "tenth " "tenth"
4341 When the bass is not the same as the root, the chord is inverted. The number
4342 of inversions that a chord can have is one fewer than the number of
4343 constituent notes. Triads, for example, (having three constituent notes) can
4344 have three positions, two of which are inversions:
4348 The root note is in the bass, and above that are the third and the fifth. A
4349 triad built on the first scale degree, for example, is marked @notation{I}.
4351 @item First inversion
4352 The third is in the bass, and above it are the fifth and the root. This
4353 creates an interval of a sixth and a third above the bass note, and so is
4354 marked in figured Roman notation as @notation{6/3}. This is commonly
4355 abbreviated to @notation{I6} (or @notation{Ib}) since the sixth is the
4356 characteristic interval of the inversion, and so always implies
4359 @item Second inversion
4360 The fifth is in the bass, and above it are the root and the third. This
4361 creates an interval of a sixth and a fourth above the bass note, and so is
4362 marked as @notation{I6/4} or @notation{Ic}. Second inversion is the most
4363 unstable chord position.
4367 @node inverted interval
4368 @section inverted interval
4370 ES: intervalo invertido,
4371 I: intervallo rivolto,
4372 F: intervalle reversé,
4373 D: umgekehrtes Intervall,
4374 NL: interval inversie,
4375 DK: omvendingsinterval,
4376 S: intervallets omvändning,
4377 FI: käänteisintervalli.
4379 The difference between an interval and an octave.
4381 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4382 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4383 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
4384 \context Staff \relative c'' {
4385 < g a >1_"second " s s < g' a, >_"seventh " s s \bar "||"
4386 < g, b >_"third " s s < g' b, >_"sixth " s s \bar "||"
4387 < g, c >_"fourth " s s < g' c, >_"fifth " s s \bar "||"
4392 @node just intonation
4393 @section just intonation
4395 ES: entonación justa,
4396 I: intonazione giusta,
4397 F: intonation juste,
4404 Tuning system in which the notes are obtained by adding and subtracting
4405 natural fifths and thirds.
4422 According to the 12@w{ }tones of the @ref{chromatic scale} there are
4423 12@w{ }keys, one on@w{ }c, one on c-sharp, etc.
4427 @ref{key signature}.
4431 @section key signature
4433 ES: armadura (de la clave),
4434 I: armatura di chiave,
4435 F: armure, armature [de la clé],
4436 D: Vorzeichen, Tonart,
4437 NL: toon@-soort (voortekens),
4440 FI: sävellajiosoitus.
4442 The sharps or flats appearing at the beginning of each staff indicating the
4448 @node laissez vibrer
4449 @section laissez vibrer
4460 [From French, @q{Let vibrate}]. Most frequently associated with harp
4461 parts. Marked @notation{l.v.} in the score.
4470 D: Largo, Langsam, Breit,
4474 FI: largo, hitaasti, leveästi.
4476 Very slow in tempo, usually combined with great expressiveness.
4477 @emph{Larghetto} is less slow than largo.
4481 @section leading note
4492 The seventh @ref{scale degree}, a @ref{semitone} below the tonic; so
4493 called because of its strong tendency to @q{lead up} (resolve upwards)
4494 to the tonic scale degree.
4498 @section ledger line
4500 ES: línea adicional,
4501 I: tagli addizionali,
4502 F: ligne supplémentaire,
4509 A ledger line is an extension of the staff.
4511 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
4512 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4513 \relative c'' { a,1 s c'' }
4523 D: legato, gebunden,
4529 To be performed (a) without any perceptible interruption between the
4530 notes, unlike (b) @emph{leggiero} or @emph{non-legato}, (c)
4531 @emph{portato}, and (d) @ref{staccato}.
4533 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
4534 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4536 \context Staff \relative c'' {
4537 c4-( d e-) \bar "||"
4538 c4-- d-- e-- \bar "||"
4539 c4-.-( d-. e-.-) \bar "||"
4540 c4-. d-. e-. \bar "||"
4553 @section legato curve
4557 @ref{slur}, @ref{legato}.
4580 A ligature is a coherent graphical symbol that represents at least two
4581 distinct notes. Ligatures originally appeared in the manuscripts of
4582 Gregorian chant notation roughly since the 9th century to denote ascending
4583 or descending sequences of notes. In early notation, ligatures were used
4584 for monophonic tunes (Gregorian chant) and very soon denoted also the way of
4585 performance in the sense of articulation. With the invention of the metric
4586 system of the white mensural notation, the need for ligatures to denote such
4587 patterns disappeared.
4591 @ref{mensural notation}.
4598 ES: estanque de nenúfares,
4599 I: stagno del giglio,
4600 F: étang de nénuphars, étang de nymphéas,
4602 NL: le@-lie@-vij@-ver,
4607 A pond with lilies floating in it.
4608 Also, the name of a music typesetting program.
4617 D: Linie, Notenlinie,
4621 FI: viiva, nuottiviiva.
4640 [From Italian, @q{place}]. Instruction to play the following passage at the
4641 written pitch. Cancels octave mark (q.v.).
4645 @ref{octave mark}, @ref{octave marking}.
4648 @node long appoggiatura
4649 @section long appoggiatura
4651 ES: apoyatura larga,
4652 I: appoggiatura lunga,
4653 F: appoggiature longue,
4658 FI: pitkä appoggiatura, pitkä etuhele.
4677 Note value: double length of @ref{breve}.
4679 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
4680 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
4682 \override NoteHead #'style = #'mensural
4695 ES: ligadura de letra,
4704 @c TODO: add languages
4714 ES: letra (de la canción),
4717 D: Liedtext, Gesangtext,
4738 @ref{diatonic scale}.
4741 @node major interval
4742 @section major interval
4744 ES: intervalo mayor,
4745 I: intervallo maggiore,
4746 F: intervalle majeur,
4747 D: großes Intervall,
4751 FI: suuri intervalli.
4758 @node meantone temperament
4759 @section meantone temperament
4761 ES: afinación mesotónica,
4762 I: accordatura mesotonica,
4763 F: tempérament mésotonique,
4764 D: mitteltönige Stimmung,
4765 NL: middenstemming, middentoonstemming,
4766 DK: middeltonetemperatur,
4767 S: medeltonstemperatur,
4768 FI: keskisävelviritys.
4770 Temperament yielding acoustically pure thirds by decreasing the
4771 natural fifth by 16@w{ }@ref{cent}s. Due to the non-circular
4772 character of this @ref{temperament} only a limited set of keys are
4773 playable. Used for tuning keyboard instruments for performance of
4789 A group of @ref{beat}s (units of musical time) the first of which
4790 bears an accent. Such groups in numbers of two or more recur
4791 consistently throughout the composition and are marked from each other
4797 @node measure repeat
4798 @section measure repeat
4802 @ref{percent repeat}.
4809 I: mediante, modale,
4819 @item The third @b{scale degree}.
4821 @item A @ref{chord} having its base tone a third from that of another
4822 chord. For example, the tonic chord may be replaced by its lower
4823 mediant (variant tonic).
4828 @ref{functional harmony}, @ref{relative key}.
4841 FI: melisma, laulettavan tavun sävelkuvio.
4843 A melisma (plural, from Greek: melismata) is a group of notes or tones
4844 sung on one syllable, especially as applied to liturgical chant.
4848 @section melisma line
4850 @c TODO: add languages
4852 ES: línea de melisma,
4863 @ref{extender line}.
4866 @node melodic cadence
4867 @section melodic cadence
4874 @node mensural notation
4875 @section mensural notation
4877 @c TODO: add languages
4879 ES: notación mensural,
4888 A system of duration notation whose principles were first established in the
4889 mid-13th century, and that (with various changes) remained in use until about
4890 1600. As such, it is the basis for the notation of rhythms in Western musical
4893 Franco of Cologne (ca. 1250) is credited with the first systematic explanation
4894 of the notation's principles, so the notation of this earliest period is called
4895 @q{Franconian}. Franco's system made use of three note values -- long, breve,
4896 and semibreve -- each of which was normally equivalent to three of the next
4899 Then, in the first half of the 14th century, Philippe de Vitry and Jehan de Murs
4900 added several note values (the minim, semiminim and fusa) and extended Franco's
4901 principles to govern the relationship between these values. They also put the
4902 duple division of note values on an equal footing with the earlier (preferred)
4905 TODO: continue description of French and Italian black notation, and the
4906 relationship betwixt them.
4908 @b{White or void mensural notation}
4910 In the 15th century, hollow (or void) notes began to substitute for the earlier
4911 solid black ones, which were then free to assume the function of red (or
4912 colored) notes in the earlier notation. ...
4914 TODO: add to definition (including summary info on proportional notation)
4918 @ref{augmentation}, @ref{diminution}, @ref{ligature}, @ref{proportion}.
4919 @c TODO: more cross-references?
4927 F: indication de mesure, mesure,
4934 The pattern of note values and accents in a composition or a section thereof.
4935 There are a couple ways to classify @q{traditional} meter (i.e. not polymeter):
4936 by grouping beats and by subdividing the primary beat.
4938 @b{By grouping beats}:
4942 @item @b{duple}: groups of two.
4943 @item @b{triple}: groups of three.
4944 @item @b{quadruple}: groups of four. A special case of duple meter.
4945 @item @b{quintuple}: groups of five beats.
4946 @item @b{sextuple} meter: groups of six. A special case of:
4950 @item duple meter, subdivided in three; or
4951 @item triple meter, subdivided in two.
4955 @item @b{septuple} meter: groups of seven.
4960 Other than triple meter and its subdivided variants (see below), meters that
4961 feature odd groupings of beats (e.g. quintuple or septuple meter) are not
4962 frequently used prior to the 20th Century.
4964 @b{By subdividing the primary beat}:
4968 @item simple: groups of two.
4972 @item duple: 2/2, 2/4, 2/8
4973 @item triple: 3/2, 3/4, 3/8
4974 @item quadruple: 4/2, 4/4 (also called common time), 4/8
4978 @item compound: groups of three.
4984 @item quadruple: 12/8
4990 Time signatures are placed at the beginning of a composition (or section) to
4991 indicate the meter. For instance, a piece written in simple triple meter with a
4992 beat on each quarter note is conventionally written with a time signature of
4993 3/4. Here are some combinations of the two classifications above:
4995 Simple duple meter (F.J. Haydn, 1732-1809; or a Croatian folk tune):
4997 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5001 g8. a16 b8 a | c b a16( fis) g8 | e' d c b | a2 \bar "||"}
5004 Simple triple meter:
5006 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5010 c es d8 c | d4 b g | d' f es8 d | es d c2 \bar "||"}
5013 Simple quadruple meter (French folk tune, @emph{Au clair de la lune}):
5015 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5019 g4 g g a | b2 a | g4 b a a | g1 \bar "||"}
5022 Simple quintuple meter (B. Marcello, 1686-1739):
5024 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5028 r4 cis8 bis ais4 dis c8 ais |
5029 aes4 bes8 aes ges4 aes f8 es \bar "||"}
5032 Compound duple meter (unknown):
5034 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5038 f8 f g a bes16 a g f |
5039 g8 g bes a c16 a bes g
5043 Compound triple meter (J.S. Bach, 1685-1750):
5045 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5049 r8 g'( a) b( d c) c( e d) |
5050 d( g fis) g( d b) g( a b)
5054 Compound quadruple meter (P. Yon, 1886-1943):
5056 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5060 b'8.( a16) gis8 a8.( gis16) fis8 gis8.( fis16) e8 fis4 b,8 |
5061 e4 e8 fis( gis) a b4.~ b4 b8
5065 @b{@q{Monometer} vs Polymeter}
5067 TODO: add information from discussion on lilypond-user related to polymeter.
5071 @ref{accent}, @ref{hemiola}, @ref{note value}, @ref{time signature}
5086 Device indicating the exact tempo of a piece.
5088 Invented ca. 1812 by Dietrich Nikolaus Winkler of Amsterdam, but takes its name
5089 from Johann Nepomuk Mälzel, who copied the device, added a scale of tempo
5090 divisions, and patented it as a "metronome". The inevitable lawsuit that
5091 followed acknowledged Winkler as the creator, but by then Mälzel had already
5092 sold many of them, and people had taken to calling it a Mälzel Metronome.
5096 @ref{metronome mark}.
5099 @node metronome mark
5100 @section metronome mark
5102 ES: indicación metronómica,
5103 I: indicazione metronomica,
5104 F: indication métronomique,
5106 NL: metronoom aanduiding,
5108 S: metronomangivelse,
5109 FI: metronomiosoitus.
5111 Exact tempo indication (in beats per minute). Abbreviated @notation{M.M.} or
5112 @notation{MM}, which is short for Mälzels Metronom (or Mälzel's Mark,
5120 @node metronomic indication
5121 @section metronomic indication
5125 @ref{metronome mark}
5140 [Italian: @q{medium}.]
5142 Used to qualify other indications, such as:
5148 @item @notation{mezzo piano} is @q{medium quiet} (that is, not as quiet as
5150 @item @notation{mezzo forte} is @q{medium loud} (that is, not as loud as
5156 @item Pitchwise, a mezzo-soprano's voice lies between that of contraltos and
5164 @section mezzo-soprano
5175 The female voice between soprano and contralto.
5179 @ref{soprano}, @ref{contralto}.
5188 D: eingestrichenes@w{ }c,
5190 DK: enstreget@w{ }c,
5191 S: ettstruket@w{ }c,
5194 First C below the 440 Hz A.
5196 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
5197 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
5198 \override Staff.Clef #'full-size-change = ##t
5221 @ref{diatonic scale}.
5224 @node minor interval
5225 @section minor interval
5227 ES: intervalo menor,
5228 I: intervallo minore,
5229 F: intervalle mineur,
5230 D: kleines Intervall,
5234 FI: pieni intervalli.
5241 @node mixolydian mode
5242 @section mixolydian mode
5246 @ref{diatonic scale}.
5255 D: Kirchentonart, Modus,
5259 FI: moodi, kirkkosävelasteikko.
5263 @ref{church mode}, @ref{diatonic scale}.
5276 FI: modulaatio, sävellajin vaihdos.
5278 Moving from one @ref{key} to another. For example, the second subject
5279 of a @ref{sonata form} movement modulates to the dominant key if the
5280 key is major and to the @ref{relative key} if the key is minor.
5292 FI: mordent, korukuvio.
5317 FI: teema, sävelaihe.
5319 The briefest intelligible and self-contained fragment of a musical
5322 @lilypond[line-width=13.0\cm]
5325 \set Score.implicitTimeSignatureVisibility = #all-invisible
5326 \override Score.TimeSignature #'break-visibility = #all-invisible
5329 \partial 8 g16\startGroup fis |
5330 g8\stopGroup d16\startGroup c d8\stopGroup g16 fis g8 b,16 a b8 g'16 fis |
5331 g8 g,16 a b8 cis d16 s
5335 \Staff \consists "Horizontal_bracket_engraver"
5353 Greater musical works like @ref{symphony} and @ref{sonata} most often
5354 consist of several -- more or less -- independant pieces called
5358 @node multi-measure rest
5359 @section multi-measure rest
5361 ES: compases de espera,
5365 D: mehrtaktige Pause, Kirchenpause,
5368 FI: usean tahdin mittainen tauko.
5370 Multi-measure rests are conventionally typeset with a combination of
5371 longa, breve and whole rests for shorter and a long horizontal bar for
5372 longer spans of rest, with a number above to indicate the duration (in
5373 measures) of the rest. The former style is called @q{Kirchenpausen} in
5374 German, as a reminiscence of its use in Renaissance vocal polyphony.
5376 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
5379 \set Score.skipBars = ##t R1*3
5381 \set Score.skipBars = ##t R1*122
5388 @ref{longa}, @ref{breve}.
5397 D: Auflösungszeichen,
5398 NL: herstellingsteken,
5399 DK: op@-løsningstegn,
5400 S: återställningstecken,
5408 @node neighbour tones
5409 @section neighbour tones
5413 @ref{acciaccatura}, @ref{appoggiatura}, @ref{grace notes},
5454 Notes are signs by means of which music is fixed in writing. The term is also
5455 used for the sound indicated by a note, and even for the key of the piano
5456 which produces the sound. However, a clear distinction between the terms tone
5457 and @ref{note} is strongly recommended. Briefly, one sees a note,
5465 I: testa, testina, capocchia,
5473 A head-like sign which indicates pitch by its position on a
5474 @ref{staff} provided with a @ref{clef}, and duration
5475 by a variety of shapes such as hollow or black heads with or without
5476 @ref{stem}s, @ref{flag}s, etc. For percussion
5477 instruments (often having no defined pitch) the note head may indicate the
5492 ES: valor (duración),
5494 F: durée, valeur (d'une note),
5499 FI: nuotin aika-arvo.
5501 Note values (durations) are measured as fractions, normally 1/2, of
5502 the next higher note value. The longest duration normally used is
5503 called @emph{brevis}, but sometimes (mostly in pre-baroque music) the
5504 double-length note value @emph{longa} or the quadruple-length note
5505 value @emph{maxima} are used.
5507 @c TODO -- add maxima to this example, in a way that doesn't break it.
5509 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
5510 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
5511 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
5513 \override NoteHead #'style = #'mensural
5514 a\longa_"longa" a\breve_"breve"
5515 \revert NoteHead #'style
5516 a1_"1/1" a2_"1/2" a4_"1/4" s16 a8_"1/8" s16
5517 a16_"1/16" s16 a32_"1/32" s16 a64_"1/64" s32 }
5520 @c TODO -- add maxima rest to this example
5522 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
5523 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
5524 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
5526 r\longa_"longa" r\breve_"breve"
5527 r1_"1/1" r2_"1/2" r4_"1/4" s16 r8_"1/8" s16
5528 r16_"1/16" s16 r32_"1/32" s16 r64_"1/64" s32 }
5531 An augmentation dot after a note multiplies the duration by one and a
5532 half. Another dot adds yet a fourth of the duration.
5534 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5535 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
5538 g4._"pointed" g8 g2 | g4 ~ g8 g g2 \bar "||"
5539 g4.._"double pointed" g16 g2 | g4 ~ g8 ~ g16 g g2 \bar "||" }
5542 Alternatively note values may be subdivided by other ratios. Most common is
5543 subdivision by@w{ }3 (@emph{triplets}) and@w{ }5 (@emph{quintuplets}).
5544 Subdivisions by@w{ }2 (@emph{duplets}) or@w{ }4 (@emph{quadruplets}) of
5545 dotted notes are also frequently used.
5547 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5548 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
5551 \times 2/3 {g8_"triplets" g g} g4 g8 g g4 \bar "||"
5552 \times 2/5 {g8_"quintuplets" g g g g} g4 g8 g g4 \bar "||"
5556 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5559 \times 3/2 {g4_"duplets" g} |
5561 \times 6/4 {g8_"quadruplets" g g g} |
5562 g8 g g g g4 \bar "||"
5572 @ref{octave marking}.
5587 The interval of an octave, sometimes abbreviated @notation{8ve}.
5589 For uses like @notation{all'ottava} or @notation{8va} with an extender line or
5590 bracket, or @notation{loco} see octave marking.
5594 @ref{interval}, @ref{octave marking}.
5598 @section octave mark
5600 ES: indicación de octava,
5609 The phrase, abbreviation, or other mark used (with or without an extender line
5610 or bracket) to indicate that the music is to be played in a different octave:
5614 @item @notation{15ma}: play two octaves higher
5615 @item @notation{8va}: play one octave higher
5616 @item @notation{8vb}: play one octave lower
5617 @item @notation{8va} (written below the passage): unusual, same as
5619 @item @notation{15vb}: play two octaves lower
5620 @item @notation{15va} (written below the passage): unusual, same as
5625 For longer passages, it may be more practical to mark the octave change at the
5626 beginning with a phrase (see the list below for examples), but without a bracket
5627 or extender line. Then, when the music returns to the written pitch, the octave
5628 change is cancelled with the word @notation{loco} (q.v.).
5630 To parallel the list above:
5634 @item @notation{15ma}: @notation{alla quindicesima (alta)}
5635 @item @notation{8va}: @notation{all'ottava} or @notation{ottava sopra}
5636 @item @notation{8vb}: @notation{all'ottava bassa}, @notation{ottava sotto}
5637 @item @notation{15vb}: @notation{alla quindicesima (bassa)}
5641 In the phrases above, @notation{quindicesima} is sometimes replaced with
5642 @notation{quindecima}, which is Latin.
5644 Finally, the music on an entire staff can be marked to be played in a
5645 different octave by putting a small 8 or 15 above or below the clef at the
5646 beginning. This octave mark can be applied to any clef, but it is most
5647 frequently used with the G and F clefs.
5651 @ref{F clef}, @ref{G clef}, @ref{loco}, @ref{octave marking}.
5654 @node octave marking
5655 @section octave marking
5664 FI: oktaavamerkintä.
5666 The practice of marking music -- an entire staff, a passage, etc. -- to indicate
5667 that it is to be played in a different octave. If applied to the clef at the
5668 beginning of the staff, all music on that staff is to played at the indicated
5671 For a list of the specific marks used, see @ref{octave mark}.
5675 @ref{interval}, @ref{loco}, @ref{octave}, @ref{octave mark}.
5679 @section octave sign
5690 I: abbellimento, fioriture,
5691 F: agrément, ornement,
5692 D: Verzierung, Ornament,
5698 Most commonly used is the @emph{trill}, the rapid alternation of a given note
5699 with the diatonic @ref{second} above it. In the music from the
5700 middle of the 19th century and onwards the trill is performed with the main
5701 note first while in the music from the preceding baroque and classic periods
5702 the upper note is played first.
5704 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5706 \context Staff = sa {
5707 % \override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
5709 c2._"pre-1850" b4\trill | c1 \bar "||"
5710 c2._"post-1850" b4\trill | c1 \bar "||"
5714 c2. c32 b c b c b c b | c1
5715 c2. b32 c b c \times 4/5 { b c b c b } | c1
5720 Other frequently used ornaments are the @emph{turn}, the @emph{mordent}, and
5722 @emph{prall} (inverted mordent).
5724 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5726 \context Staff = sa {
5727 % \override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
5729 a4_"turn" b\turn c2 \bar "||"
5730 g4_"mordent" a b\mordent a \bar "||"
5731 e'4_"prall" d\prall c2 \bar "||"
5737 e'4 e32[ d e d ~ d8] c2
5744 @ref{acciaccatura}, @ref{appoggiatura}, @ref{grace notes}.
5757 FI: ossia, vaihtoehtoinen esitystapa.
5759 Ossia (otherwise) marks an alternative. It is an added staff or piano
5760 score, usually only a few measures long, which presents another version
5761 of the music, for example for small hands.
5774 FI: stemma, instrumenttiosuus.
5778 @item In instrumental or choral music, the music for a single
5779 instrument or voice.
5781 @item in contrapuntal music, a single melodic line in the contrapuntal
5807 @node percent repeat
5808 @section percent repeat
5810 LilyPond-specific term to indicate the repetition of a musical expression on a
5811 single staff, as opposed to the more usual definition of repeat, which affects
5812 all parts. The musical expression can be anything from a single note or note
5813 pattern to one or more measures. There are other names for this symbol:
5818 @item slash mark, or slash repeat
5820 @item measure (or multi-measure) repeat
5824 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
5827 \repeat percent 4 { c4_"Beat (or slash) repeat" }
5828 \repeat percent 2 { c4 e g b_"Measure repeat" }
5829 \repeat percent 2 { c,2 es | f4 fis g c_"Multi-measure repeat" | }
5836 @uref{http://www.music.vt.edu/musicdictionary/textr/Repeat.html,University of
5837 Vermont Music Dictionary}.
5846 D: Schlagzeug, Schlagwerk,
5852 A family of musical instruments which are played on by striking or
5853 shaking. Percussion instruments commonly used in a symphony orchestra are
5854 kettledrums (I: @emph{timpani}, D: @emph{Pauken}), snare drum, bass drum,
5855 tambourine, cymbals, chinese gong (tam-tam), triangle, celesta, glockenspiel,
5859 @node perfect interval
5860 @section perfect interval
5862 ES: intervalo justo,
5863 I: intervallo giusto,
5864 F: intervalle juste,
5865 D: reines Intervall,
5869 FI: puhdas intervalli.
5888 A natural division of the melodic line, comparable to a sentence of speech.
5901 FI: fraseeraus, jäsentäminen.
5903 The clear rendering in musical performance of the @ref{phrase}s of
5904 the melody. Phrasing may be indicated by a @ref{slur}.
5919 @emph{piano} (@b{p}) soft, @emph{pianissimo} (@b{pp}) very soft,
5920 @emph{mezzo piano} (@b{mp}) medium soft.
5928 F: anacrouse, levée,
5954 @item The perceived quality of a sound that is primarily a function of its
5955 fundamental frequency.
5957 @item [FR. ton; DE. Ton; ES. tono] Any point on the continuum of musical pitch.
5959 @item [FR. diapason; DE. Kammerton, Stimmung; ES. diapasón] The standardized
5960 association of a particular frequency with a particular pitch name, e.g., c' =
5977 NL: pizzicato, getokkeld,
5980 FI: pizzicato, näppäillen.
5982 A technique for stringed instruments, abbr. @emph{pizz}. To play by plucking
5989 ES: compás polimétrico,
6000 @item The simultaneous use of two or more meters, in two or more parts.
6002 @item The @emph{successive} use of different meters in one or more parts.
6008 @ref{polymetric} (adj.)
6023 Using two or more metric frameworks simultaneously or in alternation.
6027 @ref{polymeter} (noun)
6030 @node polymetric time signature
6031 @section polymetric time signature
6033 ES: compás polimétrico,
6042 A time signature that indicates regularly alternating polymetric time.
6055 D: Polyphonie, Mehrstimmigkeit,
6059 FI: polyfonia, moniäänisyys.
6061 Music written in a combination of several simultaneous voices (parts)
6062 of a more or less pronounced individuality.
6081 D: Presto, Sehr schnell,
6082 NL: presto, Sehr schnell,
6085 FI: presto, hyvin nopeasti.
6087 Very quick, i.e., quicker than @ref{allegro}; @emph{prestissimo}
6088 denotes the highest possible degree of speed.
6103 [From Latin @emph{proportio}] In mensural notation, a ratio that expresses the
6104 relationship between the note values that follow with those that precede; or
6105 between the note values of a passage and the @q{normal} relationship of note
6106 values to the metrical pulse.
6108 @c TODO: add an example or two. O => 4/3, and its modern equivalent
6112 @ref{mensural notation}
6115 @node Pythagorean comma
6116 @section Pythagorean comma
6118 ES: coma pitagórica,
6119 I: comma pitagorico,
6120 F: comma pythagoricien,
6121 D: Pythagoräisches Komma,
6122 NL: komma van Pythagoras,
6123 DK: pythagoræisk komma,
6124 S: pytagoreiskt komma,
6125 FI: pytagorinen komma.
6127 Originally, the interval by which the sum of six whole tones exceeds the octave
6128 -- (9:8)^6 - 2:1 = 531441:524288, or 23.5 cents.
6130 Modern acoustical theory defines it as the interval by which twelve fifths
6131 exceed seven octaves. To put it another way: A sequence of fifths that starts
6132 on C eventually circles back to C. However, this C is 23.5 @ref{cent}s higher
6133 than the C obtained by adding 7 octaves. The difference between those two
6134 pitches is the Pythagorean comma.
6138 @ref{cent}, @ref{temperament}.
6170 The quality of a triad is determined by the precise arrangement of its
6171 intervals. Tertian triads can be described as a series of three notes. The
6172 first element is the root note (or simply @q{root}) of the chord, the second
6173 note is the @q{third} of the chord, and the last note is the @q{fifth} of
6174 the chord. These are described below:
6176 @multitable @columnfractions .10 .35 .35 .20
6178 @headitem Chord name @tab Component intervals
6181 @item major triad @tab major third/perfect fifth
6183 @tab C, CM, Cma, Cmaj, CΔ
6184 @item minor triad @tab minor third/perfect fifth
6186 @tab Cm, Cmi, Cmin, C-
6187 @item augmented triad @tab major third/augmented fifth
6190 @item diminished triad @tab minor third/diminished fifth
6192 @tab Cm(♭5), Cº, Cdim
6195 There are various types of seventh chords depending on the quality of the
6196 original chord and the quality of the seventh added.
6198 Five common types of seventh chords have standard symbols. The chord quality
6199 indications are sometimes superscripted and sometimes not (e.g. Dm7, Dm^7,
6200 and D^m7 are all identical). The last three chords are not commonly used
6209 @section quarter note
6214 @item I: semiminima, nera
6216 @item D: Viertel, Viertelnote
6218 @item DK: fjerdedelsnode
6219 @item S: fjärdedelsnot
6220 @item FI: neljäsosanuotti
6229 @section quarter rest
6232 @item UK: crotchet rest
6233 @item ES: silencio de negra
6234 @item I: pausa di semiminima
6236 @item D: Viertelpause
6238 @item DK: fjerdedelspause
6239 @item S: fjärdedelspaus
6240 @item FI: neljäsosatauko
6249 @section quarter tone
6251 ES: cuarto de tonno,
6260 An interval equal to half a semitone.
6270 ES: cinquillo, quintillo.
6285 @section rallentando
6290 D: rallentando, langsamer werden,
6294 FI: rallerdando, hidastuen.
6296 Abbreviation "rall.".
6302 @section relative key
6305 I: tonalità relativa,
6306 F: tonalité relative,
6308 NL: paralleltoonsoort,
6309 DK: paralleltoneart,
6311 FI: rinnakkaissävellaji.
6313 @ref{major} and @ref{minor} @ref{key}s with the same @ref{key signature}.
6315 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
6316 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
6317 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
6320 es1_"e flat major" f g as bes c d es
6325 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
6326 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
6327 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
6330 c1_"c minor" d es f g a! b! c \bar "||"
6340 F: barre de reprise,
6343 DK: gen@-ta@-gel@-se,
6347 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
6351 \repeat volta 2 {g4 g d' d | e e d2 | c4 c b b | a a g2 }
6368 @c F: 'pause' if you mean a whole rest, 'silence' if you do not want to
6369 @c specify the rest's value.
6390 @item Metrical rhythm in which every time value is a multiple or
6391 fraction of a fixed unit of time, called @ref{beat}, and in which the
6392 normal @ref{accent} recurs in regular intervals, called @ref{measure}.
6393 The basic scheme of time values is called @ref{meter}.
6395 @item Measured rhythm which lacks regularly recurrent accent. In
6396 modern notation such music appears as a free alternation of different
6399 @item Free rhythm, i.e., the use of temporal values having no common
6400 metrical unit (beat).
6411 D: ritardando, langsamer werden,
6415 FI: ritardando, hidastuen,
6417 Gradually slackening in speed. Mostly abbreviated to rit.@: or ritard.
6430 FI: ritenuto, hidastaen.
6432 Immediate reduction of speed.
6445 FI: asteikko, sävelasteikko.
6449 @ref{diatonic scale}.
6453 @section scale degree
6455 ES: grado (de la escala),
6456 I: grado della scala,
6457 F: degré [de la gamme],
6459 NL: trap [van de toonladder],
6462 FI: sävelaste, asteikon sävel.
6464 Names and symbols used in harmonic analysis to denote tones of the
6465 scale as roots of chords. The most important are degrees I = tonic
6466 (T), IV = sub@-do@-mi@-nant (S) and V = dominant (D).
6468 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
6469 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
6471 \context Staff \relative c' {
6475 << { I II III IV V VI VII I }
6483 @ref{functional harmony}.
6491 F: à cordes ravallées,
6498 [From Italian, @emph{scordare}, @q{to mistune}.] Unconventional
6499 tuning of stringed instruments, particularly lutes or violins. Used
6504 @item facilitate pitch combinations that would otherwise be difficult
6507 @item alter the characteristic timbre of the instrument, for example,
6508 to increase brilliance
6510 @item reinforce certain sonorities or tonalities by making them
6511 available on open strings
6513 @item imitate other instruments
6519 Tunings that could be called @var{scordatura} first appeared early in
6520 the 16th Century and became commonplace in the 17th.
6529 D: Partitur (full score), Klavierauszug (vocal score),
6535 A copy of orchestral, choral, or chamber music showing what each
6536 instrument is to play, each voice to sing, having each part arranged
6537 one underneath the other on different staves @ref{staff}.
6552 The @ref{interval} between two neigbouring tones of a scale. A
6553 @ref{diatonic scale} consists of alternating @ref{semitone}s and
6554 @ref{whole tone}s, hence the size of a se@-cond depends on the scale
6555 degrees in question.
6570 The interval of a minor second. The (usually) smallest interval in European
6571 composed music. The interval between two neighbouring tones on the piano
6572 keyboard -- including black and white keys -- is a semitone. An octave may
6573 be divided into 12@w{ }semitones.
6575 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
6576 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
6577 \relative c'' { g1 gis s a bes s b! c }
6582 @ref{interval}, @ref{chromatic scale}.
6607 @ref{sextuplet}, @ref{note value}.
6664 [From It, @q{in the same manner}] Performance direction: the music thus marked
6665 is to be played in the same manner (i.e. with the same articulations, dynamics,
6666 etc.) as the music that precedes it.
6670 TODO: Where else could I refer the reader?
6674 @section simple meter
6676 ES: compás simple, compás de subdivisión binaria,
6685 A meter in which the basic beat is subdivided in two: that is, a meter
6686 that does not include triplet subdivision of the beat.
6690 @ref{compound meter}, @ref{meter}.
6693 @node sixteenth note
6694 @section sixteenth note
6697 @item UK: semiquaver
6698 @item ES: semicorchea
6700 @item F: double croche
6701 @item D: Sechzehntel, Sechzehntelnote
6702 @item NL: zes@-ti@-ende noot
6703 @item DK: sekstendedelsnode
6704 @item S: sextondelsnot
6705 @item FI: kuudestoistaosanuotti
6713 @node sixteenth rest
6714 @section sixteenth rest
6717 @item UK: semiquaver rest
6718 @item ES: silencio de semicorchea
6719 @item I: pausa di semicroma
6720 @item F: quart de soupir
6721 @item D: Sechzehntelpause
6722 @item NL: zestiende rust
6723 @item DK: sekstendedelspause
6724 @item S: sextondelspaus
6725 @item FI: kuudestoistaosatauko
6750 @node sixty-fourth note
6751 @section sixty-fourth note
6754 @item UK: hemidemisemiquaver
6756 @item I: semibiscroma
6757 @item F: quadruple croche
6758 @item D: Vierundsechzigstel, Vierundsechzigstelnote
6759 @item NL: vierenzestigste noot
6760 @item DK: fi@-re@-og@-tred@-sinds@-ty@-ven@-de@-dels@-no@-de
6761 @item S: sextiofjärdedelsnot
6762 @item FI: kuudeskymmenesneljäsosanuotti
6770 @node sixty-fourth rest
6771 @section sixty-fourth rest
6774 @item UK: hemidemisemiquaver rest
6775 @item ES: silencio de semifusa
6776 @item I: pausa di semibiscroma
6777 @item F: seizième de soupir
6778 @item D: Vierundsechzigstelpause
6779 @item NL: vierenzestigste rust
6780 @item DK: fi@-re@-og@-tred@-sinds@-ty@-ven@-de@-dels@-pau@-se
6781 @item S: sextiofjärdedelspaus
6782 @item FI: kuudeskymmenesneljäsosatauko
6791 @section slash repeat
6795 @ref{percent repeat}.
6801 ES: ligadura (de expresión),
6802 I: legatura (di portamento or espressiva),
6804 D: Bogen (Legatobogen, Phrasierungsbogen),
6805 NL: fraseringsboog, legatoboog, streekboog,
6806 DK: legatobue, fraseringsbue,
6810 A slur above or below a group of notes indicates that they are to be
6811 played @ref{legato}, e.g., with one stroke of the violin bow or with
6812 one breath in singing.
6816 @section solmization
6825 FI: suhteelliset laulunimet.
6827 General term for systems of designating the degrees of the
6828 @ref{scale}, not by letters, but by syllables (@emph{do} (@emph{ut}),
6829 @emph{re}, @emph{mi}, @emph{fa}, @emph{sol}, @emph{la}, @emph{si}
6847 In its present-day meaning a sonata denotes an instrumental
6848 composition for piano or for some other instrument with piano
6849 accompaniment, which consists of three or four independant pieces,
6854 @section sonata form
6858 F: [en] forme de sonate,
6860 NL: hoofdvorm, sonatevorm,
6865 A form used frequently for single movements of the @ref{sonata},
6866 @ref{symphony}, quartet, etc. A movement written in sonata form falls
6867 into three sections called @emph{exposition}, @emph{development} and
6868 @emph{recapitulation}. In the exposition the composer introduces some
6869 musical ideas, consisting of a number of themes; in the development
6870 section the composer @q{develops} this material, and in the
6871 recapitulation the composer repeats the exposition, with certain
6872 modifications. The exposition contains a number of themes that fall
6873 into two groups, often called first and second subject. Other
6874 melodies occurring in each group are considered as continuations of
6875 these two. The second theme is in another key, normally in the key of
6876 the @ref{dominant} if the @ref{tonic} is @ref{major}, and in the
6877 @ref{relative key} if the tonic is @ref{minor}.
6898 FI: sopraano, korkea naisääni.
6900 The highest female voice.
6908 F: staccato, piqué, détaché,
6913 FI: staccato, lyhyesti, terävästi.
6915 Playing the note(s) short. Staccato is indicated by a dot above or
6916 below the note head.
6918 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
6923 d4-\staccato cis-\staccato b-\staccato cis-\staccato |
6933 I: pentagramma, rigo (musicale),
6935 D: Notensystem, Notenzeile,
6936 NL: (noten)balk, partij,
6941 A staff (plural: staves) is a series of (normally five) horizontal
6942 lines upon and between which the musical notes are written, thus
6943 indicating (in connection with a @ref{clef}) their pitch. Staves for
6944 @ref{percussion} instruments may have fewer lines.
6961 D: Hals, Notenhals, Stiel,
6967 Vertical line above or below a @ref{note head} shorter than a
6972 @lilypond[fragment,notime,line-width=13.0\cm]
6973 \set Score.autoBeaming = ##f
6974 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
6975 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
6997 [It, @q{pressing}]. Pressing, urging, or hastening the time, as to a
7017 A family of stringed musical instruments played with a bow. Strings
7018 commonly used in a symphony orchestra are violin, viola, violoncello,
7023 @section strong beat
7028 D: betonter Taktteil oder Taktschlag,
7030 D: betonet taktslag,
7031 S: betonat taktslag,
7032 FI: tahdin vahva isku.
7036 @ref{beat}, @ref{accent}, @ref{measure}, @ref{rhythm}.
7040 @section subdominant
7049 FI: subdominantti, alidominantti.
7051 The fourth @ref{scale degree}.
7053 @ref{functional harmony}.
7068 The sixth @ref{scale degree}.
7081 FI: subtoonika, alitoonika.
7083 The seventh @ref{scale degree}.
7089 ES: sobre la cuerda de Sol,
7092 D: auf G, auf der G-Saite,
7098 Indicates that the indicated passage (or note) should be played on the
7103 @section superdominant
7114 The sixth @ref{scale degree}.
7129 The second @ref{scale degree}.
7138 D: Sinfonie, Symphonie,
7144 A symphony may be defined as a @ref{sonata} for orchestra.
7148 @section syncopation
7159 Any deliberate upsetting of the normal pulse of @ref{meter},
7160 @ref{accent}, and @ref{rhythm}. The occidental system of musical
7161 rhythm rests upon the grouping of equal beats into groups of two or
7162 three, with a regularly recurrent accent on the first beat of each
7163 group. Any deviation from this scheme is felt as a disturbance or
7164 contradiction between the underlaying (normal) pulse and the actual
7167 @lilypond[fragment,ragged-right]
7172 e c'4 e,8 c'4 e,8 c' ( | c2)
7177 @node syntonic comma
7178 @section syntonic comma
7180 ES: coma sintónica, coma de Dídimo,
7181 I: comma sintonico (o didimico),
7182 F: comma syntonique,
7183 D: syntonisches Komma,
7184 NL: syntonische komma,
7185 DK: syntonisk komma,
7186 S: syntoniskt komma,
7187 FI: syntoninen komma, terssien taajuusero luonnollisessa ja
7188 Pytagorisessa viritysjärjestelmässä.
7190 Named after Ptolemy's syntonic diatonic genus. Originally, the difference
7191 by which the ditone exceeds the pure major third obtained by Pythagorean
7192 tuning -- (9:8)^2 - 5:4 = 81:80, or 21.5@w{ }cents.
7194 Modern acoustical theory defines it as the interval by which four fifths exceed
7195 the sum of two octaves plus a major third. (3:2)^4 - (2:1)^2 + (5:4)
7197 This comma is also known as the comma of Didymus, or didymic comma.
7201 @ref{Pythagorean comma}
7210 D: Notensystem, Partitur,
7214 FI: nuottijärjestelmä.
7216 The collection of staves (@ref{staff}), two or more, as used for writing
7217 down of keyboard, chamber, choral, or orchestral music.
7221 @section temperament
7226 D: Stimmung, Tem@-pe@-ra@-tur,
7227 NL: stemming, temperatuur,
7230 FI: viritysjärjestelmä.
7232 Systems of tuning in which the intervals deviate from the acoustically
7235 @ref{meantone temperament}, @ref{equal temperament}.
7238 @node tempo indication
7239 @section tempo indication
7241 ES: indicación de tempo,
7242 I: indicazione di tempo,
7243 F: indication de tempo,
7244 D: Zeitmaß, Tempobezeichnung,
7245 NL: tempo aanduiding,
7250 The rate of speed of a composition or a section thereof, ranging from
7251 the slowest to the quickest, as is indicated by tempo marks as
7252 @ref{largo}, @ref{adagio}, @ref{andante}, @ref{allegro}, and
7266 FI: tenori, korkea miesääni.
7268 The highest male voice (apart from @ref{countertenor}).
7291 ES: subrayado (tenuto),
7300 An indication that a particular note should be held for the whole
7301 length, although this can vary depending on the composer and era.
7321 @node thirty-second note
7322 @section thirty-second note
7325 @item UK: demisemiquaver
7328 @item F: triple croche
7329 @item D: Zweiunddreissigstel, Zweiunddreissigstelnote
7330 @item NL: twee-endertig@-ste (32e) noot
7331 @item DK: toogtredivtedelsnode
7332 @item S: trettiotvåondelsnot
7333 @item FI: kolmaskymmeneskahdesosanuotti
7341 @node thirty-second rest
7342 @section thirty-second rest
7345 @item UK: demisemiquaver rest
7346 @item ES: silencio de fusa
7347 @item I: pausa di biscroma
7348 @item F: huitième de soupir
7349 @item D: Zweiunddreissigstel@-pause
7350 @item NL: twee-endertig@-ste (32e) rust
7351 @item DK: toogtredivtedelspause
7352 @item S: trettiotvåondelspaus
7353 @item FI: kolmaskymmeneskahdesosatauko
7362 @section thorough bass
7372 ES: ligadura de prolongación, ligadura de unión,
7373 I: legatura (di valore),
7375 D: Haltebogen, Bindebogen,
7376 NL: overbinding, bindingsboog,
7378 S: bindebåge, överbindning,
7381 A curved line, identical in appearance with the @ref{slur}, which
7382 connects two succesive notes of the same pitch, and which has the
7383 function of uniting them into a single sound (tone) equal to the
7386 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
7387 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
7388 \relative c'' { g2 ~ g4. }
7400 @node time signature
7401 @section time signature
7403 ES: indicación de compás,
7405 F: chiffrage (chiffres indicateurs), signe de valeur, indication de mesure,
7406 D: Taktangabe, Angabe der Taktart,
7409 S: taktartssignatur,
7412 The sign placed at the beginning of a composition to indicate its
7413 meter. It most often takes the form of a fraction, but a few signs
7414 derived from mensural notation and proportions are also employed.
7418 @ref{mensural notation}, @ref{meter}.
7433 A sound of definite pitch and duration, as distinct from @emph{noise}.
7434 Tone is a primary building material of music.
7436 @c Music from the 20th century may be based on atonal sounds. Meh, not so much
7451 The first @ref{scale degree}.
7455 @ref{functional harmony}.
7458 @node transposing instrument
7459 @section transposing instrument
7461 ES: instrumento transpositor,
7470 Instruments whose notated pitch is different from their sounded pitch. Except
7471 for those whose notated and sounding pitches differ by one or more octaves (to
7472 reduce the number of ledger lines needed), most such instruments are identified
7473 by the letter name of the pitch class of their fundamental. The pitch class is
7474 the note that @emph{sounds} (disregarding the octave in which it sounds) when
7475 the instrument plays a notated C.
7477 For example: when played on the B-flat clarinet, the note middle C @emph{sounds}
7478 the B-flat one tone lower. If played on the A clarinet, the same written
7479 note sounds the A (one and half tones -- a minor third -- lower).
7481 Not all transposing instruments include the pitch class in their name:
7485 @item English horn (in F)
7487 @item Alto flute (in G)
7493 @ref{concert pitch}.
7497 @section transposition
7508 Shifting a melody up or down in pitch, while keeping the same
7511 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
7516 d4 g,8 a b c | d4 g, g | e' c8 d e fis | g4 g, g \bar "|."
7521 @lilypond[fragment,line-width=13.0\cm]
7524 \transpose c bes \relative c'' {
7526 d4 g,8 a b c | d4 g, g | e' c8 d e fis | g4 g, g \bar "|."
7533 @section treble clef
7536 I: chiave di violino,
7538 D: Violinschlüssel, Sopranschlüssel,
7561 On stringed instruments:
7565 @item The quick reiteration of the same tone, produced by a rapid
7566 up-and-down movement of the bow.
7568 @item Or, the rapid alternation between two notes of a @ref{chord}, usually
7569 in the distance of a third (@ref{interval}).
7573 @lilypond[fragment,notime,ragged-right]
7574 \set Score.automaticBars = ##f
7575 %\override Score.TextScript #'font-style = #'large
7578 f:32 [ e8:16 f:16 g:16 a:16 ] s4
7579 \repeat tremolo 8 { e32_"b" g }
7593 F: triade, accord parfait, accord de trois sons,
7610 F: trille, tremblement, battement (cadence),
7623 @section triple meter
7625 ES: compás ternario,
7628 D: in drei, ungerader Takt,
7629 NL: driedelige maatsoort,
7674 @section tuning fork
7676 ES: diapasón, horquilla de afinación,
7677 I: diapason, corista,
7685 A two-pronged piece of steel used to indicate an absolute pitch, usually for
7686 @emph{A} above middle C (440 cps/Hz), which is the international tuning
7687 standard. Tuning forks for other pitches are available.
7697 A non-standard subdivision of a beat or part of a beat, usually
7698 indicated with a bracket and a number indicating the number of
7703 @ref{triplet}, @ref{note value}.
7709 ES: grupeto (circular),
7733 FI: unisono, yksiäänisesti.
7735 Playing of the same notes or the same melody by various instruments
7736 (voices) or by the whole orchestra (choir), either at exactly the same
7737 pitch or in a different octave.
7745 F: anacrouse, levée,
7767 FI: ääni, lauluääni.
7777 @item @ref{mezzo-soprano}
7779 @item @ref{contralto}
7783 @item @ref{baritone}
7789 @item A melodic layer or part of a polyphonic composition.
7797 ES: vez, primera y segunda vez,
7806 [From Italian, @q{time} (instance, not duration)]. An ending, such as a first
7807 or second ending. LilyPond extends this idea to any number, and allows any text
7808 (not just a number) -- to serve as the @q{volta} text.
7815 I: tempo debole, arsi,
7817 D: unbetonter Taktteil oder Taktschlag,
7819 DK: ubetonet taktslag,
7820 S: obetonat taktslag,
7821 FI: tahdin heikko isku.
7825 @ref{beat}, @ref{measure}, @ref{rhythm}.
7836 @item D: Ganze, ganze Note
7840 @item FI: kokonuotti
7852 @item UK: semibreve rest
7853 @item ES: silencio de redonda
7854 @item I: pausa di semibreve
7856 @item D: ganze Pause, ganztaktige Pause
7858 @item DK: helnodespause
7880 The interval of a major second. The interval between two tones
7881 on the piano keyboard with exactly one key between them -- including
7882 black and white keys -- is a whole tone.
7901 A family of blown wooden musical instruments. Today some of these
7902 instruments are actually made from metal. The woodwind instruments
7903 commonly used in a symphony orchestra are flute, oboe, clarinet,
7904 saxophone, and bassoon.
7907 @node Duration names notes and rests
7908 @chapter Duration names notes and rests
7910 @multitable @columnfractions .12 .22 .22 .22 .22
7912 @headitem Lang. @tab note name
7916 @item @strong{US} @tab long
7920 @item @strong{UK} @tab longa
7924 @item @strong{ES} @tab longa
7925 @tab silencio de longa
7927 @tab silencio de cuadrada
7928 @item @strong{IT} @tab longa
7932 @item @strong{FR} @tab longa
7933 @tab quadruple-pause
7936 @item @strong{DE} @tab Longa
7940 @item @strong{NL} @tab longa
7944 @item @strong{DK} @tab longa
7945 @tab longanodespause
7947 @tab brevis(nodes)pause
7948 @item @strong{SE} @tab longa
7952 @item @strong{FI} @tab longa-nuotti
7954 @tab brevis-nuotti, kaksoiskokonuotti
7955 @tab brevis-tauko, kaksoiskokotauko
7959 @multitable @columnfractions .12 .22 .22 .22 .22
7961 @headitem Lang. @tab note name
7965 @item @strong{US} @tab whole note
7969 @item @strong{UK} @tab semibreve
7973 @item @strong{ES} @tab redonda
7974 @tab silencio de redonda
7976 @tab silencio de blanca
7977 @item @strong{IT} @tab semibreve
7978 @tab pause di semibreve
7980 @tab pausa di minima
7981 @item @strong{FR} @tab ronde
7985 @item @strong{DE} @tab ganze Note
7989 @item @strong{NL} @tab hele noot
7993 @item @strong{DK} @tab helnode
7997 @item @strong{SE} @tab helnot
8001 @item @strong{FI} @tab kokonuotti
8008 @multitable @columnfractions .12 .22 .22 .22 .22
8010 @headitem Lang. @tab note name
8014 @item @strong{US} @tab quarter note
8018 @item @strong{UK} @tab crotchet
8022 @item @strong{ES} @tab negra
8023 @tab silencio de negra
8025 @tab silencio de corchea
8026 @item @strong{IT} @tab semiminima, nera
8027 @tab pausa di semiminima, pausa di nera
8030 @item @strong{FR} @tab noire
8034 @item @strong{DE} @tab Viertelnote
8038 @item @strong{NL} @tab kwartnoot
8042 @item @strong{DK} @tab fjerdedelsnode
8043 @tab fjerdedelspause
8044 @tab ottendedelsnode
8045 @tab ottendedelspause
8046 @item @strong{SE} @tab fjärdedelsnot
8050 @item @strong{FI} @tab neljäsosanuotti
8052 @tab kahdeksasosanuotti
8053 @tab kahdeksasosatauko
8057 * About the French naming system: @emph{croche} refers to the note's "hook".
8058 Therefore, from the eighth note on, the note names mean @q{hook}, @q{doubled
8059 hook}, @q{trebled hook}, and so on.
8061 The rest names are based on the @emph{soupir}, or quarter rest. Subsequent
8062 rests are expressed as fractions thereof: half a @emph{soupir}, a quarter of
8063 a @emph{soupir}, and so on.
8065 Each of the following tables contains one type of note and its matching rest,
8066 with abbreviations that apply to both notes and rests. Just switch the part
8067 that means @q{note} with the part that means @q{rest}, for example:
8071 @item English: 16th @strong{note}, 16th @strong{rest}
8072 @item German: 32tel-@strong{Note}, 32tel-@strong{Pause}
8073 @item Finnish: 64-osa@strong{nuotti}, 64-osa@strong{tauko}
8077 I put a dash @q{-} when I could not find a language-specific abbreviation for a
8078 duration name. If you know of one that I missed, please send it to me, care of
8079 the lilypond-user discussion list.
8081 @multitable @columnfractions .10 .35 .35 .20
8083 @headitem Lang. @tab Note name
8086 @item @strong{US} @tab sixteenth note
8089 @item @strong{UK} @tab semiquaver
8090 @tab semiquaver rest
8092 @item @strong{ES} @tab semicorchea
8093 @tab silencio de semicorchea
8095 @item @strong{IT} @tab semicroma
8096 @tab pausa di semicroma
8098 @item @strong{FR} @tab double croche
8099 @tab quart de soupir
8101 @item @strong{DE} @tab Sechzehntelnote
8102 @tab Sechzehntelpause
8104 @item @strong{NL} @tab zestiende noot
8107 @item @strong{DK} @tab sekstendedelsnode
8108 @tab sekstendedelspause
8110 @item @strong{SE} @tab sextondelsnot
8113 @item @strong{FI} @tab kuudestoistaosanuotti
8114 @tab kuudestoistaosatauko
8119 @multitable @columnfractions .10 .35 .35 .20
8121 @headitem Lang. @tab Note name
8124 @item @strong{US} @tab thirty-second note
8125 @tab thirty-second rest
8127 @item @strong{UK} @tab demisemiquaver
8128 @tab demisemiquaver rest
8130 @item @strong{ES} @tab fusa
8131 @tab silencio de fusa
8133 @item @strong{IT} @tab biscroma
8134 @tab pausa di biscroma
8136 @item @strong{FR} @tab triple croche
8137 @tab huitième de soupir
8139 @item @strong{DE} @tab Zweiunddreißigstelnote
8140 @tab Zweiunddreißigstelpause
8142 @item @strong{NL} @tab tweeendertigste noot
8143 @tab tweeendertigste rust
8145 @item @strong{DK} @tab toogtredivtedelsnode
8146 @tab toogtredivtedelspause
8148 @item @strong{SE} @tab trettiotvåondelsnot
8149 @tab trettiotvåondelspaus
8151 @item @strong{FI} @tab kolmaskymmeneskahdesosanuotti
8152 @tab kolmaskymmeneskahdesosatauko
8157 @multitable @columnfractions .10 .35 .35 .20
8159 @headitem Lang. @tab Note name
8162 @item @strong{US} @tab sixty-fourth note
8163 @tab sixty-fourth rest
8165 @item @strong{UK} @tab hemidemisemiquaver
8166 @tab hemidemisemiquaver rest
8168 @item @strong{ES} @tab semifusa
8169 @tab silencio de semifusa
8171 @item @strong{IT} @tab semibiscroma
8172 @tab pausa di semibiscroma
8174 @item @strong{FR} @tab quadruple croche
8175 @tab seizième de soupir
8177 @item @strong{DE} @tab Vierundsechzigstelnote
8178 @tab Vierundsechzigstelpause
8180 @item @strong{NL} @tab vierenzestigste noot
8181 @tab vierenzestigste rust
8183 @item @strong{DK} @tab fireogtredsindstyvendedelsnode
8184 @tab fireogtredsindstyvendedelspause
8186 @item @strong{SE} @tab sextiofjärdedelsnot
8187 @tab sextiofjärdedelspaus
8189 @item @strong{FI} @tab kuudeskymmenesneljäsosanuotti
8190 @tab kuudeskymmenesneljäsosatauko
8195 @multitable @columnfractions .10 .35 .35 .20
8197 @headitem Lang. @tab Note name
8200 @item @strong{US} @tab one-hundred-twenty-eighth note
8201 @tab one-hundred-twenty-eighth rest
8203 @item @strong{UK} @tab semihemidemisemiquaver
8204 @tab semihemidemisemiquaver rest
8206 @item @strong{ES} @tab garrapatea
8207 @tab silencio de garrapatea
8209 @item @strong{IT} @tab fusa
8212 @item @strong{FR} @tab quintuple croche
8213 @tab trente-deuxième de soupir @tab -
8214 @item @strong{DE} @tab Hundertundachtundzwanzigstel
8215 @tab Hundertundachtundzwanzigstel @tab 128tel-Note
8216 @item @strong{NL} @tab honderdachtentwintigste noot
8217 @tab honderdachtentwintigste rust
8219 @item @strong{DK} @tab hundredeotteogtyvendedelsnode
8220 @tab hundredeotteogtyvendedelspause
8222 @item @strong{SE} @tab hundratjugoåttondelsnot
8223 @tab hundratjugoåttondelspaus
8225 @item @strong{FI} @tab sadaskahdeskymmeneskahdeksasosanuotti
8226 @tab sadaskahdeskymmeneskahdeksasosatauko
8231 @multitable @columnfractions .10 .35 .35 .20
8233 @headitem Lang. @tab Note name
8236 @item @strong{US} @tab two-hundred-fifty-sixth note
8237 @tab two-hundred-fifty-sixth rest
8239 @item @strong{UK} @tab demisemihemidemisemiquaver
8240 @tab demisemihemidemisemiquaver rest
8242 @item @strong{ES} @tab semigarrapatea
8243 @tab silencio de semigarrapatea @tab -
8244 @item @strong{IT} @tab semifusa
8245 @tab pausa di semifusa
8247 @item @strong{FR} @tab sextuple croche
8248 @tab soixante-quatrième de soupir @tab -
8249 @item @strong{DE} @tab Zweihundertundsechsundfünfzigstelnote
8250 @tab Zweihundertundsechsundfünfzigstel @tab 256tel-Note
8251 @item @strong{NL} @tab tweehonderdzesenvijftigste noot
8252 @tab tweehonderdzesenvijftigste rust
8254 @item @strong{DK} @tab tohundredeseksoghalvtredsendedelsnode
8255 @tab tohundredeseksoghalvtredsendedelspause
8257 @item @strong{SE} @tab tvåhundrafemtiosjättedelsnot
8258 @tab tvåhundrafemtiosjättedelspaus
8260 @item @strong{FI} @tab kahdessadasviideskymmeneskuudesosanuotti
8261 @tab kahdessadasviideskymmeneskuudesosatauko
8268 @ref{mensural notation}
8272 @chapter Pitch names
8274 @c -is/-es endings for Danish per Rune Zedeler, pace
8275 @c and for Finnish per Risto Vääräniemi
8276 @c -iss/-ess endings for Swedish per Mats Bengtsson
8277 @c @columnfractions .105 .145 .125 .125 .125 .125 .125 .125 -->
8279 @multitable {@strong{e-sharp} = f} {sol sostenido} {sol bemolle} {sol bémol} {Gis} {gis} {gis} {giss} {gis}
8281 @tab ES @tab I @tab F @tab D
8282 @tab NL @tab DK @tab S @tab FI
8283 @item @strong{c} @tab do @tab do @tab ut @tab C
8284 @tab c @tab c @tab c @tab c
8285 @item @strong{c-sharp} @tab do sostenido @tab do diesis @tab ut dièse @tab Cis
8286 @tab cis @tab cis @tab ciss @tab cis
8287 @item @strong{d-flat} @tab re bemol @tab re bemolle @tab ré bémol @tab Des
8288 @tab des @tab des @tab dess @tab des
8289 @item @strong{d} @tab re @tab re @tab ré @tab D
8290 @tab d @tab d @tab d @tab d
8291 @item @strong{d-sharp} @tab re sostenido @tab re diesis @tab re dièse @tab Dis
8292 @tab dis @tab dis @tab diss @tab dis
8293 @item @strong{e-flat} @tab mi bemol @tab mi bemolle @tab mi bémol @tab Es
8294 @tab es @tab es @tab ess @tab es
8295 @item @strong{e} @tab mi @tab mi @tab mi @tab E
8296 @tab e @tab e @tab e @tab e
8297 @item @strong{f-flat} = e
8298 @tab fa bemol @tab fa bemolle @tab fa bémol @tab Fes
8299 @tab fes @tab fes @tab fess @tab fes
8300 @item @strong{f} @tab fa @tab fa @tab fa @tab F
8301 @tab f @tab f @tab f @tab f
8302 @item @strong{e-sharp} = f
8303 @tab mi sostenido @tab mi diesis @tab mi dièse @tab Eis
8304 @tab eis @tab eis @tab eiss @tab eis
8305 @item @strong{f-sharp} @tab fa sostenido @tab fa diesis @tab fa dièse @tab Fis
8306 @tab fis @tab fis @tab fiss @tab fis
8307 @item @strong{g-flat} @tab sol bemol @tab sol bemolle @tab sol bémol @tab Ges
8308 @tab ges @tab ges @tab gess @tab ges
8309 @item @strong{g} @tab sol @tab sol @tab sol @tab G
8310 @tab g @tab g @tab g @tab g
8311 @item @strong{g-sharp} @tab sol sostenido @tab sol diesis @tab sol dièse @tab Gis
8312 @tab gis @tab gis @tab giss @tab gis
8313 @item @strong{a-flat} @tab la bemol @tab la bemolle @tab la bémol @tab As
8314 @tab as @tab as @tab ass @tab as
8315 @item @strong{a} @tab la @tab la @tab la @tab A
8316 @tab a @tab a @tab a @tab a
8317 @item @strong{a-sharp} @tab la sostenido @tab la diesis @tab la dièse @tab Ais
8318 @tab ais @tab ais @tab aiss @tab ais
8319 @item @strong{b-flat} @tab si bemol @tab si bemolle @tab si bémol @tab B
8320 @tab bes @tab b @tab b @tab b
8321 @item @strong{b} @tab si @tab si @tab si @tab H
8322 @tab b @tab h @tab h @tab h
8330 @node Literature used
8331 @unnumberedsec Literature used
8334 @item Apel, Willi, ed. @cite{The Harvard Dictionary of Music}.
8335 Cambridge: Belknap Press (Harvard University Press), 1944.
8337 @item Krohn, Felix. @cite{Lyhyt musiikkioppi}. Porvoo, Helsinki, Finland:
8340 @item Leuchtmann, Horst, ed. @cite{Polyglottes Wörterbuch der musikalischen
8341 Terminologie}. Kassel, 1980.
8343 @item Randall, Don, ed. @cite{The New Harvard Dictionary of Music}.
8344 Cambridge: Belknap Press (Harvard University Press), 1986.
8346 @item Riemann, Hugo. @cite{Musik-lexicon}. Berlin, 1929.
8348 @item Hornby, Albert Sydney. @cite{Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of
8349 Current English}, 3rd ed. London: Oxford University Press, 1974.
8351 @item Porter, Noah. @cite{Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary}.
8352 Springfield, Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam Company, 1913.