Multilingual Music Glossary
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We are currently providing explanations for 2484 terms from 12 languages, including English, Italian, French, German, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Finnish, Latin…
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Some random terms
- dramatic soprano A soprano voice type with a heavier tone color and more power throughout her range.
- woodwind quintet Standard chamber ensemble consisting of one each of the following: flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and French horn (not a woodwind instrument).
- réjouissance
A jubilant composition used to conclude some Baroque orchestral suites. - tritone A dissonant interval consisting of three whole steps.
- glee An English part song for three or more voices originating in the 17th century.
- tenerezza
Tenderness. - Kantor
Music director of a Lutheran church, and usually the director of music at a school or institution attached to the church as well. - hautbois
Oboe. - new wave Subgenre of rock popular since the late 1970s, highly influenced by simple 1950s-style rock and roll; developed as a rejection of the complexities of art rock and heavy metal.
- accompagnato
Accompanied. - secco
Literally, “dry”. A directive to perform in an unornamented, cold manner. It usually implies that the notes should be of short duration. - fermata An element of musical notation indicating that a note should be sustained for longer than its note value would indicate.
- tierce de Picardie
A practice from the baroque era of ending a composition with a major chord, when the rest of the composition is in a minor key, thus giving the composition a sense of finality. - simile
“Similar”. Often used to designate the continuation of the use of an articulation without repeating the articulation symbol. - cantabile
Songful, in a singing style.