Multilingual Music Glossary

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Found a word you don't know? No problem. Look it up in the Music Glossary!

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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Please note: a music glossary is just like a dictionary. It contains explanations to musical terms. If you are looking for a piece, please go here instead: search tunes.

Some random terms

  • attacca [Italian] A musical directive for the performer to begin the next section of a composition immediately and without pause.
  • no chord A directive placed over a note (or a series of notes) signifying that the note(s) should be performed without accompaniment. Typically found in popular music notation.
  • madrigal Renaissance secular work originating in Italy for voices, with or without instruments, set to a short, lyric love poem.
  • bracket In a score, a vertical bracket that groups together the staves relative to the instruments of a section, like the woodwinds or the strings.
  • passepied [French] A baroque dance in triple meter.
  • innigster [German] “Sincere”.
  • theme and variations A style of composition that first presents a basic theme and then develops and alters that theme in successive statements.
  • head voice The highest register of the voice, excluding falsetto.
  • pienezza [Italian] “Fullness”.
  • symphonie concertante [French] A musical genre of the late 18th and early 19th centuries that resembles a concerto for two to four solo instruments. It is a composition in two or three movements of a lighthearted character, usually in a major key. The genre features a few solo instruments and orchestra.
  • bourrée [French] An old French dance in use during the Baroque period, very rapid and hearty, usually in 2/4 or 2/2 time.
  • impetuoso [Italian] Impetuous, vehement.
  • amaramente [Italian] Bitterly, mournfully, grievingly.
  • direct motion Similar or parallel motion in which two or more parts rise or fall in the same direction simultaneously.
  • relative pitch The ability to identify any pitch in reference to a given pitch.