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.
- Eingang
An introduction, preface or prelude. - instrument Any device used to create music.
- oratorio
Large-scale dramatic genre originating in the Baroque, based on a text of religious or serious character, performed by solo voices, chorus and orchestra; similar to opera but without scenery, costumes or action. - radical bass An bass line produced by linking the fundamentals of the chords in a progression.
- légèrement
Lightly. - Tafelmusik
Literally, “table music”. Music that is performed at feasts and banquets. - flageolet
A simple recorder with four finger holes, popular in the 17th century in England. - neoclassical Term applied to 20th century composers who use the forms and thematic processes of the classical era.
- dominant The fifth degree of a diatonic scale.
- alla breve
A time marking indicating a quick duple meter, with the half note rather than the quarter note getting the beat (2/2 rather than 4/4). - paso doble
Literally, “double step”. A Spanish dance in a brisk duple meter, typically 2/4 time. - quasi
“Almost”. - relative pitch The ability to identify any pitch in reference to a given pitch.
- villancico
A 15th and 16th century form of Spanish poetry that was often set to music.