6_Band Vocab Set#2 Flashcards
con brio
with great energy; vigorously
ritardando
Ritardando (Italian: becoming slower) abbreviated often to rit., is often used as a direction to players
poco
little
accelerando
a gradual increase of speed
programme music
musical compositions intended to evoke images or remind the listener of events
score
written music that shows all parts; a conductor’s score, for example, may have as many as thirty different simultaneous instrumental parts on one page, normally having the woodwind at the top, followed below by the brass, the percussion and finally the strings
unison
the simultaneous sounding of the same note by two or more singers or players
interval
the distance in pitch between two notes, counted from the lower note upwards, with the lower note as the first of the interval
syncopation
the displacement of the usual rhythmic accent away from a strong beat onto a weak beat
clef
a sign that specifies the note to be indicated by one of the lines, from which other notes may be gauged