安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Tenuto, legato and staccato on the same note
In the first bars of the Barcarola et Scherzo by Alfredo Casella the piano part has chords with legato, tenuto and staccato signs all together: What is the correct way to play these notes? What co
- piano - Isnt a tenuto marking redundant? - Music: Practice Theory . . .
A tenuto marking is somewhat of an accent mark for note length, but to a lesser degree While a tenuto isn't an outright fermata, it means to put more emphasis on a note
- What to do with a tenuto pizzicato note? - Music: Practice Theory . . .
The tenuto is meant to convey emphasis (like a light accent or slightly louder dynamic), with the note still a staccato pizzicato In this case why would the staccato marking have been omitted? Have I overlooked anything? What would you do with this notation?
- What does this tenuto notation mean? - Music: Practice Theory Stack . . .
4 What precisely does this notation mean in the first bar treble clef? From ear, the note appears to be held until it’s sounded again - is that the intention, and wouldn’t a dotted eight be a reasonable alternative? Besides that, why are the two tenuto notes beamed? It’s from Michael Nyman’s ‘The Heart Asks Pleasure First’
- Ties - is there a distinction between these two notes?
The tenuto mark is there to inform the player that the curve connecting the two notes is not a tie but a slur -- a bowing mark This is two notes to be played without reversing the direction in which the bow is traveling In a piece for piano such a tied note with a tenuto sign doesn’t make much sense
- notation - What does ben tenuto il basso mean? - Music: Practice . . .
In the second theme of the recapitulation of Beethoven's Pathetique Sonata where the bass line goes into the treble clef and the bass register becomes part of the melody, I see the marking ben tenuto il basso
- What is the proper name of the dash symbol over a note and how . . . - theory
According to Wikipedia it's called a Tenuto but my teacher said it's called a "dash" Which one is correct? Or are both names correct? Second of all, how exactly do you play it? I read up on it in wikipedia and it was somewhat confusing Could someone specify with examples exactly how notes with that kind of symbols should be treated?
- Duration of articulations (e. g. staccato, tenuto) for piano
QUESTION Staccatissimo, staccato, mezzo-staccato, portato, non-legato, tenuto, legato * For piano, what would be a (rough) numerical representation of these articulations' gap duration for note dur
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