Music Glossary: orchestration-and-notation category

Indication that two players share a single written line in unison. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Increased emphasis on attack; common marks: >, (marcato), sfz for dynamic accent. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Sharp, flat, or natural sign altering pitch from the key signature; typically lasts for the measure. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Call-and-response between sections/spaces to create spatial contrast and dialogue. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Notation for note shaping (staccato, legato, accents, tenuto) affecting attack/length. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Relative loudness among parts so primary lines project while accompaniment supports. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

How well timbres fuse into a homogeneous sound; influenced by register, dynamics, vibrato. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

A comma-like mark indicating a place for wind/voice to breathe without altering pulse. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Staff reference symbols setting where specific pitches fall; chosen for range/legibility. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Guide metronome delivered to performers/engineer to maintain synchronization. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Tight chord spacing within an octave; cohesive color but can muddy in low register. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Striking strings with the wood of the bow for percussive timbre (battuto) or bowing with wood (tratto). more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Actual sounding pitch; used as reference for non-transposing instruments and analysis. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Gradual increase/decrease in loudness; notated with hairpins (< >) or text. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Small-sized notations of other parts added to a player’s part to aid entries after rests. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Strings/section divide a part across players (div.); opposite of a2/unis. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Assigning the same line to multiple instruments for strength, blend, or color fusion. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Volume indications from ppp to fff and hairpins; relative in context and room. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Equivalently sounding notes with different spellings (e.g., G♯ = A♭) depending on harmonic context. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Wind articulation using rolled R or throat flutter; produces growling, buzzy color. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Continuous slide between pitches (strings, trombone, harp pedals); notational diagonal line or text. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Overtone tones produced by lightly touching nodes (strings/winds); ethereal color and reduced volume. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

The specific combination of instruments used in a work or movement. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Set of sharps/flats at the staff start indicating the diatonic collection of a movement. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

Common staff configurations for unpitched/multi-percussion setups (1-line/2-line). more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

A strong, marked accent (ˆ) combining emphasis with separation. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...

A tempo change derived from a prior subdivision/equivalence, creating a precise new tempo. more

More in the Orchestration and Notation category...