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From: | Mark Stephen Mrotek |
Subject: | RE: how to call these notes? |
Date: | Tue, 16 Oct 2012 10:25:05 -0700 |
Mr. Thomas: What I presented was the technical term used by classical musicians. In the modern world you could call them anything that communicates. A more detailed explanation, in various languages, is available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornament_(music). Mark From: Stefan Thomas [mailto:address@hidden Dear Steven, 2012/10/15 Mark Stephen Mrotek <address@hidden> Mr. Thomas: Well the little note, the acciaccatura (with the stroke) is play simultaneously as the note to which it is attached. Of course, this can be done only on instruments, e.g. the piano, that can play two tones at the same time. The term comes from the Italian meaning “crushed.” So the two notes are “crushed” together with the acciaccatura released immediately. Mark From: Stefan Thomas [mailto:address@hidden] Do You say in english 2012/10/15 Mark Stephen Mrotek <address@hidden> Mr. Thomas: Actually the musical term is in Italian. It is acciaccatura. If the little note does not have the stroke it is called an appoggiatura and is played a little bit before the principal note. Mark Stephen Mrotek From: lilypond-user-bounces+carsonmark=address@hidden [mailto:lilypond-user-bounces+carsonmark=address@hidden] On Behalf Of Stefan Thomas Dear community, |
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