music
Noun
-
An artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner (synset 107034009)
associated with:
- transposition - (music) playing in a different key from the key intended; moving the pitch of a piece of music upwards or downwards
- release, tone ending - (music) the act or manner of terminating a musical phrase or tone
- entr'acte, interlude, intermezzo - a brief show (music or dance etc) inserted between the sections of a longer performance
- music - musical activity (singing or whistling etc.)
- recapitulation - (music) the repetition of themes introduced earlier (especially when one is composing the final part of a movement)
- tuning - (music) calibrating something (an instrument or electronic circuit) to a standard frequency
- audio cd, audio compact disc - compact discs used to reproduce sound (voice and music)
- barrel organ, grind organ, hand organ - a musical instrument that makes music by rotation of a cylinder studded with pegs
- electric organ, electronic organ, hammond organ, organ - (music) an electronic simulation of a pipe organ
- soundboard, sounding board - (music) resonator consisting of a thin board whose vibrations reinforce the sound of the instrument
- stop - (music) a knob on an organ that is pulled to change the sound quality from the organ pipes
- synthesiser, synthesizer - (music) an electronic instrument (usually played with a keyboard) that generates and modifies sounds electronically and can imitate a variety of other musical instruments
- unison - (music) two or more sounds or tones at the same pitch or in octaves
- registration - (music) the sound property resulting from a combination of organ stops used to perform a particular piece of music; the technique of selecting and adjusting organ stops
- quality, timber, timbre, tone - (music) the distinctive property of a complex sound (a voice or noise or musical sound)
- crescendo - (music) a gradual increase in loudness
- decrescendo, diminuendo - (music) a gradual decrease in loudness
- pianissimo, piano - (music) low loudness
- fermata - (music) a prolongation of unspecified length on a note or chord or rest
- register - (music) the timbre that is characteristic of a certain range and manner of production of the human voice or of different pipe organ stops or of different musical instruments
- pyrotechnics - (music) brilliance of display (as in the performance of music)
- music - (music) the sounds produced by singers or musical instruments (or reproductions of such sounds)
- section, subdivision - a self-contained part of a larger composition (written or musical)
- dedication, inscription - a short message (as in a book or musical work or on a photograph) dedicating it to someone or something
- exposition - (music) the section of a movement (especially in sonata form) where the major musical themes first occur
- musical notation - (music) notation used by musicians
- sheet music - a musical composition in printed or written form
- musical scale, scale - (music) a series of notes differing in pitch according to a specific scheme (usually within an octave)
- fanfare, flourish, tucket - (music) a short lively tune played on brass instruments
- slide, swoop - (music) rapid sliding up or down the musical scale
- gamut - the entire scale of musical notes
- roulade - (music) an elaborate run of several notes sung to one syllable
- keynote, tonic - (music) the first note of a diatonic scale
- supertonic - (music) the second note of a diatonic scale
- mediant - (music) the third note of a diatonic scale; midway between the tonic and the dominant
- subdominant - (music) the fourth note of the diatonic scale
- dominant - (music) the fifth note of the diatonic scale
- submediant - (music) the sixth note of a major or minor scale (or the third below the tonic)
- leading tone, subtonic - (music) the seventh note of the diatonic scale
- staff, stave - (music) the system of five horizontal lines on which the musical notes are written
- slur - (music) a curved line spanning notes that are to be played legato
- tie - (music) a slur over two notes of the same pitch; indicates that the note is to be sustained for their combined time value
- c - (music) the keynote of the scale of C major
- c major, c major scale, scale of c major - (music) the major scale having no sharps or flats
- segno - (music) a notation written at the beginning or end of a passage that is to be repeated
- sforzando - (music) a notation written above a note and indicating that it is to be played with a strong initial attack
- world premiere - (music) the first public performance (as of a dramatic or musical work) anywhere in the world
- rhapsody - (music) a free instrumental composition in one extended movement; typically emotional or exuberant in character
- preparation - (music) a note that produces a dissonant chord is first heard in a consonant chord
- resolution - (music) a dissonant chord is followed by a consonant chord
- idea, melodic theme, musical theme, theme - (music) melodic subject of a musical composition
- statement - (music) the presentation of a musical theme
- recapitulation - (music) the section of a composition or movement (especially in sonata form) in which musical themes that were introduced earlier are repeated
- ligature - (music) a group of notes connected by a slur
- largo - (music) a composition or passage that is to be performed in a slow and dignified manner
- larghetto - (music) a composition or passage played in a slow tempo slightly faster than largo but slower than adagio
- suite - a musical composition of several movements only loosely connected
- adagio - (music) a composition played in adagio tempo (slowly and gracefully)
- syncopation - music (especially dance music) that has a syncopated rhythm
- expressive style, style - a way of expressing something (in language or art or music etc.) that is characteristic of a particular person or group of people or period
- development - (music) the section of a composition or movement (especially in sonata form) where the major musical themes are developed and elaborated
- arioso - (music) a short recitative that is melodic but is not an aria
- vibrato - (music) a pulsating effect in an instrumental or vocal tone produced by slight and rapid variations in pitch
- brass family - (music) the family of brass instruments
- violin family - (music) the family of bowed stringed instruments
- woodwind family - (music) the family of woodwind instruments
- executant - a performer (usually of musical works)
- musician - artist who composes or conducts music as a profession
- sightreader - a performer who reads without preparation or prior acquaintance (as in music)
- tremolo - (music) a tremulous effect produced by rapid repetition of a single tone or rapid alternation of two tones
- musical time - (music) the beat of musical rhythm
- note value, time value, value - (music) the relative duration of a musical note
- pacing, tempo - (music) the speed at which a composition is to be played
- beats per minute, bpm, m.m., metronome marking - the pace of music measured by the number of beats occurring in 60 seconds
- invert - make an inversion (in a musical composition)
- sharpen - raise the pitch of (musical notes)
- drop, flatten - lower the pitch of (musical notes)
- sound off, strike up - start playing
- compose, write - write music
- counterpoint - write in counterpoint
- set to music - write (music) for (a text)
- arrange, set - adapt for performance in a different way
- put - adapt
- score - write a musical score for
- transpose - put (a piece of music) into another key
- melodise, melodize - supply a melody for
- harmonise, harmonize - sing or play in harmony
- realise, realize - expand or complete (a part in a piece of baroque music) by supplying the harmonies indicated in the figured bass
- fiddle - play on a violin
- play - play on an instrument
- swing - play with a subtle and intuitively felt sense of rhythm
- rag - play in ragtime
- play - perform music on (a musical instrument)
- beat - produce a rhythm by striking repeatedly
- chord - play chords on (a stringed instrument)
- solmizate - sing by the syllables of solmization
- prepare - lead up to and soften by sounding the dissonant note in it as a consonant note in the preceding chord
- chromatic - based on a scale consisting of 12 semitones
- diatonic - based on the standard major or minor scales consisting of 5 tones and 2 semitones without modulation by accidentals
- classical - of or relating to music in the European tradition, such as symphonies and operas
- pop, popular - (of music or art) new and of general appeal (especially among young people)
- conjunct - progressing melodically by intervals of a second
- disjunct - progressing melodically by intervals larger than a major second
- diminished - (of musical intervals) reduction by a semitone of any perfect or minor musical interval
- bowed - of a stringed instrument; sounded by stroking with a bow
- plucked - of a stringed instrument; sounded with the fingers or a plectrum
- fast - at a rapid tempo
- slow - at a slow tempo
- first - highest in pitch or chief among parts or voices or instruments or orchestra sections
- second - a part or voice or instrument or orchestra section lower in pitch than or subordinate to the first
- copyrighted - (of literary or musical or dramatic or artistic work) protected by copyright
- dissonant, unresolved - characterized by musical dissonance; harmonically unresolved
- alto - (of a musical instrument) second highest member of a group
- tenor - (of a musical instrument) intermediate between alto and baritone or bass
- lyric - used of a singer or singing voice that is light in volume and modest in range
- dramatic - used of a singer or singing voice that is marked by power and expressiveness and a histrionic or theatrical style
- major - (of a scale or mode) having half steps between the third and fourth degrees and the seventh and eighth degrees
- minor - (of a scale or mode) having half steps between the second and third degrees, and (usually) the fifth and sixth degrees, and the seventh and eighth degrees
- cantabile, singing - smooth and flowing
- monophonic - consisting of a single melodic line
- contrapuntal, polyphonic - having two or more independent but harmonically related melodic parts sounding together
- natural - (of a musical note) being neither raised nor lowered by one chromatic semitone
- sharp - (of a musical note) raised in pitch by one chromatic semitone
- flat - (of a musical note) lowered in pitch by one chromatic semitone
- solo - composed or performed by a single voice or instrument
- con brio - with vigor
- disconnected, staccato - (music) marked by or composed of disconnected parts or sounds; cut short crisply
- legato, smooth - (music) without breaks between notes; smooth and connected
- masculine - (music or poetry) ending on an accented beat or syllable
- feminine - (music or poetry) ending on an unaccented beat or syllable
- tonal - having tonality; i.e. tones and chords organized in relation to one tone such as a keynote or tonic
- atonal, unkeyed - characterized by avoidance of traditional western tonality
- increasing - (music) increasing in tempo and/or volume
- accelerando - (music) gradually increasing in tempo
- crescendo - (music) gradually increasing in volume
- decreasing - (music) decreasing in tempo and/or volume
- allargando - (music) gradually decreasing in tempo and broadening in manner
- calando - (music) gradually decreasing in tempo and volume
- decrescendo, diminuendo - (music) gradually decreasing in volume
- rallentando, rit., ritardando, ritenuto - (music) gradually decreasing in tempo
- atonalistic - of or relating to atonalism
- fretted - having frets
- unfretted - without frets
- serial - pertaining to or composed in serial technique
- polyphonic, polyphonous - of or relating to or characterized by polyphony
- lyric - relating to or being musical drama
- measured, mensurable, mensural - having notes of fixed rhythmic value
- con brio - (music) with vigor
- fugally - in a fugal style
- presto - at a very fast tempo (faster than allegro)
- largo - slowly and broadly
- accelerando - with increasing speed
- adagio - slowly
- andante - at a moderately slow tempo
- allegretto - in a moderately quick tempo
- allegro - in a quick and lively tempo
- glissando - (musical direction) in the manner of a glissando (with a rapidly executed series of notes)
- molto - much
- pizzicato - with a light plucking staccato sound
- prestissimo - extremely fast; as fast as possible
- rallentando - slowing down
- dolce - gently and sweetly
is a type of: auditory communication - communication that relies on hearingsubtypes:- section, subdivision - a self-contained part of a larger composition (written or musical)
- pizzicato - a note or passage that is played pizzicato
- monody, monophonic music, monophony - music consisting of a single vocal part (usually with accompaniment)
- concerted music, polyphonic music, polyphony - music arranged in parts for several voices or instruments
- polytonalism, polytonality - music that uses two or more different keys at the same time
- popularism - music adapted to the understanding and taste of the majority
- rhapsody - (music) a free instrumental composition in one extended movement; typically emotional or exuberant in character
- harmony, musical harmony - the structure of music with respect to the composition and progression of chords
- air, line, melodic line, melodic phrase, melody, strain, tune - a succession of notes forming a distinctive sequence
- part music - vocal music for several voices in independent parts (usually performed without accompaniment)
- composition, musical composition, opus, piece, piece of music - a musical work that has been created
- instrumental music - music intended to be performed by a musical instrument or group of instruments
- prelude - music that precedes a fugue or introduces an act in an opera
- overture - orchestral music played at the beginning of an opera or oratorio
- antiphony - alternate (responsive) singing by a choir in two parts
- chorus, refrain - the part of a song where a soloist is joined by a group of singers
- ballet - music written for a ballet
- dance music - music to dance to
- serial music, serialism - 20th century music that uses a definite order of notes as a thematic basis for a musical composition
- syncopation - music (especially dance music) that has a syncopated rhythm
- genre, music genre, musical genre, musical style - an expressive style of music
- bach - the music of Bach
- beethoven - the music of Beethoven
- brahms - the music of Brahms
- chopin - the music of Chopin
- gilbert and sullivan - the music of Gilbert and Sullivan
- handel - the music of Handel
- haydn - the music of Haydn
- mozart - the music of Mozart
- stravinsky - the music of Stravinsky
- wagner - the music of Wagner
- ta'ziyeh - (Islam) a form of Iranian musical pageant that is the theatrical expression of religious passion; based on the Battle of Kerbala and performed annually (in Farsi)
- vocal, vocal music - music intended to be performed by one or more singers, usually with instrumental accompaniment
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Any agreeable (pleasing and harmonious) sounds (synset 105726503)
"he fell asleep to the music of the wind chimes"associated with:
- reharmonise, reharmonize - provide with a different harmony
- harmonise, harmonize - write a harmony for
- orchestrate - write an orchestra score for
- instrument, instrumentate - write an instrumental score for
- transcribe - rewrite or arrange a piece of music for an instrument or medium other than that originally intended
is a type of: auditory sensation, sound - the subjective sensation of hearing somethingsubtypes: music of the spheres - an inaudible music that Pythagoras thought was produced by the celestialsame as: euphony -
Musical activity (singing or whistling etc.) (synset 100544270)
"his music was his central interest"referred to in:
- singing, vocalizing - the act of singing vocal music
- music - an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner
associated with:- sound off, strike up - start playing
- harmonise, harmonize - sing or play in harmony
- interlude - perform an interlude
- scamp - perform hastily and carelessly
- churn out - perform in a mechanical way
- sight-read, sightread - perform music from a score without having seen the score before
- rap - perform rap music
- concertise, concertize - give concerts; perform in concerts
- prelude - play as a prelude
- jazz - play something in the style of jazz
- rag - play in ragtime
- bugle - play on a bugle
- play - perform music on (a musical instrument)
- register - manipulate the registers of an organ
- skirl - play the bagpipes
- symphonise, symphonize - play or sound together, in harmony
- tweedle - play negligently on a musical instrument
- recapitulate, repeat, reprise, reprize - repeat an earlier theme of a composition
- pipe - play on a pipe
- slur - play smoothly or legato
- pedal - operate the pedals on a keyboard instrument
- bang out - play loudly
- accompany, follow, play along - perform an accompaniment to
- modulate - change the key of, in music
- bow - play on a stringed instrument with a bow
- sing - produce tones with the voice
- psalm - sing or celebrate in psalms
- minstrel - celebrate by singing, in the style of minstrels
- solmizate - sing using syllables like `do', `re' and `mi' to represent the tones of the scale
- chirp, tweedle - sing in modulation
- choir, chorus - sing in a choir
- sing - deliver by singing
- troll - sing the parts of (a round) in succession
- hymn - sing a hymn
- carol - sing carols
- madrigal - sing madrigals
- drum - play a percussion instrument
- harp - play the harp
- conduct, direct, lead - lead, as in the performance of a composition
- conduct - lead musicians in the performance of
- fiddle - play the violin or fiddle
- trumpet - play or blow on the trumpet
- clarion - blow the clarion
- double tongue, triple-tongue - play fast notes on a wind instrument
- tongue - articulate by tonguing, as when playing wind instruments
is a type of: activity - any specific behaviorsubtypes:- bell ringing, carillon, carillon playing - playing a set of bells that are (usually) hung in a tower
- instrumental music - music produced by playing a musical instrument
- intonation - the production of musical tones (by voice or instrument); especially the exactitude of the pitch relations
- percussion - the act of playing a percussion instrument
- vocal music - music that is vocalized (as contrasted with instrumental music)
- whistling - the act of whistling a tune
has: beats per minute, bpm, m.m., metronome marking - the pace of music measured by the number of beats occurring in 60 seconds -
(music) the sounds produced by singers or musical instruments (or reproductions of such sounds) (synset 105726882)
referred to in: music - an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous mannerassociated with:
- syncopate - modify the rhythm by stressing or accenting a weak beat
- chord, harmonise, harmonize - bring into consonance, harmony, or accord while making music or singing
- key - regulate the musical pitch of
- sound off, strike up - start playing
- harmonise, harmonize - sing or play in harmony
- clarion - blow the clarion
- double tongue, triple-tongue - play fast notes on a wind instrument
- tongue - articulate by tonguing, as when playing wind instruments
is a type of: auditory sensation, sound - the subjective sensation of hearing somethingsubtypes: piano music - the sound of music produced by a piano -
Punishment for one's actions (synset 101165019)
"you have to face the music"; "take your medicine"same as: medicine
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