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In music, the dynamics of a piece are the variation in loudness between notes or phrases.Dynamics are indicated by specific musical notation, often in some detail.However, dynamics markings require interpretation by the performer depending on the musical context: a specific marking may correspond to a different volume between pieces or even sections of one piece.
"Fortissimo" is a 1966 song brought to success by Rita Pavone. The music was composed by Bruno Canfora, while the lyrics were written by director and screenwriter Lina Wertmüller, at the time a close collaborator of Pavone, after having directed her in the television miniseries Il giornalino di Gian Burrasca and in the musicarello film Rita the Mosquito. [1]
Libera me, Domine: homophonic, 18 bars, ending pianissimo on per ignem with a bare fifth Tremens fac : five-voice fugato , 23 bars, ending in homophonic fortissimo on Quando cœli Dies illa : 25 bars, in canon , with a variety of imitative textures, ending in homophonic fortissimo on Dum veneris
"thread of voice", very quiet, pianissimo fill (Eng.) A jazz or rock term which instructs performers to improvise a scalar passage or riff to "fill in" the brief time between lyrical phrases, the lines of melody, or between two sections fine The end, often in phrases like al fine (to the end) fioritura
In the course of the Grosse Fuge, Beethoven plays this motif in every possible variation: fortissimo and pianissimo, in different rhythms, upside down and backwards. The usual practice in a traditional fugue is to make a simple, unadorned statement of the subject at the outset, but Beethoven from the very beginning presents the subject in a ...
The piece opens with a three-note motif at fortissimo that introduces the C-sharp minor tonality that dominates the piece. The cadential motif repeats throughout. In the third bar, the volume changes to a piano pianissimo for the exposition of the theme. The second part is propulsive and marked Agitato (agitated), beginning with highly ...
It opens with a flourish of trumpets, [17] before the main section of the movement begins with an allegretto (♩ = 84), fortissimo at first but subsiding to pianissimo after 16 bars and remaining so for the duration of the movement, except for two brief fortissimo episodes, which Nectoux conjectures accompanied the entrances of Portia's two ...
Following a broken-chords section filled with harmony changes, the main theme is restated in D major (pianissimo), the supertonic key of C major. Then a fortissimo and Beethoven's very common syncopations appear in the music giving a rhythm, this continues on to the resolution.