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What the title sayss...

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
a tempo   return to the original tempo after some deviation  
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adagio   slow, leisurely tempo  
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al fine   to the end, generally used after a repetition  
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alla breve   a tempo marking indicating quick double time; i.e. 2/2 instead of 4/4 with the half note rather than the quarter note as the beat  
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allargando   slowing of tempo, usually with increasing volume; most frequently occurs toward the end of a piece.  
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allegretto   slightly slower than allegro, often implying lighter texture and character as well  
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allegro   fast  
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allegro con spirito   fast tempo with spirit  
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amabile   sweet, loveable  
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ancora meno mosso   once more, but a little slower  
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andante   rather slow, at a moderate walking pace  
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aria   a self-contained composition for solo voice, usually with instrumental accompaniment and usually found within the context of an opera, oratorio or cantata  
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arpeggio   the notes of a chord played in succession to one another, rather than simultaneously; a broken chord  
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art song   a composed song in which the text, melody, and accompaniment, are interrelated to create a unified effect  
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bel canto   a style of singing characterized by lyricism, legato, pure vowels, and freedom of production which originated in Italy during the so called "Golden Age of Singing" (1685-1825)  
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berceuse   a lullaby  
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cadenza   an improvised or written-out ornamental passage performed by a soloist usually near the final cadence  
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cantabile   singable; singing  
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catch breath   a short or partial breath to renew lung supply quickly  
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chorale   a congregational song or hymn of the German Protestant Church, originally for the entire congregation to sing  
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chord   3 or more pitches sounded simultaneously or functioning as if sounded simultaneously  
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chromatic   motion by half steps; also describes harmony or melody that employs some of the sequential 12 pitches (semi-tones) in an octave  
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D.C. or Da Capo   repeat from the beginning of the composition  
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D.S. or dal segno   repeat from the sign  
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divisi   performers singing the same part are divided to sing different parts.  
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dolce   sweetly, usually also softly  
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dynamics   the degrees of loudness in a musical work  
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embellishment   ornamentation added to music to make it more beautiful or effective, or to demonstrate the abilities of the performer  
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forward tone   focused tone; a tone with major frontal resonance of the mouth and vocal mask  
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grave   grave, solemn  
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grazioso   graceful  
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gruppo ad lib   a group of notes played or sung at the will or pleasure of the performer  
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head voice   the higher register of the singing voice  
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key   the pitch relationships that establish a tonal center  
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largo   very slow and broad  
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leap   melodic motion from one pitch to another that is more than a whole tone away  
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legato e pesante   smooth, connected and heavy  
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leggiero(leggero)   light (soft)  
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lunga   a long pause that is determined by the performer (director)  
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major scale   a diatonic scale where the half-steps fall between the third and fourth, and the seventh and octave  
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marcato   marked, stressed  
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misterioso   play or sing in a mysterious manner  
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motif   a short musical idea or melodic theme, usually shorter than a musical phrase  
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natural   a note that is not affected by either a sharp or a flat, a natural sign cancels a previous sharp or flat  
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niente   nothing  
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notation   any means of writing down music, usually indicating pitch, duration, timbre and loudness  
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octave   an interval eight diatonic scale degrees above it. Two notes an octave apart have the same letter name, and form the most consonant interval possible.  
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phrase   a single musical idea or element which is often defined by a repeated rhythmic pattern or a melodic contour  
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portamento   special manner of singing where the voice glides from one tone to the next through all the intermediate pitches  
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prestissimo   as fast as possible  
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presto   very fast, faster than allegro  
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primo   first or upper part  
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rallentando (rall.)   slowing down; the same as ritardando  
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rubato   making the established pulse flexible by accelerating and slowing down the tempo, an expressive device  
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sempre   always  
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senza   without  
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sequence   the repetition of a phrase at different pitch levels using the same or similar intervals.  
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sforzando   strongly accented, forced  
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simile (sim.)   continue to perform in a similar manner  
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sotto voce   softly; with subdued sound; performed in an undertone  
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stringendo   pressing, becoming faster, hurrying  
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strophic   describes a song where the stanzas are all sung to the same music  
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subito   suddenly, quickly  
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tacet   indicated that a particular voice or instrument is silent for an extended passage or movement  
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tenuto (ten.)   fully sustained, occasionally even a bit longer than the note value requires  
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time signature   the sign placed at the beginning of a composition to indicate its meter  
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tonic   the key center, the foundation of a scale or melody  
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vivace   lively, briskly  
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