Glossary
- A
- A note of the scale. Nowadays, A is usually defined as having the pitch 440Hz (440 cycles per second), and is used for tuning instruments, particularly in orchestras. A440 is known as 'Concert Pitch'
- Abend
- German for 'evening'. Often used in titles of pieces
- Absolute Music
- Music composed simply for its own sake, not as a vehicle for the expression of anything in particular on the part of the composer
- Absolute Pitch
- See 'Perfect Pitch'
- Abstract Music
- See 'Absolute Music'
- Accelerando
- An Italian term meaning 'Getting gradually faster'
- Accent
- To accent a note is to emphasise it by playing it slightly louder than the surrounding notes. Also used to describe the musical symbol denoting that a note should be accented
- Acciaccatura
- An Italian term for a very short note played immediately before the main note to which it is related
- Accidental
- In musical notation, a temporary alteration to the pitch of a note, which lasts only during that bar. The note will be raised or lowered in pitch depending on the sign in front of it (such as a sharp, flat or natural sign)
- Accompagnato
- See 'Recitative'
- Accompaniment
- The musical support given to a melody or solo part in music, providing a harmony and a structure which supports the melody
- Acoustics
- The properties of a space (such as a concert hall) or instrument, with regard to the way sound travels within it. Also used to describe the study of such properties
- Ad lib.
- Latin, short for 'Ad Libitum', meaning to improvise. Often used to direct a musician to perform a piece of written-out music with their own rhythmic freedom
- Adagio
- Italian for 'slow'. Often used in titles of music, particularly in Sonatas and similar styles of music
- Agitato
- Italian for 'restless'
- Air
- A simple tune for instrument or voice
- Al fine
- Italian for 'to the end'
- Alberti Bass
- A style of keyboard composition common in 18th and 19th century music, in which the bass part (usually played by the left hand) uses simple arpeggios and chord movements
- Aleatoric/Aleatory Music
- A 20th century style of music where random events are allowed to shape elements of the music
- Alla
- Italian word with various meanings according to context. Can mean 'to the', 'at the', or 'in the manner of'
- Alla Breve
- An Italian term, directing the musician to feel that the 'pulse' of the music is slowed by a half in relation to the notation
- Allargando
- Italian for 'getting slower' or 'getting broader'
- Allegretto
- An Italian term meaning 'slower than 'Allegro''
- Allegro
- Italian for 'fast, lively, sprightly'
- Allemande
- A fairly slow dance in 4/4 time, commonly the first movement in a Baroque Dance Suite. Later a faster dance in triple time, the forerunner of the Waltz
- Appassionato
- Italian for 'impassioned'
- Appoggiatura
- An Italian term for an ornamental note (which does not fit the harmony of the music), which either rises or falls to a note which does fit the harmony of the music
- Arco
- Italian term directing string players to play using the bow rather than plucking the strings with the fingers. Opposite of 'Pizzicato'
- Aria
- A song for one or more voices, which occurs in Operas and Oratorios. See also 'Da Capo Aria'
- Arioso
- Italian for 'like an Aria'
- Arpeggio
- An Italian term for a chord which is performed with the notes played one-by-one rather than at the same time
- Arrangement
- The re-writing of a piece of music for different instruments or in a different form. Also used of the resulting piece of music
- Atonal
- Music which is composed without a 'key' (such as G major or E minor). Common in the 20th century, other methods of organising pitches were sometimes used instead, such as the 'Tone Row'
- Attacca
- An Italian term directing the musician to go straight on to the next section of music without a break
- a capella
- Choral music performed without instrumental accompaniment.
- Accordion
- A musical instrument with a small keyboard and free-vibrating metal reeds that sound when air is generated by pleated bellows.