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  1. Jun 8, 2020 · There is some discussion about whether Franz Schubert used the two terms to mean slightly different things, 'diminuendo' being a 'decrescendo' combined with a slight slowing down. Otherwise the two terms are used completely interchangeably.

  2. May 2, 2022 · I had four possibilities in mind for conveying this to the players: Just writing the words molto dim. Adding a hairpin beneath the bar with the word molto just above the hairpin. Writing a performance direction above the bar saying "Silence by end of bar" with the hairpin included. Adding a hairpin and putting several 'P's at the end of it.

  3. Jan 30, 2021 · They signify, in the case of the 'closed accent', a more marked and longer accent than the norm; in the case of the 'closed crescendo', a crescendo that ends abruptly in a sforzato emphasis; in the case of the 'closed diminuendo', a sforzato that immediately trails off into a diminuendo

  4. Jan 24, 2023 · Came across this variety of decrescendo in a vocal piece our choir is working on. 3 in the 13-page piece, all in the space of 3 bars, early in the piece, 2 of which are shown here.

  5. If you want a fadeout to a certain point in both dynamic and tempo, this is a good marking to use. You could mark ritard. and dimin. which would get you a very similar result, but Calando is a way of getting across both a diminuendo and a ritardando without marking ritard. or dimin. Calando literally means to calm down.

  6. Aug 25, 2016 · I'm working on a track that has more of an EDM feel to it, so the obvious methods of expressing exhaustion—rallentando and diminuendo—do not fit the music I'm imagining, since I want it to keep a constant tempo and mostly steady average loudness.

  7. Apr 17, 2015 · 7. Ritardando and rallentando both mean gradually getting slower and according to my AB guide to music theory book they are both supposed to imply a gradual slowing down. And allargando means broadening, implying getting a little slower and probably also a little louder. Without a doubt execution sometimes changes in some cases, since words can ...

  8. Sep 14, 2015 · I'm new to piano (and music theory) and I'm a little confused by the notation used for what I understand to be crescendo and diminuendo for the Arietta A1 piece. The first bar starts off with a "p" meaning "piano" or "quietly", then the next indication is a diminuendo > in bar 5 and then again > in bar 6, meaning even more quietly?

  9. Feb 18, 2020 · 4. “ Niente ” (“nothing”) is used to start a crescendo from silence or end a diminuendo with silence. Some scores spell it out fully (from “Titanic Suite”, published by Hal Leonard): Other scores abbreviate it as “ n. ” in italic typeface (“Diagon Alley” score reduction on YouTube):

  10. Feb 19, 2020 · I just want to know how can I steep the gradient of crescendo (or diminuendo) effect in Musescore? In normal situations it's like there are no effects at all. I'm using Musescore 3.2.