Con Moto (musical term)
Con moto is an Italian musical expression meaning “with motion,” used to indicate that a passage should be played with a sense of forward momentum without a precise metronic speed.
Con moto is an Italian musical expression meaning “with motion,” used to indicate that a passage should be played with a sense of forward momentum without a precise metronic speed.
In popular music, a bridge is a contrasting section that links the main parts of a song—typically the verses and choruses—providing harmonic, melodic, and lyrical variation. It often appears once or twice and helps maintain listener interest.
The Phrygian mode is a diatonic scale built on the third degree of the major scale, characterized by a half‑step between its first and second scale degrees. It is used in a variety of musical traditions, from Western classical to modern rock and metal, to convey a distinctly dark or exotic sound.
Scherzando is an Italian musical directive meaning “playfully” or “jokingly.” It guides performers to adopt a light, brisk, and whimsical character, often influencing tempo, articulation, and dynamics.
Audio stems are sub‑mixes of a multitrack recording that group related tracks—such as drums, vocals, or strings—into separate, playable files. They enable flexible mixing, remixing, and post‑production workflows across many music and media industries.
A sixteenth note (or semiquaver) is a musical note whose duration is one‑sixteenth of a whole note, equal to a quarter of a beat in common time. It is written with a filled notehead, a stem, and two flags or a beam.
Rondo form is a musical structure that features a recurring main theme alternating with contrasting episodes. It originated in the Classical era and is commonly used for final movements of sonatas, symphonies, and concertos.
Drum and bass (often abbreviated DnB) is a fast‑tempo electronic music genre that emerged from the UK rave scene in the early 1990s, characterized by break‑driven drum patterns, heavy sub‑bass lines, and a tempo typically ranging from 160 to 180 BPM.
Transposition is the process of shifting a piece of music, a passage, or a single note to a different pitch level while preserving its intervallic relationships. It is a fundamental technique used by composers, arrangers, and performers across many musical styles.
The Second Viennese School refers to the early‑20th‑century circle of composers centered on Arnold Schoenberg and his pupils Alban Berg and Anton Webern, active roughly from 1908 to the mid‑1930s. It is defined by the systematic abandonment of tonal harmony in favor of atonality and the twelve‑tone method.