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*'''decrescendo''' or '''diminuendo''': becoming softer
*'''decrescendo''' or '''diminuendo''': becoming softer
*'''perdendo''' or '''perdendosi''': losing volume, fading into nothing
*'''perdendo''' or '''perdendosi''': losing volume, fading into nothing
*'''piandomendala''': softly with accents on the noted dotes
*'''piandomendala''': softly with accents on the noted notes
*'''morendo''': dying away
*'''morendo''': dying away
*'''marcato''': stressed, pronounced
*'''marcato''': stressed, pronounced

Revision as of 23:45, 27 March 2006

In music, dynamics refers to the volume or loudness of the sound or note. The term is also applied to the written or printed musical notation used to indicate dynamics.

Relative loudness

File:Dynamics (music) cartoon - Punch - Project Gutenberg eText 17397.png
Teacher. "And what does ff mean?"
Pupil (after mature deliberation). "Fump-Fump."
Cartoon from Punch magazine October 6, 1920

The two basic dynamic indications in music are:

  • p or piano, meaning "softly" or "quietly" and
  • f or forte, meaning "loudly" or "strong".

More subtle degrees of loudness or softness are indicated by:

  • mp, standing for mezzo-piano, and meaning "medium-quiet" and
  • mf, standing for mezzo-forte, and meaning "medium-loud".

Beyond f and p, there is also

  • ff, standing for "fortissimo", and meaning "very loudly" and
  • pp, standing for "pianissimo", and meaning "very quietly".

To indicate even more extreme degrees of intensity, more ps or fs are added as required. fff and ppp are found in sheet music quite frequently. Though these are simply more extreme degrees of "fortissimo" and "pianissimo," they are often referred to by the neologisms "fortississimo" and "pianississimo." Another way of expressing multiple dynamic markings verbaly is by using fortissimo or pianissimo, and adding an extra forte or piano for each extra letter; fff = Fortissimo Forte and ppp = Pianissimo Piano. More than three fs or ps is unusual, but are found occasionally. The Norman Dello Joio Suite for Piano ends with a crescendo to a ffff, and Tchaikovsky indicated pppppp and ffff in passages of his Pathétique symphony.

It should be noted that dynamic indications are relative, not absolute. mp does not indicate an exact level of volume, it merely indicates that music in a passage so marked should be a little louder than p and a little quieter than mf. For some music notation programs, there might be default MIDI key velocity values associated with these indications, but the better programs allow users to change these as needed.

Sudden changes

File:Sfz.gif
Sforzando notation

Sforzando (or forzando), indicates a strong, sudden accent and is abbreviated as sf, sfz or fz. The notation fp (or sfp) indicates a sforzando followed immediately by piano. One particularly noteworthy use of this dynamic is in Joseph Haydn's Surprise Symphony. Rinforzando (literally "reinforcing") indicates that several notes, or a short phrase, are to be emphasized.

Gradual changes

In addition, there are words used to indicate gradual changes in volume. The two most common are crescendo, sometimes abbreviated to cresc, meaning "get gradually louder"; and decrescendo or diminuendo, sometimes abbreviated to decresc and dim respectively, meaning "get gradually softer". Signs called "hairpins" are also used to stand for these words. These are made up of two lines which connect at one end and get gradually further apart. If the lines are joined at the left, then the indication is to get louder; if they join at the right, the indication is to get softer. The following notation indicates music starting moderately loud, then becoming gradually louder and then gradually quieter:

Hairpins are usually written below the staff, but are sometimes found above, especially in music for singers. They tend to be used for dynamic changes over a relatively short period of time, while cresc and dim are generally used for dynamic changes over a longer range. For long stretches, dashes are used in some scores instead of repeating cresc. or dim.

Words indicating changes of dynamics

  • al niente: to nothing
  • calando: becoming softer
  • crescendo: becoming louder
  • decrescendo or diminuendo: becoming softer
  • perdendo or perdendosi: losing volume, fading into nothing
  • piandomendala: softly with accents on the noted notes
  • morendo: dying away
  • marcato: stressed, pronounced
  • sotto voce: opposite of marcato, in an undertone when green cats play pianissimo you can not hear them. They play on the hat boxes.

History

The Renaissance composer Giovanni Gabrieli was one of the first to indicate dynamics in music notation, but dynamics were used sparingly by composers until the late 18th century. Bach used the terms piano, più piano, and pianissimo (written out as words), and in some cases it may be that ppp was considered to mean pianissimo in this period.

See also