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Phrase (music theory)

Index Phrase (music theory)

In music theory, a phrase (φράση) is a unit of musical meter that has a complete musical sense of its own, built from figures, motifs, and cells, and combining to form melodies, periods and larger sections. [1]

220 relations: Abbey Road, Adhan, Agharta (album), Aja (song), Albertet de Sestaro, Allan Holdsworth, Allroy's Revenge, Altered chord, Ambiguity, Anacrusis, Antecedent, Arches (Lerdahl), Arli Liberman, Articulation (music), As with Gladness Men of Old, Attacco, Étude Op. 25, No. 10 (Chopin), Bach: The Goldberg Variations (Glenn Gould album), Banjo roll, Bar (music), Beamz, Beat juggling, Bell pattern, Big Ben, Billie Holiday, Black Beauty: Miles Davis at Fillmore West, Blackfoot music, Boris Karlov, Bourrée, Breaking Up the Girl, Breath mark, Bridge (music), Cadence (music), Call and response (music), Cantes libres, Catchiness, Charleston (dance), Chibi-Robo!, Chitta swara, Chopping (sampling technique), Classical music, Classical period (music), Coda (music), Cognitive neuroscience of music, Consecutive fifths, Copula (music), Cumulative song, Detachable Penis, Developing variation, Drum beat, ..., Duration (music), Dynamics (music), E'en So, Lord Jesus, Quickly Come, E-mu SP-1200, Emmanuel Pahud, Family Portrait (song), Fermata, Fever Dream (Richie Kotzen album), Figure (music), Fill (music), Flute Concerto (Josef Reicha), Fortspinnung, Frédéric Chopin, Frisner Augustin, Gautier de Dargies, Goin' Home (Archie Shepp and Horace Parlan album), Guitar battle, Habanera (aria), Hammer-on, Harmolodics, Heart of Glass (song), Hey Ya!, Homecoming (Kanye West song), Hook (music), How Lucky Can You Get, Hugo Riemann, I'm Gwine ober de Mountain, I've Seen All Good People, Ice dancing, Imitation (music), Impromptus (Schubert), In a Model Room, Index of music articles, Indigenous music of North America, Interpolation (music), Introspection (Greg Howe album), Jazz at the Plaza Vol. I, Jazz Goes to College, Jeff Beck Group (album), Key (music), Keyboard instrument, La Cuisinière, Lady Bird (composition), Leitmotif, Leoš Janáček, Level (music), Liberace, Lick (music), Ligature (music), Lindy hop today, List of general music articles in Rees's Cyclopaedia, Love Hate (album), Love Letter (R. Kelly album), Markov chain, Marquee Moon, Mary (Mary J. Blige album), Mediterranean Sundance, Melodic fission, Melodic motion, Melody, Mescalero (album), Metastaseis (Xenakis), Metre (music), Minimal music, Misterioso (Thelonious Monk album), Modulation (music), Motif (music), Music and mathematics, Music of Thailand, Music of the United States, Musical cryptogram, Musical gesture, Musical saw, MusicEase, My All, Nannerl Notenbuch, Navajo music, Nokia tune, Of Human Feelings, Ogunde (song), Oh! Susanna, Old Dan Tucker, Oriental riff, Ostinato, Pasodoble, Passamezzo antico, Passamezzo moderno, Pathet, Period (music), Phase music, Phrase (disambiguation), Phrasing (DJ), Piano Concerto (Schoenberg), Piano Concerto No. 24 (Mozart), Pipa, Pop music automation, Prelude, Op. 28, No. 1 (Chopin), Process music, Progressive house, Projected set, Quiet Fire, Río Ancho, Reinterpretation, Repetition (music), Requiem (Mozart), Rhythm, Rhythm changes, Rhythm in Sub-Saharan Africa, Rhythm Killers, Rhythmic mode, Rock Around the Clock, Rock Band Unplugged, Roll, Jordan, Roll, Salt Peanuts, Sample library, Satz, Scruggs style, Secondary chord, Section (music), Sentence (music), Sergei Prokofiev, Shave and a Haircut, She's My Ex, Sioux music, Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty, Six moments musicaux (Rachmaninoff), Sonata for Microtonal Piano (Ben Johnston), Song of General Kim Il-sung, Song of Innocence, Song structure, Square dance, Stephen Burns, Steps and skips, Steve Vai, Sthayi, Sting (musical phrase), String Quartets (Schoenberg), String Quartets, Op. 20 (Haydn), Structure, Stupid Girl (Garbage song), Subject (music), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007 film), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street: The Motion Picture Soundtrack, Symphony No. 2 (Lutosławski), Symphony No. 4 (Prokofiev), Takk..., Tempo, The Beach Boys, The Excursions of Mr. Brouček to the Moon and to the 15th Century, The Renaissance (Q-Tip album), The Sweet Escape (song), Theodor Uhlig, Timo Tolkki, Trance music, Twelve-bar blues, Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart, Viking metal, Vlasta Průchová, Vocalese, Whale vocalization, Where There's Smoke..., While My Guitar Gently Weeps, White (CNBLUE song), White and Black Blues, Words and Music (play), Yehudi Menuhin International Competition for Young Violinists, Zigeunerweisen, 1 Thing, 21st-century classical music, 50s progression. Expand index (170 more) »

Abbey Road

Abbey Road is the eleventh studio album by English rock band the Beatles, released on 26 September 1969 by Apple Records.

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Adhan

The adhan, athan, or azaan (أَذَان) (also called in Turkish: Ezan) is the Islamic call to worship, recited by the muezzin at prescribed times of the day.

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Agharta (album)

Agharta is a 1975 live double album by American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader Miles Davis.

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Aja (song)

"Aja" is a jazz rock song by the American rock band Steely Dan from the album of the same name, released in 1977.

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Albertet de Sestaro

Albertet de Sestaro, sometimes called Albertet de Terascon (fl. 1194–1221), was a Provençal jongleur and troubadour from the Gapençais (Gapensés in Occitan).

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Allan Holdsworth

Allan Holdsworth (6 August 1946 – 15 April 2017) was a British guitarist and composer.

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Allroy's Revenge

Allroy's Revenge is the second studio album by the American punk rock band All, released in 1989 through Cruz Records.

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Altered chord

In music, an altered chord, an example of alteration, is a chord with one or more notes from the diatonic scale replaced by a neighboring pitch in the chromatic scale.

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Ambiguity

Ambiguity is a type of meaning in which several interpretations are plausible.

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Anacrusis

In poetic and musical meter, and by analogy in publishing, an anacrusis (plural anacruses) is a brief introduction (not to be confused with a literary or musical introduction, foreword, or with a preface).

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Antecedent

An antecedent is a preceding event, condition, cause, phrase, or word.

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Arches (Lerdahl)

Arches (2010) is a musical composition by Fred Lerdahl for solo cello and large chamber ensemble commissioned by the Fromm Music Foundation for the cellist Anssi Karttunen.

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Arli Liberman

Arli Liberman (אהרלה ליברמן; born December 17, 1986) is an Israeli guitarist and record producer of Jewish origin.

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Articulation (music)

In music, articulation is the direction or performance technique which affects the transition or continuity on a single note or between multiple notes or sounds.

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As with Gladness Men of Old

"As with Gladness Men of Old" is an Epiphany hymn, written by William Chatterton Dix on 6 January 1859 (Epiphany) while he was ill in bed.

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Attacco

Attacco, in music, indicates a short phrase, treated as a point of imitation; and employed, either as the subject of a fugue, as a subordinate element introduced for the purpose of increasing the interest of its development, as a leading feature in a motet, madrigal, full anthem, or other choral composition, or as a means of relieving the monotony of an otherwise too homogeneous part-song.

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Étude Op. 25, No. 10 (Chopin)

Étude Op.

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Bach: The Goldberg Variations (Glenn Gould album)

Bach: The Goldberg Variations is the 1955 debut album of Canadian classical pianist Glenn Gould.

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Banjo roll

In bluegrass music, a banjo roll or roll is an accompaniment pattern played by the banjo that uses a repeating eighth-note arpeggio – a broken chord – that by subdividing the beat 'keeps time'.

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Bar (music)

In musical notation, a bar (or measure) is a segment of time corresponding to a specific number of beats in which each beat is represented by a particular note value and the boundaries of the bar are indicated by vertical bar lines.

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Beamz

The beamz is a laser-based music device.

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Beat juggling

Beat juggling is the act of manipulating two or more samples (e.g. drum beats, or vocal phrases), in order to create a unique composition, using multiple turntables and one or more mixers.

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Bell pattern

A bell pattern is a rhythmic pattern of striking a hand-held bell or other instrument of the Idiophone family, to make it emit a sound at desired intervals.

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Big Ben

Big Ben is the nickname for the Great Bell of the clock at the north end of the Palace of Westminster in London and is usually extended to refer to both the clock and the clock tower.

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Billie Holiday

Eleanora Fagan (April 7, 1915 – July 17, 1959), better known as Billie Holiday, was an American jazz singer with a career spanning nearly thirty years.

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Black Beauty: Miles Davis at Fillmore West

Black Beauty: Miles Davis at Fillmore West is a live double album by American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader Miles Davis.

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Blackfoot music

Blackfoot music is the music of the Blackfoot people (best translated in the Blackfoot language as nitsínixki – "I sing", from nínixksini – "song").

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Boris Karlov

---- Boris Karlov (Борис Карлов; August 11, 1924–December 14, 1964) was a Bulgarian accordionist.

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Bourrée

The bourrée (borrèia; also in England, borry or bore) is a dance of French origin and the words and music that accompany it.

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Breaking Up the Girl

"Breaking Up the Girl" is a 2001 alternative rock song written, recorded and produced by Garbage for their third studio album Beautiful Garbage.

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Breath mark

A breath mark or luftpause is a symbol used in musical notation.

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Bridge (music)

In music, especially western popular music, a bridge is a contrasting section that prepares for the return of the original material section.

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Cadence (music)

In Western musical theory, a cadence (Latin cadentia, "a falling") is "a melodic or harmonic configuration that creates a sense of resolution."Don Michael Randel (1999).

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Call and response (music)

In music, a call and response is a succession of two distinct phrases usually written in different parts of the music, where the second phrase is heard as a direct commentary on or in response to the first.

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Cantes libres

Cantes libres (sing. cante libre) is a Spanish expression that literally means free songs.

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Catchiness

Catchiness is how easy it is for one to remember a song, tune or phrase.

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Charleston (dance)

The Charleston is a dance named for the harbor city of Charleston, South Carolina.

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Chibi-Robo!

Chibi-Robo! is a platform-adventure video game for the GameCube developed by Skip Ltd. and published by Nintendo.

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Chitta swara

In Indian classical music, chitta swaras are a set of solfa passages (phrases of swaras).

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Chopping (sampling technique)

In hip hop music sampling, chopping is the "altering a sampled phrase by dividing it into smaller segments and reconfiguring them in a different order." (Schloss 2004, p. 106).

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Classical music

Classical music is art music produced or rooted in the traditions of Western culture, including both liturgical (religious) and secular music.

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Classical period (music)

The Classical period was an era of classical music between roughly 1730 to 1820, associated with the style of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.

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Coda (music)

In music, a coda (Italian for "tail", plural code) is a passage that brings a piece (or a movement) to an end.

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Cognitive neuroscience of music

The cognitive neuroscience of music is the scientific study of brain-based mechanisms involved in the cognitive processes underlying music.

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Consecutive fifths

In music, consecutive fifths, or parallel fifths, are progressions in which the interval of a perfect fifth is followed by a different perfect fifth between the same two musical parts (or voices): for example, from C to D in one part along with G to A in a higher part.

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Copula (music)

With regard to early polyphony the term copula has a variety of meanings.

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Cumulative song

A cumulative song is a song with a simple verse structure modified by progressive addition so that each verse is longer than the verse before.

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Detachable Penis

"Detachable Penis" is a song by avant-garde band King Missile.

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Developing variation

In music composition, developing variation is a formal technique in which the concepts of development and variation are united in that variations are produced through the development of existing material.

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Drum beat

A drum beat or drum pattern is a rhythmic pattern, or repeated rhythm establishing the meter and groove through the pulse and subdivision, played on drum kits and other percussion instruments.

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Duration (music)

In music, duration is an amount of time or a particular time interval: how long or short a note, phrase, section, or composition lasts.

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Dynamics (music)

In music, the dynamics of a piece is the variation in loudness between notes or phrases.

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E'en So, Lord Jesus, Quickly Come

"E'en So, Lord Jesus, Quickly Come" is a 1953 motet composed by Paul Manz with lyrics adapted by Ruth Manz.

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E-mu SP-1200

E-mu SP-1200 is a sampler, released in August 1987 by E-mu Systems, Inc..

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Emmanuel Pahud

Emmanuel Pahud (born 27 January 1970) is a Franco-Swiss flute player.

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Family Portrait (song)

"Family Portrait" is a song by Pink for her second album Missundaztood (2001).

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Fermata

A fermata ("from fermare, to stay, or stop"; also known as a hold, pause, colloquially a birdseye or cyclops eye, or as a grand pause when placed on a note or a rest) is a symbol of musical notation indicating that the note should be prolonged beyond the normal duration its note value would indicate.

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Fever Dream (Richie Kotzen album)

Fever Dream is the second studio album by guitarist Richie Kotzen, released in 1990 through Shrapnel Records.

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Figure (music)

A musical figure or figuration is the shortest idea in music; a short succession of notes, often recurring.

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Fill (music)

In popular music, a fill is a short musical passage, riff, or rhythmic sound which helps to sustain the listener's attention during a break between the phrases of a melody.

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Flute Concerto (Josef Reicha)

The Concerto for Flute and Orchestra was written by Josef Reicha in 1781, shortly after he went on a Grand Tour in the mid to late 1770s.

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Fortspinnung

Fortspinnung is a German term conceived in 1915 to refer to a specific process of development of a musical motif.

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Frédéric Chopin

Frédéric François Chopin (1 March 181017 October 1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist of the Romantic era who wrote primarily for solo piano.

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Frisner Augustin

Frisner Augustin (March 1, 1948 – February 28, 2012) was a major performer and composer of Haitian Vodou drumming, and the first and only citizen of Haiti to win a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in the United States, where he resided for forty years.

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Gautier de Dargies

Gautier de Dargies (ca. 1170 – ca. 1240) was a trouvère from Dargies.

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Goin' Home (Archie Shepp and Horace Parlan album)

Goin' Home is a studio album by American saxophonist Archie Shepp and pianist Horace Parlan.

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Guitar battle

A guitar battle (or guitar duel) is where two or more guitar players take turns soloing, either with or without a rhythm section.

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Habanera (aria)

Habanera (music or dance of Havana) is the popular name for "" ("Love is a rebellious bird"), an aria from Georges Bizet's 1875 opera Carmen.

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Hammer-on

A hammer-on is a playing technique performed on a stringed instrument (especially on a fretted string instrument, such as a guitar) by sharply bringing a fretting-hand finger down on the fingerboard behind a fret, causing a note to sound.

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Harmolodics

Harmolodics is the musical philosophy and compositional/improvisational method of jazz saxophonist Ornette Coleman.

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Heart of Glass (song)

"Heart of Glass" is a song by the American new wave band Blondie, written by singer Debbie Harry and guitarist Chris Stein.

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Hey Ya!

"Hey Ya!" is a song written and produced by André 3000 for his 2003 album The Love Below, part of the hip hop duo OutKast's double album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below.

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Homecoming (Kanye West song)

"Homecoming" is a song by American hip-hop recording artist and record producer Kanye West.

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Hook (music)

A hook is a musical idea, often a short riff, passage, or phrase, that is used in popular music to make a song appealing and to "catch the ear of the listener".

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How Lucky Can You Get

"How Lucky Can You Get" is a song recorded by American vocalist Barbra Streisand for the official soundtrack to the 1975 film Funny Lady.

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Hugo Riemann

Karl Wilhelm Julius Hugo Riemann (18 July 1849 – 10 July 1919) was a German music theorist and composer.

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I'm Gwine ober de Mountain

"I'm Gwine ober de Mountain", also spelled "I'm Going ober de Mountain", is an American song written by blackface minstrel composer Dan Emmett.

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I've Seen All Good People

"I've Seen All Good People" is a song performed by the English progressive rock band Yes.

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Ice dancing

Ice dancing is a discipline of figure skating that draws from ballroom dancing.

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Imitation (music)

In music, imitation is the repetition of a melody in a polyphonic texture shortly after its first appearance in a different voice.

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Impromptus (Schubert)

Franz Schubert's Impromptus are a series of eight pieces for solo piano composed in 1827.

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In a Model Room

In a Model Room is the debut album of Japanese band P-Model.

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Index of music articles

This page is an alphabetized index of articles about music.

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Indigenous music of North America

Indigenous music of North America, which includes American Indian music or Native American music, is the music that is used, created or performed by Indigenous peoples of North America, including Native Americans in the United States and Aboriginal peoples in Canada, Indigenous peoples of Mexico, and other North American countries—especially traditional tribal music, such as Pueblo music and Inuit music.

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Interpolation (music)

Interpolation refers to different things in classical music and hip hop music.

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Introspection (Greg Howe album)

Introspection is the second studio album by guitarist Greg Howe, released in 1993 through Shrapnel Records.

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Jazz at the Plaza Vol. I

Jazz at the Plaza Vol.

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Jazz Goes to College

Jazz Goes to College is a 1954 album documenting the North American college tour of the Dave Brubeck Quartet.

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Jeff Beck Group (album)

Jeff Beck Group is the fourth studio album by The Jeff Beck Group and the second album with the line up of Jeff Beck, Bobby Tench, Clive Chaman, Max Middleton and Cozy Powell.

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Key (music)

In music theory, the key of a piece is the group of pitches, or scale, that forms the basis of a music composition in classical, Western art, and Western pop music.

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Keyboard instrument

A keyboard instrument is a musical instrument played using a keyboard, a row of levers which are pressed by the fingers.

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La Cuisinière

La Cuisinière is a song written by Mary Bolduc and released by the Starr Record Company on her fourth record, alongside Johnny Monfarleau.

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Lady Bird (composition)

"Lady Bird" is a sixteen-bar jazz standard by Tadd Dameron.

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Leitmotif

A leitmotif or leitmotiv is a "short, constantly recurring musical phrase"Kennedy (1987), Leitmotiv associated with a particular person, place, or idea.

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Leoš Janáček

Leoš Janáček (baptised Leo Eugen Janáček; 3 July 1854 – 12 August 1928) was a Czech composer, musical theorist, folklorist, publicist and teacher.

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Level (music)

A level,van der Merwe, Peter (1989).

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Liberace

Władziu Valentino Liberace (May 16, 1919 – February 4, 1987), known mononymously as Liberace, was an American pianist, singer, and actor.

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Lick (music)

In popular music genres such as blues, jazz or rock music, a lick is "a stock pattern or phrase" consisting of a short series of notes used in solos and melodic lines and accompaniment.

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Ligature (music)

In music notation, a ligature is a graphic symbol that tells a musician to perform two or more notes in a single gesture, and on a single syllable.

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Lindy hop today

The Lindy Hop is only one of many swing dances popular today, and there are thriving local communities throughout the world.

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List of general music articles in Rees's Cyclopaedia

The music articles in the Rees's ''Cyclopaedia'' were written by Charles Burney (1726–1814), with additional material by John Farey Sr (1766–1826), and John Farey Jr (1791–1851).The Cyclopædia was illustrated using 53 plates as well as a numerous examples of music typset within the articles.

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Love Hate (album)

Love Hate is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter The-Dream.

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Love Letter (R. Kelly album)

Love Letter is the tenth studio album by American R&B recording artist R. Kelly; it was released on December 14, 2010, by Jive Records.

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Markov chain

A Markov chain is "a stochastic model describing a sequence of possible events in which the probability of each event depends only on the state attained in the previous event".

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Marquee Moon

Marquee Moon is the debut studio album by American rock band Television.

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Mary (Mary J. Blige album)

Mary is the fourth studio album by American singer Mary J. Blige, released August 17, 1999, on MCA Records.

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Mediterranean Sundance

"Mediterranean Sundance" is the third track on Elegant Gypsy (1977), the second album by Al Di Meola.

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Melodic fission

In music cognition, melodic fission (also known as melodic or auditory streaming, or stream segregation), is a phenomenon in which one line of pitches (an auditory stream) is heard as two or more separate melodic lines.

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Melodic motion

Melodic motion is the quality of movement of a melody, including nearness or farness of successive pitches or notes in a melody.

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Melody

A melody (from Greek μελῳδία, melōidía, "singing, chanting"), also tune, voice, or line, is a linear succession of musical tones that the listener perceives as a single entity.

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Mescalero (album)

Mescalero is the fourteenth studio album by the American rock band ZZ Top.

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Metastaseis (Xenakis)

Metastaseis (Μεταστάσεις; spelled Metastasis in correct French transliteration, or in some early writings by the composer Métastassis) is an orchestral work for 61 musicians by Iannis Xenakis.

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Metre (music)

In music, metre (Am. meter) refers to the regularly recurring patterns and accents such as bars and beats.

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Minimal music

Minimal music is a form of art music that employs limited or minimal musical materials.

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Misterioso (Thelonious Monk album)

Misterioso is a 1958 live album by American jazz ensemble the Thelonious Monk Quartet.

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Modulation (music)

In music, modulation is most commonly the act or process of changing from one key (tonic, or tonal center) to another.

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Motif (music)

In music, a motif (also motive) is a short musical idea, a salient recurring figure, musical fragment or succession of notes that has some special importance in or is characteristic of a composition: "The motive is the smallest structural unit possessing thematic identity".

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Music and mathematics

Music theory has no axiomatic foundation in modern mathematics, yet the basis of musical sound can be described mathematically (in acoustics) and exhibits "a remarkable array of number properties".

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Music of Thailand

The music of Thailand reflects its geographic position at the intersection of China and India, and reflects trade routes that have historically included Persia, Africa, Greece and Rome.

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Music of the United States

The music of the United States reflects the country's multi-ethnic population through a diverse array of styles.

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Musical cryptogram

A musical cryptogram is a cryptogrammatic sequence of musical notes, a sequence which can be taken to refer to an extra-musical text by some 'logical' relationship, usually between note names and letters.

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Musical gesture

In music, gesture is any movement, either physical (bodily) or mental (imaginary).

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Musical saw

A musical saw, also called a singing saw, is a hand saw used as a musical instrument.

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MusicEase

MusicEase is a proprietary WYSIWYG scorewriter created by Gary Rader and produced by MusicEase Software (formerly known as Grandmaster).

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My All

"My All" is a song by American singer and songwriter Mariah Carey from her sixth studio album, Butterfly (1997).

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Nannerl Notenbuch

The, or (English: Nannerl's Music Book) is a book in which Leopold Mozart, from 1759 to about 1764, wrote pieces for his daughter, Maria Anna Mozart (known as "Nannerl"), to learn and play.

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Navajo music

Navajo music is music made by Navajos, mostly hailing from the Four Corners region of the Southwestern United States and the territory of the Navajo Nation.

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Nokia tune

The Nokia tune (also called Grande Valse) is a phrase from a composition for solo guitar, Gran Vals, by the Spanish classical guitarist and composer Francisco Tárrega, written in 1902.

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Of Human Feelings

Of Human Feelings is a 1982 studio album by American jazz saxophonist, composer, and bandleader Ornette Coleman.

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Ogunde (song)

"Ogunde" is the opening track on jazz saxophonist John Coltrane's 1967 album Expression, and one of two songs on The Olatunji Concert: The Last Live Recording.

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Oh! Susanna

"Oh! Susanna" is a minstrel song by Stephen Foster (1826–1864), first published in 1848.

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Old Dan Tucker

"Old Dan Tucker", also known as "Ole Dan Tucker", "Dan Tucker", and other variants, is a popular American song.

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Oriental riff

The Oriental riff, also known as the East Asian riff, is a musical riff or phrase that has often been used in Western culture as a trope or stereotype of orientalism to represent the idea of Mainland China, Japan, Korea, or Taiwan or a generic East Asian theme.

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Ostinato

In music, an ostinato (derived from Italian: stubborn, compare English, from Latin: 'obstinate') is a motif or phrase that persistently repeats in the same musical voice, frequently at the same pitch.

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Pasodoble

Pasodoble (Spanish: double step) is Spanish a dance that emulates the movements of a bullfight.

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Passamezzo antico

The passamezzo antico is a ground bass or chord progression that was popular during the Italian Renaissance and known throughout Europe in the 16th century.

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Passamezzo moderno

The Gregory Walker or passamezzo moderno ("modern half step"; also quadran, quadrant, or quadro pavan) was "one of the most popular harmonic formulae in the Renaissance period, divid into two complementary strains thus:" For example, in C major the progression is as follows: |width.

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Pathet

Pathet (Javanese spelling; also patet) is an organizing concept in Central Javanese gamelan music.

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Period (music)

In music, period refers to certain types of recurrence in small-scale formal structure.

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Phase music

Phase music is a form of music that uses phasing as a primary compositional process.

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Phrase (disambiguation)

A phrase may be a linguistic expression or a constituent in the grammatical analysis of a sentence.

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Phrasing (DJ)

In DJing, phrasing, also called stage matching, refers to alignment of phrases of two tracks in a mix.

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Piano Concerto (Schoenberg)

Arnold Schoenberg's Piano Concerto, Op.

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Piano Concerto No. 24 (Mozart)

The Piano Concerto No.

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Pipa

The pipa is a four-stringed Chinese musical instrument, belonging to the plucked category of instruments.

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Pop music automation

Pop music automation is a field of study among musicians and computer scientists with a goal of producing successful pop music algorithmically.

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Prelude, Op. 28, No. 1 (Chopin)

The Prelude, Op.

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Process music

Process music is music that arises from a process.

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Progressive house

Progressive house is a style (subgenre) of house music.

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Projected set

In music a projected set is a technique where a collection of pitches or pitch classes is extended in a texture through the emphasized simultaneous statement of the a set followed or preceded by a successive emphasized statement of each of its members.

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Quiet Fire

Quiet Fire is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Roberta Flack, released in November 1971 by Atlantic Records.

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Río Ancho

"Río Ancho" is a Spanish flamenco guitar jazz piece that combines flamenco and gypsy jazz influences.

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Reinterpretation

In the analysis of 18th- and 19th-century Western music, an elision, overlap, or rather reinterpretation (Umdeutung), is the perception, after the fact, of a (metrically weak) cadential chord at the end of one phrase as the (metrically strong) initial chord of the next phrase.

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Repetition (music)

Repetition is important in music, where sounds or sequences are often repeated.

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Requiem (Mozart)

The Requiem in D minor, K. 626, is a requiem mass by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

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Rhythm

Rhythm (from Greek ῥυθμός, rhythmos, "any regular recurring motion, symmetry") generally means a "movement marked by the regulated succession of strong and weak elements, or of opposite or different conditions".

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Rhythm changes

In jazz and jazz harmony, "rhythm changes" refers to the 32 bar chord progression occurring in George Gershwin's song "I Got Rhythm." The progression uses an AABA form, with each A section based on repetitions of the ubiquitous I-VI-ii-V sequence (or variants such as iii-VI-ii-V), and the B section using a circle of fifths sequence based on III7-VI7-II7-V7, a progression which is sometimes given passing chords.

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Rhythm in Sub-Saharan Africa

Sub-Saharan African music is characterised by a "strong rhythmic interest" that exhibits common characteristics in all regions of this vast territory, so that Arthur Morris Jones (1889–1980) has described the many local approaches as constituting one main system.

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Rhythm Killers

Rhythm Killers is a 1987 studio album by Jamaican musical duo Sly and Robbie.

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Rhythmic mode

In medieval music, the rhythmic modes were set patterns of long and short durations (or rhythms).

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Rock Around the Clock

"Rock Around the Clock" is a rock and roll song in the 12-bar blues format written by Max C. Freedman and James E. Myers (the latter being under the pseudonym "Jimmy De Knight") in 1952.

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Rock Band Unplugged

Rock Band Unplugged is an expansion of the ''Rock Band'' series of music video games released for the PlayStation Portable.

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Roll, Jordan, Roll

"Roll, Jordan, Roll" (Roud 6697), also "Roll, Jordan", is a spiritual written by Charles Wesley in the 18th century which became well-known among slaves in the United States during the 19th century.

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Salt Peanuts

"Salt Peanuts" is a bebop tune reportedly composed by Dizzy Gillespie in 1942, credited "with the collaboration of" bebop drummer Kenny Clarke.

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Sample library

A sample library is a collection of digital sound recordings, known as samples, for use by composers, arrangers, performers, and producers of music.

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Satz

(German for sentence, movement, set, setting) is any single member of a musical piece, which in and of itself displays a complete sense," (Riemann 1976: 841) such as a sentence, phrase, or movement.

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Scruggs style

Scruggs style is the most common style of playing the banjo in bluegrass music.

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Secondary chord

A secondary chord is an analytical label for a specific harmonic device that is prevalent in the tonal idiom of Western music beginning in the common practice period, the use of diatonic functions for tonicization. In the tonal idiom, a song or piece of music has a tonic note and chord, which is based on the root of the key that the piece is in. The most important chords in a tonal song or piece are the tonic chord (labeled as I in harmonic analysis) and the dominant chord (V). A piece or song is said to be in the key of the tonic. In the key of C major, the tonic chord is C major and the dominant chord is G. Chords are named after the function they serve and their position (for example, the "dominant" is considered the most important after the tonic and the "subdominant" is the same distance from the tonic as the dominant but below rather than above) and numbered by the scale step of the chord's base note (the root of the vi chord is the sixth scale step). Secondary chords are altered or borrowed chords, chords which are not in the key. Secondary chords are referred to as the function they are serving of the key or chord to which they function and written "function/key". Thus, the dominant of the dominant is written "V/V" and read as, "five of five," or, "dominant of the dominant". Any scale degree with a major or minor chord on it may have any secondary function applied to it; secondary functions may be applied to diminished triads in some special circumstances. Secondary chords were not used until the Baroque period and are found more frequently and freely in the Classical period, even more so in the Romantic period, and, although they began to be used less frequently with the breakdown of conventional harmony in modern classical music, secondary dominants are a "cornerstone," of popular music and jazz of the 20th century.Benward & Saker (2003), p.273-7.

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Section (music)

In music, a section is a complete, but not independent, musical idea.

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Sentence (music)

In Western music theory, the term sentence is analogous to the way the term is used in linguistics, in that it usually refers to a complete, somewhat self-contained statement.

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Sergei Prokofiev

Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev (r; 27 April 1891 – 5 March 1953) was a Russian Soviet composer, pianist and conductor.

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Shave and a Haircut

"Shave and a Haircut" and the associated response "two bits" is a 7-note musical call and response couplet, riff or fanfare popularly used at the end of a musical performance, usually for comic effect.

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She's My Ex

"She's My Ex" is a song by the American punk rock band All, released as a single from their 1989 album Allroy's Revenge.

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Sioux music

The Sioux are a diverse group of Native Americans generally divided into three subgroups: Lakota, Dakota and Nakota.

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Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty

Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty is the debut studio album by American rapper Big Boi, released on July 5, 2010, by Purple Ribbon Records and Def Jam Recordings.

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Six moments musicaux (Rachmaninoff)

Six moments musicaux (French for "Six Musical Moments"; Шесть музыкальных моментов, Shest’ muzykál’nykh moméntov), Op. 16, is a set of solo piano pieces composed by the Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff between October and December, 1896.

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Sonata for Microtonal Piano (Ben Johnston)

Sonata for Microtonal Piano is a sonata for specifically microtonally tuned piano by Ben Johnston written in 1964 (see also just intonation).

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Song of General Kim Il-sung

"The Song of General Kim Il-sung" is a North Korean marching song composed by Kim Won-gyun in 1946.

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Song of Innocence

Song of Innocence is the debut album of American composer and producer David Axelrod.

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Song structure

Song structure or the musical forms of songs in traditional music and music are typically sectional, repeating forms used in songs, such as strophic form and is a part of the songwriting process.

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Square dance

A square dance is a dance for four couples (eight dancers in total) arranged in a square, with one couple on each side, facing the middle of the square.

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Stephen Burns

Stephen Burns is an American trumpet virtuoso, composer, and conductor.

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Steps and skips

In music, a step, or conjunct motion,Bonds, Mark Evan (2006).

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Steve Vai

Steven Siro Vai (born June 6, 1960) is an American guitarist, composer, singer, songwriter, and producer.

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Sthayi

Sthayi or Asthaayi is an initial phrase or line of a fixed, melodic composition in Hindustani music.

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Sting (musical phrase)

A sting, sometimes called a sounder, is a short musical phrase, primarily used in broadcasting and films as a form of punctuation.

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String Quartets (Schoenberg)

The Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg published four string quartets, distributed over his lifetime: String Quartet No.

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String Quartets, Op. 20 (Haydn)

The six string quartets opus 20 by Joseph Haydn are among the works that earned Haydn the sobriquet "the father of the string quartet".

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Structure

Structure is an arrangement and organization of interrelated elements in a material object or system, or the object or system so organized.

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Stupid Girl (Garbage song)

"Stupid Girl" is a song recorded by alternative rock band Garbage for the band's self-titled debut studio album.

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Subject (music)

In music, a subject is the material, usually a recognizable melody, upon which part or all of a composition is based.

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Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007 film)

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (also known simply as Sweeney Todd) is a 2007 musical period horror film directed by Tim Burton and an adaptation of Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler's Tony Award-winning 1979 musical of the same name.

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Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street: The Motion Picture Soundtrack

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street: The Motion Picture Soundtrack is a soundtrack to the film of the same name, released on December 18, 2007.

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Symphony No. 2 (Lutosławski)

The Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 4 (Prokofiev)

Symphony No.

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Takk...

Takk... (Thanks...) is the fourth studio album by the Icelandic post-rock band Sigur Rós, first released in America by Geffen Records on 12 September 2005.

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Tempo

In musical terminology, tempo ("time" in Italian; plural: tempi) is the speed or pace of a given piece.

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The Beach Boys

The Beach Boys are an American rock band formed in Hawthorne, California, in 1961.

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The Excursions of Mr. Brouček to the Moon and to the 15th Century

The Excursions of Mr.

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The Renaissance (Q-Tip album)

The Renaissance is the second studio album by American hip hop artist Q-Tip, released November 4, 2008, on Universal Motown Records.

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The Sweet Escape (song)

"The Sweet Escape" is a song by American singer and songwriter Gwen Stefani from her second studio album of the same name (2006).

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Theodor Uhlig

Theodor Uhlig (Wurzen, Saxony, 15 February 1822 – Dresden, 3 January 1853) was a German violin-player, composer and music critic.

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Timo Tolkki

Timo Tapio Tolkki (born 3 March 1966) is a Finnish musician best known as the former guitarist, songwriter and producer of the power metal band Stratovarius.

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Trance music

Trance is a genre of electronic<!-- The source says electronic music, not electronic dance music ---> music that emerged from the rave scene in the United Kingdom in the late 1980s and developed further during the early 1990s in Germany before spreading throughout the rest of Europe, as a more melodic offshoot from techno and house.

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Twelve-bar blues

The twelve-bar blues or blues changes is one of the most prominent chord progressions in popular music.

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Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart

The Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart, Op.

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Viking metal

Viking metal is a style of heavy metal music characterized by a lyrical and thematic focus on Norse mythology, Norse paganism, and the Viking Age.

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Vlasta Průchová

Vlasta Průchová (12 July 1926, Ružomberok – 16 June 2006, Prague) was a Czech jazz singer.

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Vocalese

Vocalese is a style or musical genre of jazz singing wherein words are sung note for note to melodies that were originally created by a soloist's improvisation.

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Whale vocalization

Whale sounds are used by whales for different kinds of communication.

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Where There's Smoke...

Where There's Smoke... is a 1979 album by Smokey Robinson, released on Motown Records' Tamla label.

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While My Guitar Gently Weeps

"While My Guitar Gently Weeps" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1968 double album The Beatles (also known as "the White Album").

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White (CNBLUE song)

"White" (stylized "WHITE") is a song by South Korean rock band CNBLUE.

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White and Black Blues

"White and Black Blues" was the French entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1990, performed in French (with some words in English) by Joëlle Ursull, from her album Black French.

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Words and Music (play)

Samuel Beckett wrote the radio play, Words and Music between November and December 1961.

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Yehudi Menuhin International Competition for Young Violinists

The Yehudi Menuhin International Competition for Young Violinists (or simply the Menuhin Competition) is an international music competition for violinists under the age of 22.

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Zigeunerweisen

Zigeunerweisen (Gypsy Airs), Op. 20, is a musical composition for violin and orchestra written in 1878 by the Spanish composer Pablo de Sarasate.

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1 Thing

"1 Thing" is a song written by American R&B singer and songwriter Amerie and Rich Harrison for Amerie's second studio album, Touch (2005).

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21st-century classical music

21st-century classical music is art music, in the contemporary classical tradition, that has been produced since the year 2000.

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50s progression

The 50s progression is a chord progression and turnaround used in Western popular music.

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References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrase_(music_theory)

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