Glossary of terms used on this website and in resources.
A
Accent - emphasis on individual sounds
Accompaniment - a part that supports, backs or complements a musical melody
Anacrusis - an unstressed note at the beginning of a phrase
B
Bar - the divisions of beats in music
Beatboxing - using the mouth and voice to make sounds that imitate a drum kit or drum machine
Body percussion - using the body as a percussion instrument such as clapping or clicking
Bourdon - a drone bass on two notes, a fifth apart
Bridge - a short section of music that links two important sections of a piece of music
C
Call and response - when a phrase sung by one musician is answered by another musician or by a group
Chant - reciting in a musical way
Chord - a group of three or more notes played together that make a harmony
Chorus - the part of a song often repeated after a verse
Chromatic - one or more notes which do not belong to a diatonic scale or mode
Coda - a section that rounds off or ends a piece
Contour - see melodic contour below
Crescendo - getting gradually louder
D
Diminuendo - getting gradually softer
Downbeat - the first beat of the bar
Drone - a repeated note that doesn?t change. Usually it is used to accompany a melody
Duration - the beat, rhythm, tempo and metre of a piece of music
Dynamics - the volume of the sound and changes thereof
E
Echo - imitate
G
Garage Band - a computer music program that makes it easy to play, create and record musical instruments and sound effects
Glissando - sliding between notes
Graphic notation - symbols that are not traditional music notation, used to record sounds
H
Harmony - two or more pitches sounded together
I
Improvisation - creating the music as it is being performed
Interlude - an instrumental section within a composition
Instrumentation - the varying tone colours produced by different combinations of instruments
Interval - the "distance" between two notes; the difference in pitch
L
Legato - played smoothly, with each sound connected
M
Melodic contour - the shape of the pitches within a melody
Melody - a series of notes that create a tune
Metre - the division or grouping of beats, indicated by the time signature
Metronome marking - indicates the tempo of the music
Minor pentatonic scale - based around the minor scale, this features the five notes of 1 3 4 5 and 7 (not 2 and 6). For example, in E minor pentatonic, this features the notes E G A B and D (not F and C)
N
N.C. - no chord. Don't play until the next chord symbol occurs.
O
Octave - the space of eight notes between two notes of the same name
Ostinato - a repeated musical part such as a rhythm or melody that continues much like a riff
Offbeat - when the rhythm is not on the main beat of the bar
P
Patsching - slapping own thighs to make a body percussion sound
Pause - also called a fermata and indicated by a pause sign. It indicates the note is to be held for longer than its value
Pentatonic scale - a scale made of five notes. Commonly this use notes 1 2 3 5 and 6 of the major scale and excludes notes 4 and 7. For example in C major the pentatonic scale is C D E G A (not F or B)
Phrase - a short segment of a melody
Phrasing - a musical sentence usually in between breaths
Pitch - the highs and lows of a musical composition or the melodic contour
R
Rap - rhythmical speaking
Rhythm - a part of the musical concept of duration. The rhythm, unlike the beat, usually changes and forms patterns. In a song, the rhythm is the words
Riff - a repeated musical pattern (also called an ostinato)
Rondo - a structure in which section A recurs between alternating sections
Round - a part song in which the voices enter one after the other, singing the same melody
S
Scat - improvised singing which uses nonsense syllables
Score - musical notation
Soundscape - a sound or combination of sounds that create an atmospheric musical composition
Staccato -detached sounds
Structure - the way a piece of music is put together
Syncopation - when the rhythm is off the beat
T
Tempo - the speed of the beat
Timbre (tone colour) - the description of the way an instrument or style sounds and how the sound is created
Time signature - two figures written at the beginning of bars showing how many beats in a bar and how much the beat is worth
Triad - a chord, made up of three notes, 1st, 3rd and 5th degrees of a scale
Twelve bar blues - is one of the most used chord progressions in popular music. In its basic form, it is based on chords I, IV, and V of a key
U
Upbeat - an unstressed note at the beginning of a phrase (also referred to as an anacrusis)
Unison - all parts playing or singing the same melody
V
Verse - a section of a song usually alternating with the chorus.