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Article title matches

  1. Music & Video, Sound Design (168 bytes)
    5: :*[[Music & Audio for films]]
  2. Register (music) (2,420 bytes)
    1: ...tch]]es or [[pitch class]]es, [[melody]], part, [[Musical instrument|instrument]] or group of instruments...
    5: ...ument|woodwind]] and [[brass instrument|brass]] [[musical instrument|instrument]]s, the word '''register'...
    7: ... complete registers and one partial register. The musical note C4 (corresponding to [[middle C]] on the p...
    11: ...[timbre]]. Register is also used stucturally in [[musical form]], with the climax of a piece usually bein...
    16: ...inging". Manuel Garcia. New York: Joseph Patelson Music House (1894)
  3. Chamber music (12,730 bytes)
    1: ... to a part. The word "chamber" signifies that the music can be performed in a small room, often in a priv...
    4: ...f [[Musical ensemble|ensembles]] found in chamber music.
    7: ...'Common [[Musical ensemble|Ensembles]]''' || '''[[Musical instrument|Instrumentation]]''' || '''Comments'...
    15: ...ured bass|basso continuo]] || Common in [[baroque music]] predating the piano. The basso continuo part i...
    18: ...scriptions of his own works); a favorite domestic musical form, with lots of transcriptions of other genr...
  4. Music sequencer (4,878 bytes)
    1: ...quence of control information for an [[electronic musical instrument]]. More recently the term has come t...
    3: Early analog music sequencers used control voltage/trigger interface...
    7: ...notation. (For software designed specifically for music notation, see [[scorewriter]].)
    9: ..., some hardware [[synthesizer]]s and almost all [[music workstation]]s include a built-in MIDI sequencer....
    11: Music can also be sequenced using [[tracker]]s such as ...
  5. Chord (music) (143 bytes)
  6. And of course always great to meet n plan with http://www.jubilee2000uk.org Make music MRC blessed (1,163 bytes)
  7. The amazing remotecontrol orchestra conductor A viral video about classical music drug card VIDEO (809 bytes)
  8. That awkward moment when youre supposed to be cleaning your room and you put on music and it turns http://iphoneite.com/iphone-4s-jailbreak/iphone 4s jailbreak into a dance party for one (1,467 bytes)
  9. Demis the sugar to every chocolate Demis the star of every night sky Demis the music for retail sales training every iPod Demis the melody to our life (2,383 bytes)

Page text matches

  1. Main Page (1,820 bytes)
    6: ...largest article database and lexicon about Audio, Music, Instruments, Computers... A wiki is a collaborat...
    28: ...'''[[:Category:Articles|All articles]]''' about : Music, Audio, Computers and Softwares, Instruments, Hom...
    35: ...ome/?lang=en&s=2ca7395b2e76bfdbe745b6d0580f2c99 PcMusic.Org]''.
  2. Apple (30,159 bytes)
    1: ...] software, Apple sells audiobooks, games, music, music videos, TV shows, and movies in its online [[iTun...
    16: ...introduced the [[iPod]], the most popular digital music player in the world.
    92: ...ervice quickly became the market leader in online music services, with over 2 billion downloads by Januar...
    94: ... and with it, obtained their professional-quality music productivity application [[Logic Pro|Logic]], whi...
  3. Guitar (52,845 bytes)
    1: ...usic|pop]]. The guitar usually has six [[Strings (music)|strings]], but [[Tenor guitar|four]], [[Seven-st...
    5: ...it-'', similar to Sanskrit ''sangeet'' meaning "''music''", and ''-tar'' a widely attested root meaning "...
    8: ... after the 10th century. ([http://www.iranian.com/Music/2002/November/Guitar/index.html See related artic...
    11: ... of popularity, the last surviving publication of music for the instrument appeared in 1576. It is not cl...
    13: ...ar.com Early Romantic Guitar]. The Guitar and Its Music: From the Renaissance to the Classical Era'' by J...
  4. Bass guitar (36,637 bytes)
    1: ... lower in [[pitch (music)|pitch]], in the [[Bass (musical term)|bass]] range.
    3: ...zz]], [[fusion]], [[Latin]], [[funk]], and [[Rock music|rock]] styles.
    23: ...odels became identified with particular styles of music, such as the [[Rickenbacker 4000]] series, which ...
    42: ... and the use of the term "electric bass" by U.S. musicians' unions.
    59: ...standard design electric bass has four [[Strings (music)|strings]], tuned E, A, D and G, with the fundame...
  5. ITMS (212 bytes)
    1: Short for [[Itunes]] Music Store.
    3: ...st and largest online music store selling [[MP3]] music downloads.
  6. BPM (598 bytes)
    3: BPM is a common way to define tempo in Western music. The second hand on a clock can be said to be mov...
  7. Bibliography (973 bytes)
    16: ...804d62b5a7fc5b36e48386af&authstatuscode=400 Grove Music Online]
  8. Orchestra & Instruments (315 bytes)
    12: ==Chamber Music (strings)==
    16: ==Chamber Music (winds)==
    20: ==Chamber Music==
    26: ==Electroacoustic Music==
    32: ==Jazz Music==
  9. Music & Video, Sound Design (168 bytes)
    5: :*[[Music & Audio for films]]
  10. Tuning (17,829 bytes)
    1: In [[music]], there are two common meanings for '''tuning'''...
    6: ...he [[unison]] but often at some other [[interval (music)|interval]] relationship.
    7: ...is too high or too low, corresponding to [[Sharp (music)|sharp]] or [[flat]], respectively.
    14: ...truments do not have a regular [[Harmonic series (music)|harmonic series]], and are known as [[Inharmonic...
    16: ...sal). Symphony orchestras tend to tune to an [[A (musical note)|A]] provided by the principal [[oboe|oboi...
  11. Pitch (16,733 bytes)
    5: ...ange in pitch is perceived) is about five [[cent (music)|cent]]s (that is, about five hundredths of a [[s...
    11: ...erent key signatures (because of [[transposition (music)|transposition]]), concert pitch is often used to...
    17: To avoid these problems, music theorists sometimes represent pitches using a num...
    23: ...ed in psychological experiments and understood by musicians. The system is flexible enough to include "m...
    27: ...e expressed by a [[ratio]] or measured in [[cent (music)|cent]]s. People with a sense of these relationsh...
  12. Unison (2,592 bytes)
    1: In [[music]], a '''unison''' is an [[interval]], the ratio o...
    5: ...colors" ([[timbre]]s), i.e. come from different [[musical instrument]]s or human voices. Voices with dif...
    7: ...en the singing is said to be ''[[a cappella]]''. Music in which all the notes sung are in unison is call...
  13. Interval (18,749 bytes)
    1: ...es the distance between two [[note]]s or [[pitch (music)|pitch]]es.
    11: ...f equal-tempered intervals used in European tonal music which explain their use through their approximati...
    77: ...r notation]] is often used, most prominently in [[musical set theory]]. In this system intervals are nam...
    81: In atonal or [[musical set theory]] there are numerous types of interv...
    133: ...een a contentious issue throughout the history of music theory; it is 31 cents flatter than an equal-temp...
  14. Sharp (1,496 bytes)
    3: ...'' means higher in pitch. More specifically, in [[musical notation]], '''sharp''' means "higher in [[pitc...
    7: ...le step. Less often (in for instance [[microtonal music]] [[notation]]) one will encounter half, or three...
    9: The [[note]] ''C sharp'' is shown in [[musical notation]] in Figure 1, together with ''C doubl...
    14: * [[Accidental (music)|Accidental]]
    15: * [[Flat (music)|Flat]]
  15. Flat (1,428 bytes)
    2: ...' means "lower in pitch." More specifically, in [[music notation]], '''flat''' means "lower in [[pitch]] ...
    6: ...le step. Less often (in for instance [[microtonal music]] [[notation]]) one will encounter half, or three...
    8: The [[note]] ''A flat'' is shown in [[musical notation]] in Figure 1, together with ''A doubl...
    15: * [[Accidental (music)|Accidental]]
    16: * [[Sharp (music)|Sharp]]
  16. Ear training (11,333 bytes)
    1: ...part in ear training, since one must be able hear music in one's head and match pitch before it is possib...
    3: ...ame pitch to be generated with multiple timbres. Music which employs function through timbre as well as ...
    7: ...r all musicians listening to and performing tonal music. Functional pitch recognition involves identifyin...
    11: Many musicians use functional pitch recognition in order to ...
    13: ... solfege symbols with the scale degrees. In fact, musicians may utilize the moveable-''do'' system to lab...
  17. Piano (31,680 bytes)
    1: ...string]] instrument, depending on the system of [[musical instrument classification|classification]] used...
    3: ...d ubiquity has made it among the most familiar of musical instruments.
    21: ...ormance|authentic-instrument performance]] of his music. The pianos of Mozart's day had a softer, clearer...
    58: ===Piano history and musical performance ===
    60: ...s music on modern pianos, see [[piano history and musical performance]].
  18. Harpsichord (20,144 bytes)
    1: ...onfusion with the [[clavichord]]. Accordingly, in musical circles the Italian or, more commonly, the Fren...
    6: ... [[psaltery]]. A [[Latin]] [[manuscript]] work on musical instruments by [[Henri Arnault de Zwolle]], c. ...
    10: ...ered pleasing but unspectacular in their [[Pitch (music)|tone]] and serve well for [[accompaniment|accomp...
    15: ...ially used merely to permit easy [[transposition (music)|transposition]] (at the interval of a fourth) ra...
    26: ...listeners, but the feeling that it overpowers the music has led to very few modern instruments being mode...
  19. Brass instrument (13,026 bytes)
    3: A '''brass instrument''' is a [[musical instrument]] whose tone is produced by vibratio...
    42: ...was an improved design. However most professional musicians preferred rotary valves for quicker, more rel...
    109: * [http://www.brassmusic.ru Brassmusic.Ru — Russian Brass Community]
    110: ...truments] from [http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/music Music Acoustics] at the University of New South Wales
  20. Clavichord (7,872 bytes)
    1: ...ance]], [[Baroque music|Baroque]] and [[Classical music era|Classical]] eras. Historically, it was widely...
    6: ...d primarily by Renaissance, Baroque and Classical music enthusiasts. They maintain a level of interest am...
    8: ...d attention in other genres of music, like [[rock music|rock]] in the form of the [[clavinet]], which is ...
    16: ...though still not really enough for use in chamber music), and a clearer, more direct sound. Among the dis...
    18: ...an be easily altered) and the ability to play any music exactly as written without concern for "bad" note...

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