Prove you're not a robot
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
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Radioactive Buttholereplied to [email protected] last edited by
1, 3, and 8.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Relevant youtube https://youtu.be/mR48eiLrQ7A
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
That's always been my problem with CAPTCHAs - they're so subjective!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I had to look up the difference between a decrescendo and a diminuendo, and Iβm still not sure why itβs not just a diminuendo.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Please drink a verification can
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It's probably a regional thing that you're more used to diminuendo. The also-subjective version, that I got taught here in Germany, is that the hairpin notation (
<
and>
) correspond to crescendo and decrescendo, and that diminuendo is just an alternative way of saying decrescendo.
I'm guessing, they taught it to us that way, because just adding "de-" to negate is easy to remember. Maybe native Italians do use "diminuendo" more naturally. It certainly seems less unwieldy, because it doesn't use the negation.But yeah, ultimately it's like how English has "silent" and "quiet", which mean essentially the same thing, but both are in use. If we hadn't already standardized on "piano", you'd probably find both words in English compositions, with whichever one used that the composer liked more in that position.
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But silent and quiet mean different things.
Silent is the absent of sound, quiet is sound at a low volume.
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I was expecting a response like that.
You know the nuance, because you speak the language. Someone who speaks Italian might feel similarly about diminuendo and decrescendo. Personally (knowing no Italian), I always felt like diminuendo was more of an alright-slowly-become-quieter, whereas decrescendo was more of a you-need-to-be-become-less-loud-fairly-quickly. So, the decrescendo often undoes a crescendo and the diminuendo is more of a general trend over the next measures. But yeah, I am grasping at straws, since many composers will use them interchangeably (not least, because they may not speak Italian either).
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Sounds like something a robot would say