Quiet. No sound from the instrument.
Musical notation usually (but not always) uses Italian. quite = molto (meaning very) quiet = tranquillo (meaning peaceful), tacet (meaning silent)
Could the answer be TACIT. It means to be silent etc. No, it is an adjective meaning "silent". The correct answer is TACET from the Latin for silence. In Latin it actually means: "let it be silent."
Guitar, Drumset, Berry Sax...ect jk. Instruments that are featured are Oboe English Horn, Flute, Harp, Clarinet, horn, bassoon, and strings. Instruments that are not super featured are mostly the other brass instruments which rest forever or are tacet.
There are two terms for silence in music. When there is a set time of silence- a single beat, a measure, or ten measures, etc- that is called a "rest". when there is a time of silence in a piece of music that isn't restrained to a set time that could be either a "rest fermata" or a "grand pause". A rest fermata will have the symbol place over a rest.
Daniel Tacet has written: 'Renault, secret d'Etat' 'Un monde sans paysans'
tacet
Quiet. No sound from the instrument.
Pete Kelly's Blues - 1959 The 16-Bar Tacet 1-13 was released on: USA: 5 July 1959
"Qui tacet consentit" (silence implies consent)
silent consent.-------------------------------------------Qui tacet consentire videtur, ubi loqui debuit ac potuit."Who is silent, when he ought to and might have spoken, is seen to agree."
Musical notation usually (but not always) uses Italian. quite = molto (meaning very) quiet = tranquillo (meaning peaceful), tacet (meaning silent)
Could the answer be TACIT. It means to be silent etc. No, it is an adjective meaning "silent". The correct answer is TACET from the Latin for silence. In Latin it actually means: "let it be silent."
I think 'sonare' might be a possibility since it's a musical term that means 'to play'. For the case of singing 'cantare' would be used instead. I've not ever seen either of the terms used in this context though.
"Tacet" is the equivalent of "silent" in the glossary of musical terminology.Specifically, the word comes from the classical Latin of the ancient Romans. It literally means "It is silent." In terms of music, there is to be no sound, from any person or any instrument.
This is really just a rephrasing of the old Latin rule of law: "qui tacet consentire videtur (one who is silent is seen to have given consent)." To acquiesce is to accept or to comply. So, it follows that if a person chooses silence as a response, then that is interpreted (rightly or wrongly) as acceptance.
Guitar, Drumset, Berry Sax...ect jk. Instruments that are featured are Oboe English Horn, Flute, Harp, Clarinet, horn, bassoon, and strings. Instruments that are not super featured are mostly the other brass instruments which rest forever or are tacet.