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The answer is the "tempo" as in, this tempo is really fast!
moderato e grazioso
Hey man,Tempo primo is the term you are looking for. Tempo Primo means to return to the original tempo of the piece. However lets say for example that the tempo changes in sections B and D. If you want to return to the changed tempo in B (which is different from the ORIGINAL tempo or section A tempo), the term is known as a tempoGood luck!Mr.Impossible Chord
punks is a term for a group of young hooligans
The term "tempo" indicates the speed a composer intends the piece to be played. "Allegro" is Italian for a fast, light, cheerful tempo. The grand staff is the combination of the bass and treble clef staffs linked by a barline and a brace. The tempo indication appears above the treble staff of the grand staff, usually at the beginning of the piece, or whenever the composer chooses to change tempos throughout the music.
'Molto allegro' is one possible answer. There are others.
Tempo describes the speed of a song.
Accelerando
Tempo medio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "medium tempo." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "average time (duration, interval, timing, weather)" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "TEM-po MEH-dryo" in Italian.
The Italian term for gradual increase in tempo is "accelerando."
The answer is the "tempo" as in, this tempo is really fast!
Tempo
Tempo.
Tempo.
Allegro is the Italian term which describes the mood of a piece of music as happy. The pronunciation will be "al-LEY-gro" in Italian.
moderato e grazioso
Tempo