Soft and loud are described with dynamics. From softest to loudest:
ppp (pianississimo)
pp (pianissimo)
p (piano)
mp (mezzo-piano) (mezzo = medium)
mf (mezzo-forte)
f (forte)
ff (fortissimo)
fff (fortississimo)
There is also cresc. (to get louder) and decresc. (to get softer).
Forte-piano (fp) means loud, then immediately soft. It refers to dynamics (how loud or quiet notes are).
Loud instruments are the brass horns and electric guitars... soft is harmonica and klimba and glockenspeil.
It can be loud or soft, depending on how it is played.
The degree of loudness or softness.Dynamics refers to how loud (forte) or soft (piano) portions of a piece are. There can be variations in the terms forte and piano: adding mezzo in front literally means "medium (loud or soft)", doubling the words have an added effect (ff "twice as loud" or pp "twice as soft").How loud of soft you play.which of the following is the best definition of dynamics in music?
There are many musical terms - too many to count. Sometimes composers and arrangers use common words as musical directions rather than terms that might be found in a music dictionary. I recently played a piece that included a section marked as "Nasty". We played it loud, with lots of accents and with something other than our best tone quality and intonation. It was very effective.
loud quiet
quiet loud
Loud quiet
It means how loud or quiet your voice is.
dark, bright, brilliant, broad, loud, quiet loads!!!
P for 'piano' in musical notation, meaning soft or quiet. F for 'forte' would be the opposite, meaning loud.
The Italian terms for dynamics are: piano (quiet), mezzo-piano (medium-quiet), mezzo-forte (medium-loud), and forte (loud). There are more terms in either direction, but those are the main four.
charming, exciting, calm, pumped, rockin', quiet, loud, ect.
Forte-piano (fp) means loud, then immediately soft. It refers to dynamics (how loud or quiet notes are).
The term dynamics refers to whether a sound is soft or loud.=]...+
Volume is to do with sound and how loud or quiet it is, that is what volume is!
It's a simile. It is also an oxymoron, with the idea of loud quiet (the noun quiet modified by the adjective loud).