An appoggiatura is a type of musical ornament. It is like a 'leaning note' and is written as a grace note printed in small character, without a line through the stem, prefixed to a principal note and generally takes about half the time value of this note.
It is not to be confused with an acciaccatura, sometimes called a 'crushed note' which takes up very little time value of the principal note it is prefixed to. You can tell the difference between them as an acciaccatura has a line through the stem but is also written in small print as a grace note.
An appoggiatura takes on half the value of the note it is tied to. For example, if there was a minium (2 count note) with an appoggiatura, the minium note would become a crotchet (1 beat note) and the appoggiatura note would also be played for 1 beat. Normally the appoggiatura is emphasised (stressed/ leaned on). An acciaccatura looks like an appoggiatura but with a line crossing it. It is also called a crushed note. Really, it doesn't take any duration off the note, but is like a before thought. It is played very fast with the main emphasis on the note.
Ornaments alter the pitch pattern of individual notes, such as Trill, Mordant, Turn, Appoggiatura and Acciaccura. An example would be for a Trill, a rapid alteration between the specified note and the next higher note (according to the key signature) within it's duration
An appoggiatura takes on half the value of the note it is tied to. For example, if there was a minium (2 count note) with an appoggiatura, the minium note would become a crotchet (1 beat note) and the appoggiatura note would also be played for 1 beat. Normally the appoggiatura is emphasised (stressed/ leaned on). An acciaccatura looks like an appoggiatura but with a line crossing it. It is also called a crushed note. Really, it doesn't take any duration off the note, but is like a before thought. It is played very fast with the main emphasis on the note.
an appoggiatura is a musical note a scale
An appoggiatura is a musical ornament that resolves to a main note, while an acciaccatura is a quick grace note that is played simultaneously with the main note and then released.
appoggiatura
An appoggiatura is a type of embellishment that takes up half the value of the main note, while a grace note is a quick ornament played before the main note.
A grace note is a quick, decorative note played before the main note, while an appoggiatura is a longer, emphasized note that takes up part of the main note's duration.
An acciaccatura is a very quick grace note that is played simultaneously with the main note, adding a quick embellishment to the melody. An appoggiatura is a longer grace note that takes up some of the main note's duration, creating a more pronounced and expressive embellishment in the music.
If you are talking about the commercial from around 1980, it was an improvised appoggiatura - according to the woman who sang it!
I'm not sure what you mean by a "stat" note but I'm believing you must be referring to an "appoggiatura" and if there is a diagonal line through the stem it will be an "acciaccatura" which will be executed faster. Sometimes referred to as a "grace" note.
The different types of grace notes used in music notation are the acciaccatura (short, quick note played before the main note) and the appoggiatura (longer, more expressive note played before the main note).
Ornaments alter the pitch pattern of individual notes, such as Trill, Mordant, Turn, Appoggiatura and Acciaccura. An example would be for a Trill, a rapid alteration between the specified note and the next higher note (according to the key signature) within it's duration
If the tiny notes have a slash through them, those are acciacaturas. They are meant to be swiftly played before the beat of the note they're connected to. If it's just another regular note, only smaller, that is an appoggiatura. This note will be played on the beat of the note connected, only they will both share the beat. For example, if an F is connected to an E (and the E being a crotchet), you will play F then E, each lasting one quaver.