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notation - Is there a difference between a slur and legato? - Music . . . Legato technique is required for slurred performance, but unlike slurring (as that term is interpreted for some instruments), legato does not forbid rearticulation In standard notation legato is indicated either with the word legato itself, or by a slur (a curved line) under the notes that are to be joined in one legato group
Why include both sempre legato and slur marks? As the piece progresses, the left-hand is also intended to be sempre legato, except in the couple of places where notes are separated by rests The remaining slur marks are primarily phrase markings Rather than indicating articulation, a phrase marking is a guide to shaping the musical interpretation
legato - Terminology for Note Hold Released Fractions in Rhythm . . . Legato refers to how the note connects to the next one, and I see it used it music software E g legato quantization typically means "extend the end of the note up to the start of the next one" Legato overlap means extending note beyond the start of the next one (typically expressed in absolute time units, not percentage) Legato note
Should slurs encompass tied notes from before and or after? The top staves are "correct" for a slur, the bottom staves are correct for a phrasing slur For music like violin music, this difference is more poignant than for piano since a slur has separate technical meaning as a bowing direction instruction (which implies legato but the legato can be dissolved with tenuto or staccato marks) while a phrasing slur is basically a "play this phrase legato
What is the difference between these articulations? What is the difference in playing between accent (the little right pointing arrow,) staccato (the little dot,) marcato (the little hat,) accent-staccato (the little right-pointing arrow with the li
How are stacatto and tied notes interpreted? [duplicate] It's a red herring! It's not a tie, and they're not staccato, per se It's a separate sign called 'portato',or more accurately and easily understood 'articulated legato', and if it was applied to notes that were not the same, obviously it couldn't be a tie A slur it would be
notation - Music: Practice Theory Stack Exchange OK, my old piano teacher would hit me with a ruler for saying this, but the "legato" is most idiomatically achieved here with the sustain pedal Look at the left hand part: it is simply arpeggiating a D-major chord So you "catch" the low D with the pedal, and then sustain it as you jump the left hand up to catch the rest of the notes
Double thirds, fourths, fifths and sixths piano fingering? When legato is a necessity, an exceptionally helpful technique is to play a note with one finger, then immediately swap that finger for another, freeing up the previous finger for future use As an example of this technique, here is one way to play a right-hand D major scale in sixths (remember that the upper note is the key to legato):
What is the difference between martelé and détaché bowing? 'Martele' could be described as a long staccato Staccato is a short stroke executed with very short bow length, biting the string at the beginning of the note, releasing the pressure and moving energetic but very short and biting again for the next note