This song section occurs once in a song and has unique music & lyrics.
The "M" in MIDI stands for this.
Musical.
A figurative statement using "like" or "as" is known as this.
A simile.
Triads are chords that contain this number of notes.
3.
This is the name for a microphone cable.
XLR.
This song section directly precedes a chorus and has unchanging music & lyrics.
Pre-chorus.
This tool allows recorded MIDI data to be "snapped" to the steady beat.
Quantisation.
Repeating words or phrases in a song section is known as this.
Internal Repetition.
Diatonic chords can be major, minor, or this other quality.
Diminished.
This type of microphone requires phantom power.
Condenser Microphone.
This section has unchanging music, but different lyrics each time it happens.
The drum machine in bandlab has each beat divided into this rhythm.
Semiquavers.
Vocalisations.
A standard chord contains a root, a third and fifth. Which of these would a bass play?
Root.
"+48v" is also called this.
Phantom Power.
This section occurs at the very end of a song, and usually references hooks or lyrics from the chorus.
Outro.
The "M" in BPM stands for this.
Minute.
This song section does not have to have lyrics that rhyme.
A chorus.
The sequence of chord changes throughout a piece of music is known as this.
A chord progression.
The word for the amount of electrical signal sent from the microphone to the audio interface.
Gain.
This technique, wherein the key moves up by a tone or semitone, can make a chorus seem fresh again.
Modulation.
This audio effect can also be referred to as "Room Echo."
Repeating an incomplete statement throughout a section, then completing the idea in the last line is known as this.
Idea Fragmentation.
I, IV, V, and vi have this nickname.
The ideal gain level for recording with a microphone.
-10dB.