The major key signature with no flats or sharps.
What is the key of C?
A note with this dot below it is played short and detached.
What is a Staccato?
These intervals can only be unison, 4ths, 5ths, or octaves.
What are perfect intervals?
The period of silence for a defined period of time.
What is a rest?
The type of minor scale with no changes from the notes of the relative major scale.
What is a Natural Minor Scale?
This major key signature contains two flats.
What is the key of B flat?
A gradual and dynamic increase in volume is represented by this hairpin symbol.
What is a crescendo?
This type of interval has no half steps between the notes.
What is Perfect Unison?
This type of note is has a stem, no flags, and the note head is completely filled in.
What is a quarter note?
This minor scale raises the 7th degree up one half-step.
What is a Harmonic Minor Scale?
The major key signature that contains a total of seven different sharps.
What is the key of C#?
The gradual and dynamic decrease of volume that is represented with hairpin symbols.
What is a diminuendo?
The type of interval represented by the capital letter "A" or a plus symbol.
What are augmented intervals?
This type of note has three flags, a stem, and a completely filled in note head.
What is a thirty-second note?
This minor scale raises both the 6th and 7th degrees by one half-step ascending and lowers them back to their natural form while descending.
What is a melodic minor scale?
The minor key signature with only one flat.
What is the key of D?
In most music, this curved line is used to connect notes so that they are played smoothly and together.
What is a slur?
This type of interval is represented by two lowercase letter D.
What are double diminished intervals?
This indication in music notation determines how many notes of a given value can fit in a measure.
What is a Time Signature?
This scale type has 5 notes and is used as the basis for different folk songs.
What is a pentatonic scale?
This minor key signature contains five sharps.
What is the key of G#?
This articulation indicates for the performer to rapidly alternate between two adjacent notes.
What is a trill?
These intervals are larger than one octave.
What are Compound Intervals?
The dot placed to the right of a note that adds half of the length of the original note.
What is the augmentation point?
This scale has no musical center of gravity.
What is a whole tone scale?