The hairpin that contains the loudest sound needs more bow than the others. So you might want to have the first two bars be a down bow with the long slur as you have written it; then no slur for bars 3 through 6, with a marking to stay in the upper half in bars 5 and 6.
- What dynamic is between MP and MF?
- What is between MP and MF in music?
- How do you write dynamic markings?
- How do you write dynamics in music?
What dynamic is between MP and MF?
Dynamic marking and meaning
Dynamic marking | Meaning |
---|---|
ff | Fortissimo: very loud |
f | Forte: loud |
mf | Mezzo forte: fairly loud |
mp | Mezzo piano: fairly quiet |
What is between MP and MF in music?
mp: abbreviation of mezzo-piano meaning "somewhat soft" mf: abbreviation of mezzo-forte meaning "somewhat loud" f: abbreviation of forte meaning "loud" ff: abbreviation of fortissimo meaning "very loud"
How do you write dynamic markings?
Dynamic markings can be placed at the beginning or anywhere else within a piece of music. For example, pianissimo (pp) means that the piece is to be played very softly until you reach the next dynamic marking. Fortissimo (ff) means that the rest of the selection is to be played very loudly.
How do you write dynamics in music?
Dynamics
- Pianissimo (pp) – very quiet.
- Piano (p) – quiet.
- Mezzo forte (mf) – moderately loud.
- Forte (f) – loud.
- Fortissimo (ff) – very loud.
- Sforzando (sfz) – a sudden, forced loud.
- Crescendo (cresc) – gradually getting louder.
- Diminuendo (dim) – gradually getting quieter.