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单词 accelerando
释义

Definition of accelerando in English:

accelerando

adverb & adjective əˌtʃɛləˈrandəʊəkˌsɛləˈrandəʊ
Music
  • (especially as a direction) with a gradual increase of speed.

    (尤作演奏演唱指示)渐速音地(的)

nounPlural accelerandos, Plural accelerandi əˌtʃɛləˈrandəʊəkˌsɛləˈrandəʊäkˌseləˈrändō
Music
  • An accelerando passage.

    the first movement's long accelerando
    Example sentencesExamples
    • No deviations from this basic pulse are indicated - no accelerando or ritardando - but the avoidance of repeated rhythmic patterns prevents the emergence of any phrase-structure comparable to Schumann's.
    • The plonking accordion-driven sections of Radio / Video lull the listener into a false sense of security, before the band once again whip themselves up into a tense accelerando before ‘rocking out’ to a glorious crescendo.
    • Clipped, laconic, understated, but with quirky rubatos and accelerandos to convey something simmering underneath.
    • Then another identical (but slightly more intense, somehow - more of an accelerando?) chorus, and we're done.
    • You have to watch out for the small accelerandi.
    • The mysterious opening becomes increasingly agitated till an irate accelerando launches the Allegro on its wayward path.
    • It is clear that full physical involvement aids learning, and that the subjective body experience is central to primal rhythmic elements of music like tempo, accelerando, syncopation, and ostinato.
    • Melodic rubato occurs where ‘tempo rubato frees a melody from strict note values, either by agogic accents or by accelerando and rallentando… so that the melody is momentarily out of step with the accompaniment ’.
    • By most all accounts the evening was a success, with one local critic lauding the orchestra's ‘exciting accelerandos and heart-stopping rubatos.’
    • ‘In the Middle of the Night, Something or Someone Is Under the Bed and I Decide to Look’ is a wonderfully descriptive piece that consists of chromatically rising rhythmic effects within one long crescendo and accelerando.
    • But he lets us have breakneck accelerandos and ear-splitting fortissimos rather too cavalierly, and now and then lapses into undue cuteness.
    • This is one of the least metronomic recordings I know, and yet the concerto holds its shape because a basic pulse has been maintained, in spite of the accelerandi and rallentandi.
    • The music of commerce would thus be harmonious and evenly paced, its dynamics restrained; there would be no swelling crescendo of the Boom, no cacophonous accelerando to the climax and no minor key diminuendo thereafter into the Bust.
    • That was always fascinating to me, like the long accelerando in the final variation of Elgar's Enigma that I eventually recorded with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, easy to take a little too quick and find you have to put the brakes on.
    • We may recognise that we are being reminded of the point from which we began but we are far from home and a continuous accelerando takes the music to first twice its original speed and then twice as fast again.
    • He was barely ten yards behind the piper's trail, and the song, now with an accelerando, broke into a jig.

Origin

Italian.

Rhymes

bandeau, Brando, glissando, Orlando

Definition of accelerando in US English:

accelerando

adjective & adverbäˌCHeləˈrändō
Music
  • With a gradual increase of speed (used chiefly as a direction).

nounäkˌseləˈrändō
Music
  • An accelerando passage.

    the first movement's long accelerando
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This is one of the least metronomic recordings I know, and yet the concerto holds its shape because a basic pulse has been maintained, in spite of the accelerandi and rallentandi.
    • By most all accounts the evening was a success, with one local critic lauding the orchestra's ‘exciting accelerandos and heart-stopping rubatos.’
    • No deviations from this basic pulse are indicated - no accelerando or ritardando - but the avoidance of repeated rhythmic patterns prevents the emergence of any phrase-structure comparable to Schumann's.
    • The plonking accordion-driven sections of Radio / Video lull the listener into a false sense of security, before the band once again whip themselves up into a tense accelerando before ‘rocking out’ to a glorious crescendo.
    • Clipped, laconic, understated, but with quirky rubatos and accelerandos to convey something simmering underneath.
    • But he lets us have breakneck accelerandos and ear-splitting fortissimos rather too cavalierly, and now and then lapses into undue cuteness.
    • Then another identical (but slightly more intense, somehow - more of an accelerando?) chorus, and we're done.
    • The mysterious opening becomes increasingly agitated till an irate accelerando launches the Allegro on its wayward path.
    • It is clear that full physical involvement aids learning, and that the subjective body experience is central to primal rhythmic elements of music like tempo, accelerando, syncopation, and ostinato.
    • The music of commerce would thus be harmonious and evenly paced, its dynamics restrained; there would be no swelling crescendo of the Boom, no cacophonous accelerando to the climax and no minor key diminuendo thereafter into the Bust.
    • We may recognise that we are being reminded of the point from which we began but we are far from home and a continuous accelerando takes the music to first twice its original speed and then twice as fast again.
    • That was always fascinating to me, like the long accelerando in the final variation of Elgar's Enigma that I eventually recorded with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, easy to take a little too quick and find you have to put the brakes on.
    • He was barely ten yards behind the piper's trail, and the song, now with an accelerando, broke into a jig.
    • Melodic rubato occurs where ‘tempo rubato frees a melody from strict note values, either by agogic accents or by accelerando and rallentando… so that the melody is momentarily out of step with the accompaniment ’.
    • ‘In the Middle of the Night, Something or Someone Is Under the Bed and I Decide to Look’ is a wonderfully descriptive piece that consists of chromatically rising rhythmic effects within one long crescendo and accelerando.
    • You have to watch out for the small accelerandi.

Origin

Italian.

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更新时间:2024/11/11 8:54:08