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      • Niente (Italian pronunciation: [ˈnjɛnte]), also called quasi niente [ˈkwaːzi ˈnjɛnte], is a musical dynamic often used at the end of a piece to direct the performer to fade the music away to little more than a bare whisper, normally gradually with a diminuendo, al niente.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niente
  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › NienteNiente - Wikipedia

    Niente (Italian pronunciation:), also called quasi niente [ˈkwaːzi ˈnjɛnte], is a musical dynamic often used at the end of a piece to direct the performer to fade the music away to little more than a bare whisper, normally gradually with a diminuendo, [1] al niente. [2]

  2. Italian Musical Terms. The majority of musical terms are in Italian, so this page has quite a long list. The other common languages for musical terms are German and French. Some of the words below have an audio file attached so you can hear how it is pronounced. Just click on the speaker icon.

    Musical Term
    Abbreviation
    a
    at; to; by; for; in
    a capella
    unaccompanied
    a piacere
    at pleasure
    accelerando
    (accel.)
  3. Professor Sharp teaches about dynamics. The dynamic markings include niente abbreviated as n.TMMT 28-7 Three Minute Music Theory Playlist: https://www.you...

    • 16 sec
    • 4.1K
    • Three Minute Music Theory
  4. dictionary.onmusic.org › terms › 2340-nienteOnMusic Dictionary - Term

    Jun 5, 2016 · niente [Italian, nothing] A directive to perform the indicated passage of a composition in a whisper with almost no sound. This term is often seen at the end of a decrescendo indicating that the sound should die away to nothing.

  5. Feb 18, 2020 · “Niente” (“nothing”) is used to start a crescendo from silence or end a diminuendo with silence. Some scores spell it out fully (from “Titanic Suite”, published by Hal Leonard): Other scores abbreviate it as “n.” in italic typeface (“Diagon Alley” score reduction on YouTube):

  6. Oct 6, 2019 · Mezzo means "middle" or "medium", and so they're more towards the middle than piano and forte. So from softest to loudest, we have pp (pianissimo), p, mp, mf, f, and ff (fortissimo).

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  8. Niente (Italian pronunciation: [ˈnjɛnte]), also called quasi niente [ˈkwaːzi ˈnjɛnte], is a musical dynamic often used at the end of a piece to direct the performer to fade the music away to little more than a bare whisper, normally gradually with a diminuendo, al niente.

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