Unfamiliar notation in Diabelli's “Duet in D” for pianoWhy do we use such complicated notation?Is there...

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Unfamiliar notation in Diabelli's “Duet in D” for piano


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While working through 'Duet in D' for piano, by A. Diabelli, I came across this unfamiliar notation that looks like a slur between two notes of the same chord or some kind of bracket (see below). What is this notation called, and how do I read it?



Bar 112 of Diabelli's 'Duet in D'










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    4















    While working through 'Duet in D' for piano, by A. Diabelli, I came across this unfamiliar notation that looks like a slur between two notes of the same chord or some kind of bracket (see below). What is this notation called, and how do I read it?



    Bar 112 of Diabelli's 'Duet in D'










    share|improve this question

























      4












      4








      4








      While working through 'Duet in D' for piano, by A. Diabelli, I came across this unfamiliar notation that looks like a slur between two notes of the same chord or some kind of bracket (see below). What is this notation called, and how do I read it?



      Bar 112 of Diabelli's 'Duet in D'










      share|improve this question














      While working through 'Duet in D' for piano, by A. Diabelli, I came across this unfamiliar notation that looks like a slur between two notes of the same chord or some kind of bracket (see below). What is this notation called, and how do I read it?



      Bar 112 of Diabelli's 'Duet in D'







      piano notation






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 3 hours ago









      TimothyTimothy

      356




      356






















          1 Answer
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          It's an alternate way to notate an arpeggio.



          arpège (Fr.), arpeggio (It.), arpeggi (It. plural): (Italian, meaning 'in the manner of a harp') a spread chord played from the top down or from the bottom up indicated by a vertical wavy line, a vertical square bracket or a curved bracket (the latter two signs are now uncommon).



          (Direct quote from Dolmetsch. Always a great place to start when looking for music symbols)



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

            – Tim
            2 hours ago











          • Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

            – Albrecht Hügli
            24 mins ago











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          5














          It's an alternate way to notate an arpeggio.



          arpège (Fr.), arpeggio (It.), arpeggi (It. plural): (Italian, meaning 'in the manner of a harp') a spread chord played from the top down or from the bottom up indicated by a vertical wavy line, a vertical square bracket or a curved bracket (the latter two signs are now uncommon).



          (Direct quote from Dolmetsch. Always a great place to start when looking for music symbols)



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

            – Tim
            2 hours ago











          • Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

            – Albrecht Hügli
            24 mins ago
















          5














          It's an alternate way to notate an arpeggio.



          arpège (Fr.), arpeggio (It.), arpeggi (It. plural): (Italian, meaning 'in the manner of a harp') a spread chord played from the top down or from the bottom up indicated by a vertical wavy line, a vertical square bracket or a curved bracket (the latter two signs are now uncommon).



          (Direct quote from Dolmetsch. Always a great place to start when looking for music symbols)



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

            – Tim
            2 hours ago











          • Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

            – Albrecht Hügli
            24 mins ago














          5












          5








          5







          It's an alternate way to notate an arpeggio.



          arpège (Fr.), arpeggio (It.), arpeggi (It. plural): (Italian, meaning 'in the manner of a harp') a spread chord played from the top down or from the bottom up indicated by a vertical wavy line, a vertical square bracket or a curved bracket (the latter two signs are now uncommon).



          (Direct quote from Dolmetsch. Always a great place to start when looking for music symbols)



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer















          It's an alternate way to notate an arpeggio.



          arpège (Fr.), arpeggio (It.), arpeggi (It. plural): (Italian, meaning 'in the manner of a harp') a spread chord played from the top down or from the bottom up indicated by a vertical wavy line, a vertical square bracket or a curved bracket (the latter two signs are now uncommon).



          (Direct quote from Dolmetsch. Always a great place to start when looking for music symbols)



          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 36 mins ago









          guidot

          5,8131034




          5,8131034










          answered 3 hours ago









          Shannon DuncanShannon Duncan

          694315




          694315













          • In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

            – Tim
            2 hours ago











          • Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

            – Albrecht Hügli
            24 mins ago



















          • In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

            – Tim
            2 hours ago











          • Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

            – Albrecht Hügli
            24 mins ago

















          In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

          – Tim
          2 hours ago





          In TAB it's usefully shown better with an arrowhead indicating the direction of strum.

          – Tim
          2 hours ago













          Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

          – Albrecht Hügli
          24 mins ago





          Thank you for the dolmetsch link. I hope there I can look up the most English music terms I miss to know.

          – Albrecht Hügli
          24 mins ago


















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