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- Cantabile abstract "In music, cantabile [kanˈtaːbile], an Italian word, means literally "singable" or "songlike". In instrumental music, it is a particular style of playing designed to imitate the human voice. For 18th-century composers, cantabile is often synonymous with "cantando" (singing), and indicates a measured tempo and flexible, legato playing. For later composers, particularly in piano music, cantabile is the drawing out of one particular musical line against the accompaniment (compare counterpoint). Felix Mendelssohn's six books of Songs Without Words (Lieder ohne Worte) are short lyrical piano pieces with song-like melodies written between 1829 and 1845. A modern example is an instrumental by Harry James & His Orchestra, called "Trumpet Blues and Cantabile".A cantabile movement, or simply a "cantabile", is the first half of a double aria, followed by a cabaletta. The cantabile movement would be slower and more free-form to contrast with the structured and generally faster cabaletta. Louis Spohr subtitled his violin concerto No. 8 "in moda d'una scena cantata," "in the manner of a sung [operatic] scene"; opera arias exerted a strong influence on the "singable" cantabile melodic line in Romantic writing for stringed instruments.".
- Cantabile soundRecording Cantabile__1.
- Cantabile soundRecording Cantabile__2.
- Cantabile wikiPageExternalLink books?id=XUgp-ZbBVlkC&pg=PA113&dq=%22Cantabile%22++Spohr+violin+concerto.
- Cantabile wikiPageID "1638444".
- Cantabile wikiPageLength "2545".
- Cantabile wikiPageOutDegree "22".
- Cantabile wikiPageRevisionID "673023979".
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Aria.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Cabaletta.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Category:Articles_containing_video_clips.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Category:Italian_opera_terminology.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Category:Western_classical_music_styles.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Counterpoint.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Felix_Mendelssohn.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Human_voice.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Italian_language.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Joshua_Bell.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Legato.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Louis_Spohr.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Movement_(music).
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Niccolò_Paganini.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Ogg.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Ogv.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Piano.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Romantic_music.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Sharon_Isbin.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Songs_Without_Words.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Tempo.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink Theora.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLink White_House.
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cantabile".
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLinkText "cantabile".
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLinkText "lyrical".
- Cantabile wikiPageWikiLinkText "singably".
- Cantabile description "--11-04".
- Cantabile description "Audio only version".
- Cantabile filename "20091104".
- Cantabile filetype Ogg.
- Cantabile filetype Ogv.
- Cantabile filetype Theora.
- Cantabile hasPhotoCollection Cantabile.
- Cantabile title "Cantabile".
- Cantabile wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPA-it.
- Cantabile wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Listen.
- Cantabile wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Opera_terms.
- Cantabile wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses.
- Cantabile subject Category:Articles_containing_video_clips.
- Cantabile subject Category:Italian_opera_terminology.
- Cantabile subject Category:Western_classical_music_styles.
- Cantabile type Article.
- Cantabile type Article.
- Cantabile type Style.
- Cantabile type Thing.
- Cantabile comment "In music, cantabile [kanˈtaːbile], an Italian word, means literally "singable" or "songlike". In instrumental music, it is a particular style of playing designed to imitate the human voice. For 18th-century composers, cantabile is often synonymous with "cantando" (singing), and indicates a measured tempo and flexible, legato playing. For later composers, particularly in piano music, cantabile is the drawing out of one particular musical line against the accompaniment (compare counterpoint).".
- Cantabile label "Cantabile".
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Կանտաբիլե.
- Cantabile sameAs Kantabilo.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs 칸타빌레.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs m.05jpwn.
- Cantabile sameAs Кантабиле.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Cantabile.
- Cantabile sameAs Q913079.
- Cantabile sameAs Q913079.
- Cantabile wasDerivedFrom Cantabile?oldid=673023979.
- Cantabile isPrimaryTopicOf Cantabile.