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- Q1363276 subject Q7232894.
- Q1363276 subject Q8742679.
- Q1363276 abstract "An encore is an additional performance added to the end of a concert, from the French encore, which means "again", "some more"; multiple encores are not uncommon. Encores originated spontaneously, when audiences would continue to applaud and demand additional performance from the artist after the concert had ended. In some modern circumstances, encores have come to be expected, and artists often plan their encores. This is sometimes necessitated by noise curfews at venues, which may also sometimes require an artist to forgo encores if the concert has gone on too long. Traditionally, in a concert that has a printed set list for the audience, encores are not listed, even when they are planned.Though the word derives from French, encore was traditionally not used this way in French, nor ancora in Italian. French speakers commonly use instead either une autre (‘another’), un rappel (‘a return, curtain call’) or the Latin bis (‘second time’) in the same circumstances. Italians also use bis and, formerly, da capo (‘from the beginning’). In England, altra volta (Italian for "another time") was used in the early nineteenth century, but such usage had been completely supplanted by 1900.".
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- Q1363276 wikiPageWikiLink Q7232894.
- Q1363276 wikiPageWikiLink Q726071.
- Q1363276 wikiPageWikiLink Q8742679.
- Q1363276 wikiPageWikiLink Q9794.
- Q1363276 comment "An encore is an additional performance added to the end of a concert, from the French encore, which means "again", "some more"; multiple encores are not uncommon. Encores originated spontaneously, when audiences would continue to applaud and demand additional performance from the artist after the concert had ended. In some modern circumstances, encores have come to be expected, and artists often plan their encores.".
- Q1363276 label "Encore (concert)".