Tutti (from Italian. Tutti “everything, all”) is a musical term that has two meanings:
Tutti - as the opposite of the concept of solo , that is, the performance of music by the full composition of the orchestra or choir. In the score of the performed work in this place put the word-sign Tutti . As a rule, a tutti performance fragment immediately follows a solo fragment, in order to give the solo participant the opportunity to relax and prepare for the continuation of the performance, and to listeners more precisely to feel the nuances of the work in contrast [1] [2] .
Tutti is a special organ button.
In organ music, the term tutti also means full sound. By it is meant the simultaneous operation of the corresponding pipes of all registers [3] . To simplify the implementation of such a passage , the organ keyboard contains a special button, usually a foot button. Her first press turns on all registers and copulas , and a second press returns to the previous settings.
See also
- Solo
- Concerto Grosso
Notes
- ↑ Tutti // Great Soviet Encyclopedia : [in 30 vol.] / Ch. ed. A.M. Prokhorov . - 3rd ed. - M .: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969-1978.
- ↑ Tutti // Website Musicterms.artopium.com
- ↑ Dolzhansky A.N. Brief Musical Dictionary. - 5th ed .. - St. Petersburg: Doe, 2000 .-- 448 p. - (World of culture, history and philosophy). - 15,000 copies. - ISBN 5-8114-0231-7 .
Literature
- Tutti // Musical Encyclopedia. - M .: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1981. - V. 5. - S. 655-656. - 1056 s.