- Musical composition - Musical exercise piece - Musical practice piece - Musical study piece - Short musical composition - A composition in the fine arts which is intended, or may
serve, for a study. - A study; an exercise; a piece for practice of some special
point of technical execution.
- Musical composition - Musical piece - Repetitive piece of music - A composition, vocal or instrumental, commonly of a lively,
cheerful character, in which the first strain recurs after each of the
other strains. - See Rondeau, 1.
- Ballet finale - Closing musical passage - Closing piece of music - cod witha tailpiece - Concluding passage of a piece of music - Medico dares to include last part of composition - Musical piece
- Artistic composition - Composer’s work featured in Octopussy - Concerto or symphony - Creative work - Musical composition - Musical piece - Musical work
- A musical composition - As a not (anag.) - Beethoven's Moonlight - Boy at a musical composition - Instrumental composition - Instrumental composition in progress, on a tablet - Instrumental piece
- Emotional musical piece - Intense musical piece - Queen hit, Bohemian ... - Rap, so Dee can hear the highly emotional music - Romantic music - A recitation or song of a rhapsodist; a portion of an
epic poem adapted for recitation, or usually recited, at one time;
hence, a division of the Iliad or the Odyssey; -- called also a book. - A disconnected series of sentences or statements composed
under excitement, and without dependence or natural connection;
rambling composition.
- Composition for voices and orchestra - Dramatic unstaged musical composition - Extended musical composition - Musical work for orchestra and choirs - Musical work usually on a sacred theme - Religious choral work - Religious musical piece
- 8-piece group - A musical piece - At Centre, concoct etude for eight - Company of eight - Composition for eight - Concoct ethics involving eight singers - Concoct étude that’s too much for a set number of players
- Study of musical acoustics - The doctrine or science of musical sounds. - Secondary and less distinct tones which accompany any
principal, and apparently simple, tone, as the octave, the twelfth, the
fifteenth, and the seventeenth. The name is also applied to the
artificial tones produced by a string or column of air, when the
impulse given to it suffices only to make a part of the string or
column vibrate; overtones.