C1, C2, C3, C4, …… A single finger holding multiple strings on a stringed instrument  at the same time.

Symbol used in standard notation for guitar. Number indicates which fret. Example: B7 (C7, CVII, VII) See Barre

 

C clef clef sign that marks the position of the note C on the staff. See clef in Staff, Barline, & Clef

 

Cacophony discordant or dissonant sound

 

Cadence a note ornament see cadence in Note Ornamentation

 

Cadence calls songs sung by soldiers while marching

 

Calando (Italian) diminuendo

 

Calcando (Italian) accelerando

 

Calmato (Italian) calmed, calming

 

Calme (French) calm

 

Calore (Italian) passion, warmth or animation

 

Caloroso (Italian) passion, warmth or animation

 

Calvarios Spanish Easter songs

 

Calypso Caribbean popular musical form often humorous sung by a single guitarist or bands

 

Camatillo Rosewood From Central America, it is sometimes known as Mexican Kingwood.The wood has a deep, rich purple color with numerous black ink lines. Straight grain is rare but it is surprisingly stable. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar 

 

Camminando (Italian) a flowing style, a walking pace

 

Camphor Burl An alternative wood for the back and sides of a classical guitar. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar 

 

Canadian Cypress Alaskan Yellow Cedar, sometimes called Canadian or New World Cypress, is fine and even textured with very close grains. In terms of dimensional change due to moisture content change, it is one of the most stable. It is light yellow in color. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

 

Canari very fast gigue-like dance, in triple or duple-compound meter, with a 'skipping' feel

 

Cancel natural sign, used to remove a previously applied accidental

 

Can-can Parisian dance, originating in Paris, involving a line of high-kicking women

 

Cancrizans (Latin) a tune repeated so that the original order of notes is reversed--- the last note become the first, the penultimate note becomes the second, and so on until the first becomes the last

 

Canon a musical form in which a (second, third, fourth, ….) line starting later than the one before it matches it note for note but such that the parts overlap

 

Cans headphones, microphone and belt pack

 

Cantabile (Italian) in a singing style

 

Cantando (Italian) in a singing style

 

Cantaor (Spanish) flamenco singer (masc.)

 

Cantaora (Italian) in a singing style (femin.)

 

Cant de la sibila traditional Christmas song from Majorca (Spain) about the second coming of Christ

 

Cante chico light flamenco song

 

Cante grande profound Flamenco song style

 

Cante hondo (Spanish) serious Spanish flamenco song making use of the Phrygian cadence and the word ole

 

Cante jondo (Spanish) serious Spanish flamenco song making use of the Phrygian cadence and the word ole

 

Cantes de las minas flamenco style that has as theme the mines, its men and their difficulties

 

Cantes extremeños flamenco songs from the Extremadura region

 

Canticle a Biblical hymn

 

Cantilena (Italian) Lullaby--smooth, melodious vocal style

 

Canto (Italian) song, melody

 

Canto de velada Spanish evening song

 

Canto hondo (Spanish) serious Spanish flamenco song making use of the Phrygian cadence and the word ole

 

Cantus (Latin) melody at the top of a polyphonic piece, often set over a tenor line

 

Canzonet (Italian) short, simple song

 

Canzonetta (Italian) short, simple song

 

Caoine (Gaelic) Irish funeral song

 

Capelle (French) chapel

 

Capodaster (German) device that clamps to the neck of a guitar and which change its tuning by shortening the sounding length of every string

 

Capodastère (French) device that clamps to the neck of a guitar and which change its tuning by shortening the sounding length of every string

 

Capotasto (Italian) device that clamps to the neck of a guitar and which change its tuning by shortening the sounding length of every string

 

Capo d'astro (Italian) device that clamps to the neck of a guitar and which change its tuning by shortening the sounding length of every string

 

Capodastro (Italian) device that clamps to the neck of a guitar and which change its tuning by shortening the sounding length of every string

 

Cappella chapel

 

Capriccio (Italian) light, quick, sometimes fanciful composition

 

Capriccioso (Italian) capricious

 

Caprice (English) light, quick, sometimes fanciful composition

 

Caprice (French) light, quick, sometimes fanciful composition

 

Capricieux (French) capricious

 

Capricciosamente (Italian) capriciously

 

Carcassi, Matteo (1792-1853) See Classical Guitarists and Composers

 

Carcelera (Spanish) prisoner's song

 

Caressant (French) caressing

 

Carezzando (Italian) caressing

 

Carezzevole (Italian) caressingly

 

Carol (English) Christmas song

 

Carrée (French) double whole note see Note Values

 

Carulli, Fernando (1770-1841) See Classical Guitarists and Composers

 

Catgut (German) good, well; (English) a cord made from the intestines of animals, esp. of sheep,

lambs or goats, used for strings of early guitars

 

Cavaquinho small 4-stringed instrument from Portugal and the Portuguese-speaking countries,

used in samba music. inspiration for the Hawaiian ukulele

 

C clef clef sign that marks the position of the note C on the staff. See clef in Staff, Barline, & Clef

 

Cédez (French) slow down generally before a return to an earlier tempo

 

Cejilla device that can be moved to change the pitch of the flamenco guitar

 

Celere (Italian) quick, speedy

 

Celerità (Italian) speed

 

Celeramente speedily

 

Celtic harp small harp 24 to 34 strings, around 1 metre tall, with curved neck and pillar

that is played resting on the knee

 

Cent logarithmic unit used when measuring the difference between two pitches in

an equal-tempered scale; one cent is one one-hundredth of an equal-tempered

semitone (half step)

Center Seam Backstrip The Backstrip, usually made of wood, will match or compliment the guitars edge binding. It will also reinforce the center seam of a book-matched back of a guitar. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

Center Seam Reinforcement Strip A strip of wood is added to the seam of a book-matched back for reinforcement on a guitar. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar 

cf. (Latin) abbreviated form of conferatur meaning 'compare'

 

Chaabi popular Arabic music, also known as shaabi

 

Chacarrá fandango dance from Tarifa, in southern Spain, performed by two women and one man

 

Chace (French) fourteenth-century French term for 'canon', two- and three-voice

canons that imitated bird calls or the sounds of instruments, …..

 

Chachachá considered to be the first chachachá, in 1953. As a dance, cha cha became popular

in the 1950s and 1960s and is descended from mambo through triple mambo. It is

in 4/4 time and follows a rhythmic pattern two quarter-notes, three eighth-notes

and a eighth-rest

 

Chaconne a slow stately dance with variations, popular during the seventeenth- and

eighteenth-centuries, generally in triple time, played over a ground bass

 

Chacony (Old Eng.) a slow stately dance with variations, popular during the seventeenth- and

eighteenth-centuries, generally in triple time, played over a ground bass

 

Chaleur (French) warmth, with warmth

 

Chaleureusement (French) warmth, with warmth

 

Chamber a prefix used to describe small-scale musical activities, for example- chamber

symphony (a symphony for a small ensemble of players), chamber music

(music generally written to be played one-to-a-part)

 

Champeta criolla Afro-Colombian music style and dance from Cartagena, on the Caribbean coast

 

Champêtre (French) rustic

 

Changed note device in strict counterpoint where a non-harmonic note is used on an accented beat

 

Changes the set of chord changes, or harmonies, contained in the central theme or melody

around which a piece has been built

 

Changez (French) change

 

Changing notes non-harmonic notes; two notes, one that leaves the chord note by a tone or semitone,

then leaps to the next non-harmonic note by skipping over the chord note, before resolving to the same chord note by a tone or semitone

 

Changing time signatures see in  Time Signatures

 

Chantant (French) in a singing style

 

Chaque (French) each, every

 

Character piece a musical piece representing a location, mood or personality

 

Charango small, 5-course, double strung guitar from South America, traditionally made

with the shell of an armadillo

 

Chart colloquial or jazz term for a arrangement or score

 

Chase improvisations where one player performs a melodic riff and other members in

the band take up the theme, often adding additional phrases, each trying to

outplay the others

 

Che (Italian) who, which

 

Chechen An alternative wood for the back and sides of a classical guitar. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

 

Chechen Burl An alternative wood for the back and sides of a classical guitar. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

 

Cheese cloth A thin, loose woven cotton cloth, such as is used in pressing cheese curds. See How to Change Classical  Guitar Strings 

 

Chevalet (French) bridge of a stringed instrument

 

Cheville (French) peg of a stringed instrument

 

Chiaro (Italian) clear

 

Chiara (Italian) unconfused

 

Chiaramente (Italian) clearly

 

Chiarezza (Italian) clarity

 

Chiave (Italian) clef

 

Chiave di basso (Italian) bass clef

 

Chiave di tenore (Italian) C clef

 

Chiave di violino (Italian) treble clef

 

Chin chin Chinese 4 string banjo with aluminum body

 

Chitarra (Italian) guitar

 

Chitarra batente guitar from Calabria (southern Italy), also known as 'Renaissance guitar'. With

four or five metal strings

 

Chitarrone a long-necked member of the lute family fitted with extra bass strings,

used to accompany solo singers, which was popular in the sixteenth- and

seventeenth-centuries

 

Chops performer's technique when playing riffs, improvisations and melodic lines

 

Choral music sung by a choir

 

Choral symphony a symphony that includes a chorus

 

Chorale (German) traditional German hymn

 

Chord a group of notes, normally two or more, played simultaneously

 

Chordal a form of music in which a single melody is accompanied by sets of chords,

instead of a competing counter melody

 

Chord diagrams a form of musical notation using vertical and horizontal lines to represent the

strings and frets on a guitar that uses numbered dots to show the position of

the fingers.

 

Chord symbols abbreviations for chord names used by players of the guitar, ukulele….

 

Chorus a fairly large choir; a refrain of a song

 

Chromatic a scale in which all the intervals between succeeding notes is a semitone

(half-note)

 

Chromatic interval a note that does not form part of the major or natural, melodic or harmonic

minor scales

 

Chromatic scale Scale composed of twelve half steps see Musical Scales

 

Chromatic signs accidentals

 

Chromatique (French) chromatic

 

Church Cadence Plagal Cadence. A chord progression where the subdominant chord is followed by the tonic chord- In the tonality of C major, an plagal cadence would be the subdominant f major chord (F A C) moving to the tonic C major chord (C E G). see  Musical Cadences

 

CI, CII, CIII, CIV, CV, CVI…… A single finger holding multiple strings on a stringed instrument  at the same time.

Symbol used in standard notation for guitar. Roman numeral (after C) indicates which fret. Example: B7 (C7, CVII, VII) See Barre

 

Ciacona (Italian) slow stately dance with variations, popular during the seventeenth- and

eighteenth-centuries, generally in triple time, played over a ground bass

 

Cinq (French) five

 

Cinque (Italian) five

 

Cinquième (French) fifth

 

Cioà (Italian) that is

 

Circle of fifths chain of intervals. each interval a fifth, after passing through every note of

the scale returns to a note, several octaves different, from that on which the

chain began. see Circle of Fifths

 

Clangorous containing partials that are not part of the natural harmonic series.

Clangorous tones often sound bell-like

 

Claque (French) members of an audience, hired by a performer, usually to respond rapturously

and loudly during the performance including calling for frequent encores,

audience response

 

Clarity Free from obscurity and easy to understand; the comprehensibility of clear expression. See Dressing the Frets on a Classical Guitar See How to Change Classical  Guitar Strings 

 

Classical a period in music generally understood to be between 1750 and 1820;

music that is has an enduring quality

 

Classical Guitar A guitar, usually of six nylon strings, used to play classical style music. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar 

 

Classical music a period in music generally understood to be between 1750 and 1820;

music that is has an enduring quality

 

Clave five-note, two-bar rhythmic pattern which generates rhythmic measurement

and is the foundation and backbone of salsa

 

Clef symbol placed on the left of the stave which establishes the relationship

between notes and their position on the staff lines and spaces See clef in Elements of a Musical Score  See clef in Staff, Barline, & Clef See Elements of Standard Notation for Classical Guitar

 

Clef de fa (French) clef sign that shows the position of F on the staff, for example, the bass clef See clef in Staff, Barline, & Clef

 

Clef de sol clef sign that shows the position of G on the staff, for example, the treble clef See clef in Staff, Barline, & Clef

 

Click track technique for reinforcing the live sound of a musical or band with recorded

sound from one track of a tape. The other track of the tape consists of a click

used by the musical director to keep the live band and cast synchronized with

the recorded band or cast

 

Clos a cadence in which the last note sounds conclusive; that note, termed the

'final', which is the central note of the melody; the second ending of a

repeated section

 

Close cadence

 

Closed ending second of two endings in a secular medieval work, usually cadencing on the final

 

Close harmony a form of harmony where the harmonizing notes lie close to the melody

 

Cocobolo Cocobolo is a Rosewood that grows in southern Mexico and Central America. Freshly cut, it is a bright yellow and orange-red but over time it oxidizes to a rich brown-red color with black streaks. It is probably as close to Brazilian Rosewood in beauty and tonal qualities as any wood. Cocobolo is heavier than most Rosewoods, not as stable, and occasionally more brittle. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar 

 

Coda (Italian) passage ended onto the end of a composition see in Repeats, D.S.,D.C....

 

Coda Sign see in Repeats, D.S.,D.C....

 

Coda uncinata (Italian) the flag attached to the tail of a note to show its length

 

Code uncinate (Italian) the flags attached to the tail of a note to show their length

 

Codetta (Italian) a passage within a composition in sonata form which, while resembling a coda,

occurs at the end of the exposition rather than at the end of the piece

 

Cogli (Italian) with the

 

Coi (Italian) with the

 

Col' (Italian) with the

 

Col canto (Italian) to follow the speed of the singer

 

Coll (Italian) with the

 

Colla (Italian) with the

 

Collage a technique where musical fragments from other compositions are overlapped

within a new work

 

Colla parte (Italian) to follow the speed of the singer

 

Colla voce (Italian) to follow the speed of the singer

 

Colle (Italian) with the

 

Colombianas flamenco style influenced by South American rhythms

 

Combination note third note heard when two notes are played simultaneously, resultant tone

 

Combined French Polished Shellac & Nitrocellulose Lacquer Many guitar makers are now combining both. They are using French polish for the soundboard because of the finish's tonal characteristics and Nitrocellulose lacquer for the rest of the guitar for its durability. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar 

 

Combo Small group of musicians, usually four to six

 

Come (Italian) as, like, as if

 

Comme (French) as, like, as if

 

Come prima (Italian) as before

 

Comique (French) comic

 

Commissioned work one for which a composer is given a contract

 

Common chord a chord containing a root, third, and fifth

 

Common meter the meter of a four-line stanza with eight, six, eight and six syllables per line

 

Common metre the meter of a four-line stanza with eight, six, eight and six syllables per line

 

Common note a note that remains the same between two different chords

 

Common time the time signature 4/4 See common time in Elements of a Musical Score see in  Time Signatures

 

Common tone a note that remains the same between two different chords

 

Comodamente (Italian) comfortably, conveniently, moderately

 

Comodo (Italian) at an easy pace, comfortable, moderate

 

comp. abbreviation of 'composed'

 

Comparsa musical gathering

 

Compass the range of an instrument

 

Compiacevole (Italian) pleasing

 

Compiacevolmente (Italian) pleasingly

 

Compiacimento (Italian) pleasure

 

Comping the practice of supplying background music comprised of chords while

a soloist is improvising

 

Complete cadence Plagal Cadence. A chord progression where the subdominant chord is followed by the tonic chord- In the tonality of C major, an plagal cadence would be the subdominant f major chord (F A C) moving to the tonic C major chord (C E G). see  Musical Cadences

 

Complex meter a time signature such as 4+2+3 / 8

 

Complex time signature a time signature such as 4+2+3 / 8

 

Componiert (German) composed

 

Composé (French) composed

 

Composer a person who writes music

 

Composition the music that a composer writes

 

Compound harmony standard chord with an added octave in the bass

 

Compound interval an interval greater than an octave, for example, a ninth, an eleventh, a thirteenth

 

Compter (French) to count

 

Con (Italian) with

 

Con amore (Italian) with love, lovingly

 

Con brio (Italian) with spirit

 

Concert (Italian) musical performance in front of an audience

 

Concertant (French) in the form of a concerto, where there is interplay between the performers

 

Concertante (Italian) in the form of a concerto, where there is interplay between the performers

 

Concertino (Italian) a shorter work

 

Concert master (German) the first violinist or leader of an orchestra

 

Concert-meister (German) the first violinist or leader of an orchestra

 

Concerto ensemble music for voice(s) and instrument(s) (seventeenth-century

 

Concert overture single-movement concert piece for orchestra

 

Concert pitch the pitch to which an ensemble tunes, typically a'= 440Hz

 

Concitato (Italian) agitated, roused, stirred

 

Concitamento (Italian) agitation

 

Concitazione (Italian) agitation

 

Concord a chord, or group of notes complete and in total harmony with each other

 

Concordant a chord, or group of notes complete and in total harmony with each other

 

Conduct to direct a performance by an ensemble

 

Conductor a person who conducts

 

Con forza (Italian) forcefully, vigorously

 

Con fuoco (Italian) with fire

 

Con grandezza (Italian) with grandeur

 

Conjunct in which a theme moves by no more than a tone or semitone from one note to the next

 

Connecting note a note that is held between adjacent chords

 

Con passione (Italian) play with emotion

 

Consecutive interval a progression where the harmonic interval between the parts remains fixed

-in octaves, in thirds, in fourths……..

 

Conservatoire (French) where musicians study

 

Conservatorium (German) where musicians study

 

Conservatory where musicians study

 

Conserver (French) to preserve, to retain

 

Con sordino (Italian) with mute

 

con sordini (Italian) with mutes

 

Conte (French) tale

 

Contemporary music a term applied  to any music written within the last forty or fifty years

 

Continuous imitation Renaissance polyphonic style where subjects move between the

lines or voices, often overlapping one another

 

Contra a prefix indicating that the pitch of an instrument is usually one octave lower

 

Contrabass double-bass

 

Contrebasse (French) double-bass

 

Contrabasso (Italian) double-bass

 

Contradanza (Italian) popular eighteenth-century French dance form

 

Contredanse (French) popular eighteenth-century French dance form