L' (French) the

Label Viewed through the sound hole, the Label generally identifies the maker, origin, model, serial number and the approximate date the guitar was built. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

Lacey She Oak 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

Lacewood Lacewood is from South America. It is dense wood with a loud, sustaining tap tone. Its color is a warm cinnamon brown. See Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Alternative Wood Choices for Back & Sides See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

 

Lächelnd (German) laughing

Lacquer Acrylic Originally used on cars, it is a guitar finish similar to nitrocellulose lacquer, but dries quicker and harder. With age, does not produce the vintage look. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

Lacquer Nitrocellulose Used since the 1920’s, a quick-drying solvent-based lacquer that contains nitrocellulose. A very hard yet flexible, durable finish that can be polished to a high sheen on a guitar. It yellows with age, producing a desired vintage look. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

Lacquer Water-Based With personal health and environmental concerns the long-term trend is moving away from solvent-based finishes on guitars.  In response, many manufacturers set a goal to create a lacquer with all of the positive characteristics of current solvent-based lacquers but without the hazardous, toxic solvent base. Water-Based Lacquer is environmentally friendly and produces "acceptable" results. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

Lacrimoso (Italian) mournful, sad, tearful

 

Lage (German) position (in string playing); the range of an instrument

 

Lagnevole (Italian) doleful

 

Lagnoso (Italian) doleful

 

Lagrimando (Italian) tearful

 

Lagrimoso (Italian) mournful, sad, tearful

 

Lahute eight-stringed instrument in the lute family, tuned in fifths, a folk instrument of the Kosovar Albanians

 

Laid back music played with the accent played slightly after the beat to convey a relaxed, casual feeling

 

Laisser (French) to allow, to leave

 

Lamentabile (Italian) lamenting, mourning

 

Lamentando (Italian) lamenting, mourning

 

Lamentazione (Italian) lamentation

 

Lamentevole (Italian) lamenting, mourning

 

Lamento (Italian) lament

 

Lamento bass term from the eighteenth-century to describe a bass line that falls successively by a half-step to denote grief or sadness

 

Lamentoso (Italian) lamenting, mourning

 

Lancio (Italian) gusto

 

Ländler Austrian rural dance or air, usually in 3/4 or 3/8 time, slow waltz

 

Lang (German) long

 

Langoureusement (French) languorously

 

Langoureux (French) languorous

 

Langsam (German) slow

 

Langsammer (German) slower

 

Languendo (Italian) languishing

 

Languemente (Italian) languishing

 

Languente (Italian) languishing

 

Langueur (French) languor

 

Languidamente (Italian) languidly

 

Languido (Italian) languid

 

Languissant (French) languishing

 

Languore (Italian) languor

 

Laos Rosewood 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

 

Largamente (Italian) dignified and slowish

 

Large (French) dignified and slow

 

Largement (French) dignified and slowish

 

Larghetto not as slow as largo

 

Larghissimo an extremely slow tempo, slower than largo

 

Larguer (French) breadth

 

Largo (Italian) broad

 

Larynx the upper part of the trachea in the human throat

 

Lasciare (Italian) to allow to

 

Lasciate (Italian) allow, let

Lattice Bracing Generally made of spruce, braces add stiffness to the top of a classical guitar. The wood chosen is very straight grained running the length of the brace. The lattice describes the pattern in which the braces lay. See Anatomy of a Classical Guitar

Laúd Spanish lute with a flat back, 12 metal strings in 6 courses and a pear shaped body

Laut (German) loud

 

Laute (German) lute

 

Lavouto Greek lute

 

Lavta Turkish lute

 

Lay out direction indicating that a player should be silent, in jazz

 

Le (French) the; the lowered sixth degree of the major scale

 

Leading note the seventh degree of a major scale

 

Leading tone the seventh degree of a major scale

 

Leap a skip; the movement from one note to another

 

Leather plectrum a plectrum made of leather

 

Leben (German) life, vivacity

 

Lebendig (German) lively

 

Lebendiger (German) livelier

 

Lebhaft (German) lively

 

Lebhafter (German) livelier

 

Lebhaftigkeit (German) liveliness

 

Ledger line short lines drawn through, above or below the heads of notes that are written above or below the staff

 

Left hand fingerings In music, the assignment of fingers of the left hand. See Left hand fingerings in Elements of a Musical Score  See Left hand fingerings in Left & Right Hand Fingerings See Elements of Standard Notation for Classical Guitar   See Elements of Tablature for Classical Guitar

 

Legabile (Italian) smooth playing style in which the notes seem bound together

 

Legando (Italian) smooth playing style in which the notes seem bound together

 

Legatissimo exceedingly smooth

 

Legato (Italian) smooth playing style in which the notes seem bound together See legato in Note Symbols

 

Legatura (Italian) bind, slur, syncopation, tie

 

Legende (French) a legend

 

Léger (French) light

  

Légère (French) light

 

Leggere (Italian) light

 

Légèrement (French) lightly

 

Légereté (French) lightness

 

Leggeramente (Italian) lightly

 

Leggeranza (Italian) lightness

 

Leggerezza (Italian) lightness

 

Leggerissimo (Italian) as light as possible

 

Leggermente (Italian) lightly

 

Leggero (Italian) light

 

Leggiadramente (Italian) gracefully

 

Leggiadretto (Italian) graceful

 

Leggiadro (Italian) graceful

 

Leggieramente (Italian) lightly

 

Leggieranza (Italian) lightness

 

Leggiere (Italian) light

 

Leggierezza (Italian) lightness

 

Leggierissimo (Italian) as light as possible

 

Leggiero (Italian) light

 

Leggiermente (Italian) lightly

 

Leggio (Italian) music stand

 

Legnani, Luigi (1790-1877) See Classical Guitarists and Composers

 

Leichen-musik (German) funeral music

 

Leicht (German) easy, light style

 

Leichtfertig (German) frivolous, giddy

 

Leichtigkeit (German) lightness, easiness

 

Leid (German) sorrow

 

Leidenschaft (German) passion

 

Leidenschaftlich (German) passionately

 

Leise (German) soft, gentle

 

Leiser (German) softer

 

Leisten (German) to perform

 

Leistung (German) performance

 

Lene (Italian) gentle

 

Leno (Italian) gentle

 

Lent (French) slow

 

Lentamente (Italian) slowly

 

Lentando (Italian) slowing

 

Lentato (Italian) slowed

 

Lentement (French) slowly

 

Lenteur (French) slowness

 

Lentezza (Italian) slowness

 

Lentissimo (Italian) very slow

 

Lento (Italian) slow

 

Les (French) the

 

Lesson a short keyboard piece or pieces from the seventeenth- or eighteenth-centuries

 

Lestamente (Italian) quickly

 

Lestissimo (Italian) very quickly

 

Lesto (Italian) quick

 

Letzt (German) last

 

Levare (Italian) to lift, to take off

 

Levate (Italian) lift off

 

Levet a piece to be played under a bedroom window in the morning

 

Levezza (Italian) lightness

 

Li the raised sixth degree of the major scale

 

Liaison (Italian) legato, slur, tie or bind

 

Liberamente (Italian) freely

 

Libero (Italian) free, unrestrained

 

Libertà (Italian) freedom, liberty

 

Libre (French) free

 

Librement (French) freely

 

Lick a spontaneous musical phrase, melody or passage often drawn from a stock of scales, arpeggios…….

 

Lié (French) slurred, tied

 

Liebe (German) love

 

Lieblich (German) charming, lovely

 

Lied (German) song

 

Lieder (German) songs

 

Liedersammlung (German) song collection

 

Lietissimo (Italian) very joyous

 

Lietezza (Italian) joy

 

Lieto (Italian) joyous

 

Lieve (Italian) light

 

Lievemente (Italian) lightly

 

Lievezza (Italian) lightness

 

Lift a rising glissando attached to the end of a note; to transcribe a musical score from a recording

 

Ligature slur, tie

 

Line used graphically to denote ends of bars, the pitches of notes, articulation , used to describe aspects of melody

 

Linea (Latin) a stave line

 

Linear chords chord that results from linear motion

 

Liner notes textual data that convey information about a music recording, for example

 

Lining out call and response singing

 

Link material that appears between the end of one phrase and the beginning of the next, but belongs to neither

 

Linke hand (German) left hand

 

Lip synching moving one's lips to music that has been pre-recorded

 

Lira (Italian) instrument

 

Liscia (Italian) smooth

 

Liscio (Italian) smooth

 

L'istesso (Italian) the same

 

L'istesso tempo (Italian) beat remains constant when the meter changes

 

Liturgical music reverent music

 

Liu qin treble version of the Chinese lute, had originally 2 or 3 strings and 7 frets, but today may have up to 4 steel strings, and up to 24 frets, sounds like a mandolin and is played with a small bamboo tube placed over the forefinger used as a plectrum

 

Liuto (Italian) lute

 

Liuto attiorbato (Italian) lute

 

Liuto cantabile a five-course plucked string instrument

 

Livre (French) book

Llobet, Miguel (1878-1938) See Classical Guitarists and Composers

Locanda (Italian) tavern

Loco (Italian) read the notes as written

 

Loin (French) distant

 

Lointain (French) faint

 

Lo kantak Basque lullaby

 

Lontananza (Italian) distance

 

Lontano (Italian) distant

 

Loop a piece of material that plays over and over

 

Loose Fret  A fret that is no longer properly seated in its fingerboard slot. See Dressing the Frets on a Classical Guitar See How to Change Classical  Guitar Strings

 

Los (German) free in style, loose

 

Lotar Moroccan pear-shaped lute

 

Loudness human impression of the strength of a sound

 

Lourd (France) heavy

 

Lourde (France) heavy

 

Lourdement (French) heavily

 

Lourdeur (French) heaviness, weight

 

Low E String The sixth string of the guitar. See How to Change Classical  Guitar Strings 

 

Luftig (German) airy

 

Lugubre (Italian) lugubrious, mournful, sad

 

Luigi Legnani (1790-1877) See Classical Guitarists and Composers

 

Lullaby a cradle song

 

Lumineux (French) luminous

 

Lunga (Italian) long

 

Luogo (Italian) loco

 

Lungo (Italian) long

 

Lusingando (Italian) to play in an intimate manner

 

Lusinghiero (Italian) to play in an intimate manner

 

Lustig (German) cheerful

 

Lustigkeit (German) cheerfulness

 

Lustspiel (German) comedy

 

Luta (Swedish) lute

 

Lute a plucked stringed instrument with a pear-shaped body and fretted fingerboard

 

Luth (French) a plucked stringed instrument with a pear-shaped body and fretted fingerboard

 

Luthier a maker of stringed instruments

 

Lutto (Italian) mourning

 

Luttosamente (Italian) mournfully

 

Luttoso (Italian) mournful

 

Luttuoso (Italian) mournful

 

Lyre guitar six-string lyre-guitars were popular on the Continent early in the 19th century

 

Lyricism an intense personal quality, expressive of feeling or emotion, expressed in poetry or music

 

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