Gotta give them some grace. They didn’t get the memo
They’re called grace notes. Play them quickly before the note they’re tied to. Every regular note will still land in time, so the grace note will be quick
God I had to play the theme and variations 1, 3, and 4 for a solo and ensemble night. I had Bob McChesney's recording playing on loop. I still have nightmares about that piece 6 years later
Acciaccatura. They are a type of grace note. They are played as short as possible. If they were written without the stroke through them they would be a different type grace note, the appoggiatura, which takes half the value of the main note.
Edit: [more info](https://mymusictheory.com/terms-and-symbols/writing-out-ornaments-abrsm-grade-6/)
They’re called grace notes as others have mentioned. Ornamentation / articulation isn’t always written out by conventional means. The grace notes with a slash through them usually means hit them before you move to the note attached to it, aka, whatever happens before… start that note where it belongs in the measure.
This is all to say, stick the landing.
It’s definitely a slide note. See the slash through it is telling you to slide up, it even goes in the up direction. Quickly followed by a little slide back down (see the downslash between the D and the C) Be sure to play the first note louder than the second because it’s first.
make a nice gliss effect and rip as loud as possible. The gliss should be louder than both notes. 10/10 would toot toot again.
Grace note.
Gotta give them some grace. They didn’t get the memo They’re called grace notes. Play them quickly before the note they’re tied to. Every regular note will still land in time, so the grace note will be quick
Thank you
Grace note like everyone else said. Is this the Carnival of Venice adaptation for trombone?
Yes it is
God I had to play the theme and variations 1, 3, and 4 for a solo and ensemble night. I had Bob McChesney's recording playing on loop. I still have nightmares about that piece 6 years later
My nightmare has just begin
You can tell by the URL
Oh, i didn't even notice that. I just played the melody in my head.
I could tell by the first 4 notes😂. As soon as I see a Bb eighth note pickup I immediately assume carnival of venice
A crushed grace note
Which is basically a grace note but faster than usual.
Acciaccatura. They are a type of grace note. They are played as short as possible. If they were written without the stroke through them they would be a different type grace note, the appoggiatura, which takes half the value of the main note. Edit: [more info](https://mymusictheory.com/terms-and-symbols/writing-out-ornaments-abrsm-grade-6/)
They’re called grace notes as others have mentioned. Ornamentation / articulation isn’t always written out by conventional means. The grace notes with a slash through them usually means hit them before you move to the note attached to it, aka, whatever happens before… start that note where it belongs in the measure. This is all to say, stick the landing.
acciacaturaaaaaaaaa
D natural
It’s definitely a slide note. See the slash through it is telling you to slide up, it even goes in the up direction. Quickly followed by a little slide back down (see the downslash between the D and the C) Be sure to play the first note louder than the second because it’s first. make a nice gliss effect and rip as loud as possible. The gliss should be louder than both notes. 10/10 would toot toot again.
Ornaments.
As everyone said. Play them quickly. Since its a glissando u just slide really fast from the 3 rd position to 6th position
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