Marcato
Template:Short description Template:Image frameMarcato (short form: Marc.; Italian for marked) is a musical instruction indicating a note, chord, or passage is to be played louder or more forcefully than the surrounding music. The instruction may involve the word marcato itself written above or below the staff or it may take the form of the symbol ∧,<ref>George Heussenstamm, The Norton Manual of Music Notation, W. W. Norton & Company, p. 52</ref><ref>Anthony Donato, Preparing Music Manuscript, Prentice-Hall, Inc., p. 50</ref><ref>Tom Gerou and Linda Rusk, Essential Dictionary of Musical Notation, Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., p.36</ref> an open vertical wedge. The marcato is essentially a louder and often shorter version of the regular accent > (an open horizontal wedge).
Like the regular accent, however, the marcato is often interpreted to suggest a sharp attack tapering to the original dynamic,<ref>Walter Piston, Orchestration, W.W. Norton & Company: 1955, p. 20</ref> an interpretation which applies only to instruments capable of altering the dynamic level of a single sustained pitch. According to author James Mark Jordan, "the marcato sound is characterized by a rhythmic thrust followed by a decay of the sound."<ref>James Mark Jordan, Evoking sound: Fundamentals of Choral Conducting and Rehearsing, GIA Publications: 1996, pp193.</ref>
The instruction marcato or marcatissimo<ref>Walter Piston, Orchestration, published by W.W. Norton & Company, 1955, page 17</ref> (extreme marcato), among various other instructions, symbols, and expression marks may prompt a string player to use martelé bowing, depending on the musical context.<ref>Kent Kennan and Donald Grantham, The Technique of Orchestration, Third Edition, published by Prentice-Hall, pp.53-54</ref> An example is the Gavotte in D majorTemplate:Which one from J. S. Bach (Suzuki Book Volume 3) page 19, Bar 39.
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