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ragtime  A written piano music, duple in meter, moderate in tempo. The left hand marks the beat while the right hand plays a syncopated melody.
chromaticism (chromatic, adj.)  Use of tones not belonging in a particular major or minor scale.
cakewalk  A plantation dance with syncopated melodies, including the short-LONG-short figure that became characteristic of ragtime.
finale  In music theater, the final scene of an act or of the show.
piano roll  A perforated paper roll on which pianists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries recorded their performances.
player piano  An instrument for playing piano rolls by pumping pedals to force air through the holes in a piano roll as it wound over a tracker bar.
staccato  Short, detached.
two-step or fox-trot  A popular American dance derived from ragtime. The meter is duple, the rhythm syncopated, the tempo moderate.
Tin Pan Alley  The name for the popular-music publishing industry from the late nineteenth century through the first half of the twentieth. Also, the streets in New York City where the publishing houses were located.
song plugger  A music store employee who demonstrated popular music for customers by playing it on the piano and sometimes by singing it as well.
verse-chorus form  A common song form in which verses relating the song’s story alternate with a tuneful chorus, or refrain.
barbershop style  Unaccompanied (traditionally male) voices singing popular songs in close harmony.
modulate  To change systematically from one key to another, usually by using one or more tones common to each key as a pivot.
American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP)  Organization formed in 1914 to ensure that music creators would receive fair compensation for public performance of their works.
Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI)  A performing rights licensing agency formed in 1940 to represent a broader range of popular and alternative music than ASCAP seemed to serve. .







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