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Composers often use curved lines (top) to indicate the phrasing of their music. A musical phrase (Greek φράση, sentence, expression, see also strophe) is a unit of musical meter that has a complete musical sense of its own,[1] built from figures, motifs, and cells and combining to form melodies, periods and larger sections.[2] or the length in which a singer or instrumentalist can play in one breath. The term, like sentence, verse etc. has been adopted into the vocabulary of music from linguistic syntax[3]. Though the analogy between the musical and the linguistic phrase is often made, still the term "is one of the most ambiguous in music....there is no consistency in applying these terms nor can there be...only with melodies of a very simple type, especially those of some dances, can the terms be used with some consistency."[4] Edward Cone analyses the "typical musical phrase" as consisting of an "initial downbeat, a period of motion, and a point of arrival marked by a cadential downbeat". [5] Charles Burkhart defines a phrase as "Any group of measures (including a group of one, or possibly even a fraction of one) that has some degree of structural completeness. What counts is the sense of completeness we hear in the pitches not the notation on the page. To be complete such a group must have an ending of some kind....Phrases are delineated by the tonal functions of pitch. They are not created by slurs or by legato performance.................A phrase is not pitches only but also has a rhythmic dimension, and further, each phrase in a work contributes to that work's large rhythmic organization."[6] In common practice phrases are often four bars or measures long[7] culminating in a more or less definite cadence.[8] A phrase will end with a weaker or stronger cadence depending if it is an antecedent or consequent phrase. Phrase rhythm is the rhythmic aspect of phrase construction and the relationships between phrases, and "is not at all a cut-and-dried affair, but the very lifeblood of music and capable of infinite variety. Discovering a work's phrase rhythm is a gateway to its understanding and to effective performance." The term was popularized by William Rothstein's Phrase Rhythm in Tonal Music. Techniques include overlap, lead-in, extension and expansion, and reinterpretation or elision. [edit] Notes
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