What's the difference between legato and staccato?

Legato


Definition:

  • (a.) Connected; tied; -- a term used when successive tones are to be produced in a closely connected, smoothly gliding manner. It is often indicated by a tie, thus /, /, or /, /, written over or under the notes to be so performed; -- opposed to staccato.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) No conductor telling me when to come in, no legato or staccato to follow.
  • (2) Penefsky, 1974; Hirakow & Gotoh, 1975; Ishikawa & Yamada, 1975; Legato, 1975; Hoerter, Mazet & Vassort, 1981).
  • (3) Roars appeared sonographically like prolonged barks composed of a pulsated preface, a long legato climax and a brief, fractionated and at times pulsated coda; each part varied internally to the ear and in acoustic structure.
  • (4) The notated interpretations correlated with the presence of the 3 methods: The notated melody preceded other events in chords (chord asynchrony); events notated as phase boundaries showed greatest tempo changes (rubato); and the notated melody showed most consistent amount of overlap between adjacent events (staccato and legato).
  • (5) Each performance contained 3 expressive timing patterns: chord asynchronies, rubato patterns, and overlaps (staccato and legato).
  • (6) In Experiment 2, for vocalized presentations of syllables ending in a, recency was larger for staccato speech than legato speech; for subvocalized presentations, there was a substantial recency for the legato style.

Staccato


Definition:

  • (a.) Disconnected; separated; distinct; -- a direction to perform the notes of a passage in a short, distinct, and pointed manner. It is opposed to legato, and often indicated by heavy accents written over or under the notes, or by dots when the performance is to be less distinct and emphatic.
  • (a.) Expressed in a brief, pointed manner.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) However, as we watch Blade Runner , Deckard doesn’t feel like a replicant; he is dour and unengaged, but lacks his victims’ detached innocence, their staccato puzzlement at their own untrained feelings.
  • (2) Although staccato LAD occlusion represents a minority of patients hospitalized with unstable angina, it includes most who suffer cardiac complications.
  • (3) No conductor telling me when to come in, no legato or staccato to follow.
  • (4) Sanders, who is not a registered Democrat and self-identifies as a democratic socialist, gave a familiar stump speech on progressive themes such as single-payer healthcare, rapped out in his trademark staccato delivery.
  • (5) Speech of deaf talkers has often been characterized as staccato, leading to the perception of improper grouping of syllables.
  • (6) Julia Gichuki was fast asleep when she heard the staccato sound of gunfire drawing ever closer to the women’s hostel at her university in the town of Garissa, about 90 miles from the Kenyan border with Somalia.
  • (7) Instructed beforehand that excessive noise between points could cost the team points, the crowd behaved with admirable discipline, which only made their loudness more effective, coming in staccato bursts.
  • (8) René Brunel, who wrote about the Aissawa in the 1920s, described his experience of 'the furious tempest of drums and oboes', saying the spectators were 'in the grip of the terrifying staccato music seized by this contagious madness and ecstatic frenzy which none can resist'.
  • (9) Speakers with TE voices using pulmonary air were able to preserve the rythm and the syntactico-semantic structure of their speeches, as opposed to speakers with EV who often had to insufflate air into the esophagus and therefore had a staccato-like speech.
  • (10) His voice is urgently staccato, and he has a habit of gruffly referring to his music industry peers by surname: Spector, Orbison, Bacharach.
  • (11) Both presented with a characteristic staccato cough and tachypnea but little evidence of peripheral airway obstruction.
  • (12) Perhaps Gianni De Biasi’s players had been expecting a little more edge from the expectant 12,800 who had arrived in this provincial city from places as diverse as Tirana and Toronto, but the atmosphere never hit fever pitch – a situation perhaps unaided by the succession of downpours that lent the pre-match choreography a somewhat staccato feel.
  • (13) Spasmodic dysphonia is a focal dystonia that causes a loss of the fine control of intrinsic laryngeal muscles and produces a strained staccato voice.
  • (14) This may have been a staccato performance, one that frustrated far more than it excited, but it means the side have broken a winless streak in these finals that had stretched back to 2009.
  • (15) No ringing refrain emerged from a staccato seven-way conversation.
  • (16) The notated interpretations correlated with the presence of the 3 methods: The notated melody preceded other events in chords (chord asynchrony); events notated as phase boundaries showed greatest tempo changes (rubato); and the notated melody showed most consistent amount of overlap between adjacent events (staccato and legato).
  • (17) Joe clip was fast-paced, staccato, colorful, and full of verbal and action violence.
  • (18) Over a cacophony of piano, percussion and brass, Bush’s voice veers from oddly clipped staccato to hysterical screaming as she waxes existential about frustration and the endless search for knowledge.
  • (19) Each performance contained 3 expressive timing patterns: chord asynchronies, rubato patterns, and overlaps (staccato and legato).
  • (20) I've been infected by James's ominous, staccato delivery.

Words possibly related to "legato"

Words possibly related to "staccato"