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Accidental (music)

In music, an accidental is a note of a pitch (or pitch class) that is not a member of the scale or mode indicated by the most recently applied key signature. In musical notation, the sharp (), flat (), and natural () symbols, among others, mark such notes—and those symbols are also called accidentals.

The most common accidentals. From left to right: flat, natural, and sharp.

In the measure (bar) where it appears, an accidental sign raises or lowers the immediately following note (and any repetition of it in the bar) from its normal pitch, overriding the key signature. A note is usually raised or lowered by a semitone, and there are double sharps or flats, which raise or lower the indicated note by two semitones. Accidentals usually apply to all repetitions within the measure in which they appear, unless canceled by another accidental sign, or tied into the following measure. If a note has an accidental and the note is repeated in a different octave within the same measure the accidental is usually repeated, although this convention is far from universal.

The modern accidental signs derive from the two forms of the lower-case letter b used in Gregorian chant manuscripts to signify the two pitches of B, the only note that could be altered. The "round" b became the flat sign, while the "square" b diverged into the sharp and natural signs.

Sometimes the black keys on a musical keyboard are called "accidentals" (more usually sharps), and the white keys are called naturals.[1]

Standard use of accidentals

Typical system

In most cases, a sharp raises the pitch of a note one semitone while a flat lowers it one semitone. A natural is used to cancel the effect of a flat or sharp. This system of accidentals operates in conjunction with the key signature, whose effect continues throughout an entire piece, unless canceled by another key signature. An accidental can also be used to cancel a previous accidental or reinstate the flats or sharps of the key signature.

Accidentals apply to subsequent notes on the same staff position for the remainder of the measure where they occur, unless explicitly changed by another accidental. Once a barline is passed, the effect of the accidental ends, except when a note affected by an accidental is tied to the same note across a barline. Subsequent notes at the same staff position in the second or later bars are not affected by the accidental carried through with the tied note.

 

Under this system, the notes in the example above are:

  • m. 1: G, G, G (the sharp carries over)
  • m. 2: G (with courtesy accidental), G, G (the flat carries over)
  • m. 3: G (which is tied from the previous note), G, G (the natural sign cancels the sharp sign)

Though this convention is still in use particularly in tonal music, it may be cumbersome in music that features frequent accidentals, as is often the case in atonal music. As a result, an alternative system of note-for-note accidentals has been adopted, with the aim of reducing the number of accidentals required to notate a bar. According to Kurt Stone, the system is as follows:[2]

  1. Accidentals affect only those notes which they immediately precede.
  2. Accidentals are not repeated on tied notes unless the tie goes from line to line or page to page.
  3. Accidentals are not repeated for repeated notes unless one or more different pitches (or rests) intervene.
  4. If a sharp or flat pitch is followed directly by its natural form, a natural is used.
  5. Courtesy accidentals or naturals (in parentheses) may be used to clarify ambiguities but are kept to a minimum

Because seven of the twelve notes of the chromatic equal-tempered scale are naturals (the "white notes", A; B; C; D; E; F; and G on a piano keyboard) this system can significantly reduce the number of naturals required in a notated passage.

Occasionally, an accidental may change the note by more than a semitone: for example, if a G is followed in the same measure by a G, the flat sign on the latter note means it is two semitones lower than if no accidental were present. Thus, the effect of the accidental must be understood in relation to the "natural" meaning of the note's staff position.

In some atonal scores (particularly by composers of the Second Viennese School), an accidental is notated on every note, including natural notes and repeated pitches. This system was adopted for "the specific intellectual reason that a note with an accidental was not simply an inflected version of a natural note but a pitch of equal status."[3]

Double accidentals

 
The two double accidentals. From left to right: double flat and double sharp.

Double accidentals raise or lower the pitch of a note by two semitones,[4] an innovation developed as early as 1615.[5] This applies to the written note, ignoring key signature. An F with a double sharp applied raises it a whole step so it is enharmonically equivalent to a G.

Usage varies on how to notate the situation in which a note with a double sharp (or flat) is followed in the same measure by a note with a single sharp (or flat). Some publications simply use the single accidental for the latter note, whereas others use a combination of a natural and a sharp (shown below), with the natural being understood to apply to only the second sharp.

 

The double accidental with respect to a specific key signature raises or lowers the notes containing a sharp or flat by a semitone. For example, when in the key of C minor or E major, F, C, G, and D contain a sharp. Adding a double accidental (double sharp) to F in this case only raises F by one further semitone, creating G natural. Conversely, adding a double sharp to any other note not sharped or flatted in the key signature raises the note by two semitones with respect to the chromatic scale. For example, in the aforementioned key signature, any note that is not F, C, G, and D is raised by two semitones instead of one, so an A double sharp raises the note A natural to the enharmonic equivalent of B natural.

 
An example of the use of a double accidental

Courtesy accidentals

 
An A followed by an A in the next measure. The A is given a courtesy accidental to remind the player that the flat sign does not apply to it.

In modern scores, a barline cancels an accidental, with the exception of tied notes. Courtesy accidentals, also called cautionary accidentals or reminder accidentals are used to remind the musician of the correct pitch if the same note occurs in the following measure. The rules for applying courtesy accidentals (sometimes enclosed in parentheses) vary among publishers, though in a few situations they are customary:

  • When the first note of a measure had an accidental in the previous measure
  • After a tie carries an accidental across a barline, and the same note appears in the next measure
  • When a chord contains a diminished or augmented octave
  • When there is a cross relation with another part

Publishers of free jazz music and some atonal music sometimes eschew all courtesy accidentals.[6]

Microtonal notation

 
A common notation for quarter tones. From left to right, half-flat, flat-and-a-half, half-sharp, sharp-and-a-half.

Composers of microtonal music have developed a number of notations for indicating the various pitches outside of standard notation. One such system for notating quarter tones, used by the Czech Alois Hába and other composers, is shown on the right.

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, when Turkish musicians switched from their traditional notation systems—which were not staff-based—to the European staff-based system, they refined the European accidental system so they could notate Turkish scales that use intervals smaller than a tempered semitone. There are several such systems, which vary as to how they divide the octave they presuppose or the graphical shape of the accidentals. The most widely used system (created by Rauf Yekta Bey) uses a system of four sharps (roughly +25 cents, +75 cents, +125 cents and +175 cents) and four flats (roughly −25 cents, −75 cents, −125 cents and −175 cents)[citation needed], none of which correspond to the tempered sharp and flat. They presuppose a Pythagorean division of the octave taking the Pythagorean comma (about an eighth of the tempered tone, actually closer to 24 cents, defined as the difference between seven octaves and 12 just-intonation fifths) as the basic interval. The Turkish systems have also been adopted by some Arab musicians.

Ben Johnston created a system of notation for pieces in just intonation where the unmarked C, F, and G major chords are just major chords (4:5:6) and accidentals create just tuning in other keys. Between 2000 and 2003, Wolfgang von Schweinitz and Marc Sabat developed the Extended Helmholtz-Ellis Just Intonation (JI) pitch notation, a modern adaptation and extension of the notation principles first used by Hermann von Helmholtz, Arthur von Oettingen, and Alexander John Ellis that some other musicians use for notating extended just intonation.[7]

History of notation of accidentals

The three principal symbols indicating whether a note should be raised or lowered in pitch are derived from variations of the small letter b:[8] the sharp () and natural () signs from the square "b quadratum", and the flat sign () from the round "b rotundum" b.

The different kinds of B were eventually written differently, so as to distinguish them in music theory treatises and in notation. The flat sign derives from a round b that signified the soft hexachord, hexachordum molle, particularly the presence of B. The name of the flat sign in French is bémol from medieval French bé mol, which in modern French is bé mou ("soft b"). The natural sign and the sharp sign derive from variations of a square b that signified the hard hexachord, hexachordum durum, where the note in question is B. The name of the natural sign in French is bécarre from medieval French bé quarre, which in modern French is bé carré ("square b"). In German music notation, the letter B or b always designates B while the letter H or h – a deformation of a square b – designates B.

In the early Middle Ages, a widespread musical tradition was based on the hexachord system defined by Guido of Arezzo.[9] The basic system, called musica recta, had three overlapping hexachords. Change from one hexachord to another was possible, called a mutation. A major problem with the system was that mutation from one hexachord to another could introduce intervals like the tritone that musicians of the time considered undesirable. To avoid the dissonance, a practice called musica ficta arose from the late 12th century onward. This introduced modifications of the hexachord, so that "false" or "feigned" notes could be sung, partly to avoid dissonance. At first only B could be flattened, moving from the hexachordum durum (the hard hexachord) G–A–B–C–D–E where B is natural, to the hexachordum molle (the soft hexachord) F–G–A–B–C–D where it is flat. The note B is not present in the third hexachord hexachordum naturale (the natural hexachord) C–D–E–F–G–A.[citation needed]

Strictly speaking the medieval signs and indicated that the melody is progressing inside a (fictive) hexachord of which the signed note is the mi or the fa respectively. That means they refer to a group of notes around the marked note, rather than indicating that the note itself is necessarily an accidental. For example, when a semitone relationship is indicated between F and G, either by placing a mi-sign () on F or a fa-sign () on G, only the context can determine whether this means, in modern terms, F-G or F-G, or even F–G . The use of either the mi-sign on F or the fa-sign on G means only that "some kind of F goes to some kind of G, proceeding by a semitone".[10]

As polyphony became more complex, notes other than B required alteration to avoid undesirable harmonic or melodic intervals (especially the augmented fourth, or tritone, that music theory writers referred to as diabolus in musica, i.e., "the devil in music"). Nowadays "ficta" is used loosely to describe any such un-notated accidentals. The implied alterations can have more than one solution, but sometimes the intended pitches can be found in lute tablatures where a fret is specified.[11]

The convention of an accidental remaining in force through a measure developed only gradually over the 18th century. Before then, accidentals only applied to immediately repeated notes or short groups when the composer felt it was obvious that the accidental should continue.[12] The older practice continued in use well into the 18th century by many composers, notably Johann Sebastian Bach.[13] The newer convention did not achieve general currency until early in the 19th century.[14]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Palmieri, Robert, and Margaret W. Palmieri. "Ebonies", Piano: An Encyclopedia, p.118. New York: Routledge, 2003. ISBN 0-415-93796-5.
    "The ebonies are the black keys of a piano, called variously sharps or accidentals, …"
    "The ivories are the white keys of the piano (also called naturals), ..."
  2. ^ Stone, Kurt. Music Notation in the Twentieth Century: A Practical Guidebook, p. 56. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1980.
  3. ^ Gould, Elaine (2011). Behind Bars: The Definitive Guide to Music Notation. London. p. 86. ISBN 978-0571514564. OCLC 701032248.
  4. ^ Bruce Benward & Marilyn Nadine Saker, Music in Theory and Practice, seventh edition (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2003): vol 1, p. 6.
    "Double Sharp ( )—raises the pitch two half steps. Double flat ( )—lowers the pitch two half steps."
  5. ^ "Accidentals". Gemini Musical Theatre Company. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  6. ^ Marshall, Wolf (2008). Stuff! Good Guitar Players Should Know: An A-Z Guide to Getting Better, p.59. ISBN 9781423430087.
  7. ^ Glover, Richard; Harrison, Bryn; Gottschalk, Jennie (2018-12-27). Being Time: Case Studies in Musical Temporality. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-62892-272-1.
  8. ^ Niecks, Frederick. The Flat, Sharp, and Natural. A Historical Sketch. Proceedings of the Musical Association, 16th Sess., (1889 - 1890), pp. 79–100.(JSTOR)
  9. ^ Guido d'Arezzo, "Epistola de ignotu cantu [ca. 1030]", abridged translation by Oliver Strink in Source Readings in Music History, selected and annotated by Oliver Strunk, 5 vols. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1965): 1:121–25. Latin test in Martin Gerbert, Scriptores ecclesistici de musica sacra potissimum, 3 vols. (St. Blasien, 1784), 2:43–46, 50. See also Clause V. Palisca, "Introduction" to Guido's Micrologus, in Hucbald, Guido, and John on Music: Three Medieval Treatises, translated by Warren Babb, edited, with introductions by Claude V. Palisca, index of chants by Alejandro Enrique Planchart, 49–56, Music Theory Translation Series 3 (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1978): esp. 49–50. ISBN 0-300-02040-6.
  10. ^ Margaret Bent, "Diatonic Ficta", Early Music History 4 (1984): pp. 1–48. Citation on pp. 14–15.
  11. ^ Gangwere, Blanche (2004). Music History During the Renaissance Period, 1520-1550: A Documented Chronology. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-29248-4.
  12. ^ "Accidentals". Harvard Dictionary of Music (2nd ed.). Harvard University Press. 1972.
  13. ^ Anthony Pryer, "Accidental", The Oxford Companion to Music, edited by Alison Latham (Oxford University Press, 2002).
  14. ^ Don Michael Randel, "Accidental", The Harvard Dictionary of Music, fourth edition (Harvard University Press, 2003). ISBN 978-0-674-01163-2; Ian D. Bent, David W. Hughes, Robert C. Provine, Richard Rastall, Anne Kilmer, David Hiley, Janka Szendrei, Thomas B. Payne, Margaret Bent, and Geoffrey Chew, "Notation", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001): §III, 4 (vi).

accidental, music, accidentals, redirects, here, group, accidentals, music, accidental, note, pitch, pitch, class, that, member, scale, mode, indicated, most, recently, applied, signature, musical, notation, sharp, flat, natural, symbols, among, others, mark, . Accidentals redirects here For the group see The Accidentals In music an accidental is a note of a pitch or pitch class that is not a member of the scale or mode indicated by the most recently applied key signature In musical notation the sharp flat and natural symbols among others mark such notes and those symbols are also called accidentals The most common accidentals From left to right flat natural and sharp In the measure bar where it appears an accidental sign raises or lowers the immediately following note and any repetition of it in the bar from its normal pitch overriding the key signature A note is usually raised or lowered by a semitone and there are double sharps or flats which raise or lower the indicated note by two semitones Accidentals usually apply to all repetitions within the measure in which they appear unless canceled by another accidental sign or tied into the following measure If a note has an accidental and the note is repeated in a different octave within the same measure the accidental is usually repeated although this convention is far from universal The modern accidental signs derive from the two forms of the lower case letter b used in Gregorian chant manuscripts to signify the two pitches of B the only note that could be altered The round b became the flat sign while the square b diverged into the sharp and natural signs Sometimes the black keys on a musical keyboard are called accidentals more usually sharps and the white keys are called naturals 1 Contents 1 Standard use of accidentals 1 1 Typical system 2 Double accidentals 3 Courtesy accidentals 4 Microtonal notation 5 History of notation of accidentals 6 See also 7 NotesStandard use of accidentals EditTypical system Edit In most cases a sharp raises the pitch of a note one semitone while a flat lowers it one semitone A natural is used to cancel the effect of a flat or sharp This system of accidentals operates in conjunction with the key signature whose effect continues throughout an entire piece unless canceled by another key signature An accidental can also be used to cancel a previous accidental or reinstate the flats or sharps of the key signature Accidentals apply to subsequent notes on the same staff position for the remainder of the measure where they occur unless explicitly changed by another accidental Once a barline is passed the effect of the accidental ends except when a note affected by an accidental is tied to the same note across a barline Subsequent notes at the same staff position in the second or later bars are not affected by the accidental carried through with the tied note Under this system the notes in the example above are m 1 G G G the sharp carries over m 2 G with courtesy accidental G G the flat carries over m 3 G which is tied from the previous note G G the natural sign cancels the sharp sign Though this convention is still in use particularly in tonal music it may be cumbersome in music that features frequent accidentals as is often the case in atonal music As a result an alternative system of note for note accidentals has been adopted with the aim of reducing the number of accidentals required to notate a bar According to Kurt Stone the system is as follows 2 Accidentals affect only those notes which they immediately precede Accidentals are not repeated on tied notes unless the tie goes from line to line or page to page Accidentals are not repeated for repeated notes unless one or more different pitches or rests intervene If a sharp or flat pitch is followed directly by its natural form a natural is used Courtesy accidentals or naturals in parentheses may be used to clarify ambiguities but are kept to a minimumBecause seven of the twelve notes of the chromatic equal tempered scale are naturals the white notes A B C D E F and G on a piano keyboard this system can significantly reduce the number of naturals required in a notated passage Occasionally an accidental may change the note by more than a semitone for example if a G is followed in the same measure by a G the flat sign on the latter note means it is two semitones lower than if no accidental were present Thus the effect of the accidental must be understood in relation to the natural meaning of the note s staff position In some atonal scores particularly by composers of the Second Viennese School an accidental is notated on every note including natural notes and repeated pitches This system was adopted for the specific intellectual reason that a note with an accidental was not simply an inflected version of a natural note but a pitch of equal status 3 Double accidentals Edit The two double accidentals From left to right double flat and double sharp Double accidentals raise or lower the pitch of a note by two semitones 4 an innovation developed as early as 1615 5 This applies to the written note ignoring key signature An F with a double sharp applied raises it a whole step so it is enharmonically equivalent to a G Usage varies on how to notate the situation in which a note with a double sharp or flat is followed in the same measure by a note with a single sharp or flat Some publications simply use the single accidental for the latter note whereas others use a combination of a natural and a sharp shown below with the natural being understood to apply to only the second sharp The double accidental with respect to a specific key signature raises or lowers the notes containing a sharp or flat by a semitone For example when in the key of C minor or E major F C G and D contain a sharp Adding a double accidental double sharp to F in this case only raises F by one further semitone creating G natural Conversely adding a double sharp to any other note not sharped or flatted in the key signature raises the note by two semitones with respect to the chromatic scale For example in the aforementioned key signature any note that is not F C G and D is raised by two semitones instead of one so an A double sharp raises the note A natural to the enharmonic equivalent of B natural An example of the use of a double accidentalCourtesy accidentals Edit An A followed by an A in the next measure The A is given a courtesy accidental to remind the player that the flat sign does not apply to it In modern scores a barline cancels an accidental with the exception of tied notes Courtesy accidentals also called cautionary accidentals or reminder accidentals are used to remind the musician of the correct pitch if the same note occurs in the following measure The rules for applying courtesy accidentals sometimes enclosed in parentheses vary among publishers though in a few situations they are customary When the first note of a measure had an accidental in the previous measure After a tie carries an accidental across a barline and the same note appears in the next measure When a chord contains a diminished or augmented octave When there is a cross relation with another partPublishers of free jazz music and some atonal music sometimes eschew all courtesy accidentals 6 Microtonal notation Edit A common notation for quarter tones From left to right half flat flat and a half half sharp sharp and a half Composers of microtonal music have developed a number of notations for indicating the various pitches outside of standard notation One such system for notating quarter tones used by the Czech Alois Haba and other composers is shown on the right In the 19th and early 20th centuries when Turkish musicians switched from their traditional notation systems which were not staff based to the European staff based system they refined the European accidental system so they could notate Turkish scales that use intervals smaller than a tempered semitone There are several such systems which vary as to how they divide the octave they presuppose or the graphical shape of the accidentals The most widely used system created by Rauf Yekta Bey uses a system of four sharps roughly 25 cents 75 cents 125 cents and 175 cents and four flats roughly 25 cents 75 cents 125 cents and 175 cents citation needed none of which correspond to the tempered sharp and flat They presuppose a Pythagorean division of the octave taking the Pythagorean comma about an eighth of the tempered tone actually closer to 24 cents defined as the difference between seven octaves and 12 just intonation fifths as the basic interval The Turkish systems have also been adopted by some Arab musicians Ben Johnston created a system of notation for pieces in just intonation where the unmarked C F and G major chords are just major chords 4 5 6 and accidentals create just tuning in other keys Between 2000 and 2003 Wolfgang von Schweinitz and Marc Sabat developed the Extended Helmholtz Ellis Just Intonation JI pitch notation a modern adaptation and extension of the notation principles first used by Hermann von Helmholtz Arthur von Oettingen and Alexander John Ellis that some other musicians use for notating extended just intonation 7 History of notation of accidentals EditThe three principal symbols indicating whether a note should be raised or lowered in pitch are derived from variations of the small letter b 8 the sharp and natural signs from the square b quadratum and the flat sign from the round b rotundum b The different kinds of B were eventually written differently so as to distinguish them in music theory treatises and in notation The flat sign derives from a round b that signified the soft hexachord hexachordum molle particularly the presence of B The name of the flat sign in French is bemol from medieval French be mol which in modern French is be mou soft b The natural sign and the sharp sign derive from variations of a square b that signified the hard hexachord hexachordum durum where the note in question is B The name of the natural sign in French is becarre from medieval French be quarre which in modern French is be carre square b In German music notation the letter B or b always designates B while the letter H or h a deformation of a square b designates B In the early Middle Ages a widespread musical tradition was based on the hexachord system defined by Guido of Arezzo 9 The basic system called musica recta had three overlapping hexachords Change from one hexachord to another was possible called a mutation A major problem with the system was that mutation from one hexachord to another could introduce intervals like the tritone that musicians of the time considered undesirable To avoid the dissonance a practice called musica ficta arose from the late 12th century onward This introduced modifications of the hexachord so that false or feigned notes could be sung partly to avoid dissonance At first only B could be flattened moving from the hexachordum durum the hard hexachord G A B C D E where B is natural to the hexachordum molle the soft hexachord F G A B C D where it is flat The note B is not present in the third hexachord hexachordum naturale the natural hexachord C D E F G A citation needed Strictly speaking the medieval signs and indicated that the melody is progressing inside a fictive hexachord of which the signed note is the mi or the fa respectively That means they refer to a group of notes around the marked note rather than indicating that the note itself is necessarily an accidental For example when a semitone relationship is indicated between F and G either by placing a mi sign on F or a fa sign on G only the context can determine whether this means in modern terms F G or F G or even F G The use of either the mi sign on F or the fa sign on G means only that some kind of F goes to some kind of G proceeding by a semitone 10 As polyphony became more complex notes other than B required alteration to avoid undesirable harmonic or melodic intervals especially the augmented fourth or tritone that music theory writers referred to as diabolus in musica i e the devil in music Nowadays ficta is used loosely to describe any such un notated accidentals The implied alterations can have more than one solution but sometimes the intended pitches can be found in lute tablatures where a fret is specified 11 The convention of an accidental remaining in force through a measure developed only gradually over the 18th century Before then accidentals only applied to immediately repeated notes or short groups when the composer felt it was obvious that the accidental should continue 12 The older practice continued in use well into the 18th century by many composers notably Johann Sebastian Bach 13 The newer convention did not achieve general currency until early in the 19th century 14 See also Edit Look up accidental in Wiktionary the free dictionary Just intonation Staff notation Maneri Sims notation Musical isomorphism a mathematical concept which uses accidentals in its notationNotes Edit Palmieri Robert and Margaret W Palmieri Ebonies Piano An Encyclopedia p 118 New York Routledge 2003 ISBN 0 415 93796 5 The ebonies are the black keys of a piano called variously sharps or accidentals The ivories are the white keys of the piano also called naturals Stone Kurt Music Notation in the Twentieth Century A Practical Guidebook p 56 New York W W Norton amp Co 1980 Gould Elaine 2011 Behind Bars The Definitive Guide to Music Notation London p 86 ISBN 978 0571514564 OCLC 701032248 Bruce Benward amp Marilyn Nadine Saker Music in Theory and Practice seventh edition Boston McGraw Hill 2003 vol 1 p 6 Double Sharp raises the pitch two half steps Double flat lowers the pitch two half steps Accidentals Gemini Musical Theatre Company Retrieved 2021 08 12 Marshall Wolf 2008 Stuff Good Guitar Players Should Know An A Z Guide to Getting Better p 59 ISBN 9781423430087 Glover Richard Harrison Bryn Gottschalk Jennie 2018 12 27 Being Time Case Studies in Musical Temporality Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 62892 272 1 Niecks Frederick The Flat Sharp and Natural A Historical Sketch Proceedings of the Musical Association 16th Sess 1889 1890 pp 79 100 JSTOR Guido d Arezzo Epistola de ignotu cantu ca 1030 abridged translation by Oliver Strink in Source Readings in Music History selected and annotated by Oliver Strunk 5 vols New York W W Norton 1965 1 121 25 Latin test in Martin Gerbert Scriptores ecclesistici de musica sacra potissimum 3 vols St Blasien 1784 2 43 46 50 See also Clause V Palisca Introduction to Guido s Micrologus in Hucbald Guido and John on Music Three Medieval Treatises translated by Warren Babb edited with introductions by Claude V Palisca index of chants by Alejandro Enrique Planchart 49 56 Music Theory Translation Series 3 New Haven and London Yale University Press 1978 esp 49 50 ISBN 0 300 02040 6 Margaret Bent Diatonic Ficta Early Music History 4 1984 pp 1 48 Citation on pp 14 15 Gangwere Blanche 2004 Music History During the Renaissance Period 1520 1550 A Documented Chronology Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 29248 4 Accidentals Harvard Dictionary of Music 2nd ed Harvard University Press 1972 Anthony Pryer Accidental The Oxford Companion to Music edited by Alison Latham Oxford University Press 2002 Don Michael Randel Accidental The Harvard Dictionary of Music fourth edition Harvard University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 674 01163 2 Ian D Bent David W Hughes Robert C Provine Richard Rastall Anne Kilmer David Hiley Janka Szendrei Thomas B Payne Margaret Bent and Geoffrey Chew Notation The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 III 4 vi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Accidental music amp oldid 1117324351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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