what musical instruments usually accompanies the song
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- An accompaniment in music is music that accompanies (belongs) to something else.
- A piece of music can have a melody and an underlying accompaniment. Music can be played on the piano with the right hand playing the melody and the left hand playing the accompaniment.
- The accompaniment can also be played on another instrument. The music need not be a melody with accompaniment, although it often is. The accompaniment does not always have to be deeper than the melody.
- To play the piano, the pianist must learn to play a melody with the right hand and the accompaniment with the left hand or the melody can be passed from one hand to the other.
- Normally the melody should be played slightly louder than the accompaniment. The accompaniment must not “drown out” the melody.
- An accompaniment can consist of single notes, chords, or any other pattern. The accompaniments help us to feel harmony. The melodies can be played or sung without accompaniment.
- Folk songs are traditionally sung without accompaniment. When one instrument accompanies another, the person playing the accompaniment is an accompanist. The piano is the most popular accompanying instrument in western music.
- A good pianist can accompany a violin, cello, oboe, trumpet, singer, or choir. You have to listen carefully to the accompanying instruments and play with the same feeling. When a soloist plays a concerto, the orchestra accompanies the soloist. An organist playing a song accompanies the congregation. A drummer in a rock band accompanies the main instrument.
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