Music is an art form that
involves organized and audible sounds and silence. It is usually
expressed in terms of pitch (which includes melody and harmony),
rhythm (which includes tempo and meter), and the quality of
sound (which includes timbre, articulation, dynamics, and
texture). Music may also involve generative forms in time
through the construction of patterns and combinations of natural
stimuli, principally sound. Music may be used for artistic
or aesthetic, communicative, entertainment, or ceremonial
purposes. The definition of what constitutes music varies
according to culture and social context. Within "the
arts", music can be classified as a performing art, a
fine art, or an auditory art form.
Music is a personal response to vibration since the same piece
of music will affect people differently. Although it cannot
contain emotions, it is sometimes designed to manipulate and
transform the emotions of the listeners. For example, a piece
of music created for a movie is primarily designed to heighten
the emotion or mood of each scene in the film.
The broadest definition of music is organized vibration. There
are observable patterns to what is broadly labeled music,
and while there are understandable cultural variations, the
properties of music are the properties of sound as perceived
and processed by humans and animals |