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      E

      E is a note of the scale (= Italian, French: mi).
       
       

      Elegy

      An elegy (= French: élégie) is a lament, either vocal or instrumental.
       
       

      English horn

      The English horn is more generally known in England as the cor anglais. It is the tenor oboe.
       
       

      Enharmonicism

      Different spellings of notes (e.g., Ab = G#) can be used for various purposes.  A dominant seventh chord can be respelled as a Ger6 chord, allowing for different resolutions of the same sound type.  Much music, since at least the 18th century, exploits enharmonic equivalence for the purposes of modulation.
       
       

      Ensemble

      The word ensemble is used in three senses. It may refer to the togetherness of a group of performers: if ensemble is poor, the players are not together. It may indicate part of an opera that involves a group of singers. It can also mean a group of performers.
       
       

      Entr'acte

      As the word suggests, an entr'acte is music between the acts of a play or opera

       

      Escape tone

      (échappée)  A metrically weak dissonance approached by step and left by leap in the opposite direction.  Such formations can also be understood as incomplete neighboring tones.  (See Nonharmonic Tones)
       
       

      Equal temperament

      A system of tuning currently accepted as the standard.  In this system, the octave is divided into twelve half-steps of equal size.  Thus, no one key is favored at the expense of others, and accidentals and modulations may be employed freely.  It should be noted that, except for the octave, none of the intervals in equal temperament is identical with its counterpart in Just or Pythagorean tuning.  However, our ears have become adjusted to these compromises.  Equal temperament was not universally adopted throughout Europe until the mid-19th century.  Other musical cultures employ different tunings.
       
       

      Etude

      An étude is a study, intended originally for the technical practice of the player. Chopin, Liszt and later composers elevated the étude into a significant piece of music, no mere exercise.
       
       

      Exposition

      The exposition in sonata-allegro form is the first section of the movement, in which the principal thematic material is announced. In the exposition of a fugue (a fugal exposition) the voices (= parts) enter one by one with the same subject: the exposition ends when all the voices have entered.
       
       

      Expressionism

      Term taken over from the visual arts and used, more or less metaphorically, for music written in a deeply subjective and introspective style.  The composition of such music is roughly lined in inspiration with the German school of expressionist painters.  These painters sought to go beyond the purely visual appearance and to depict the artist's subjective interpretation of reality, using distortion, exaggeration, symbolism, etc.

      The composers most often identified as 'expressionists" are Schoenberg and Berg, and to some extent Webern.  Schoenberg's "Verklärte Nacht", "Pierrot Lunaire", and "Erwartung", along with Berg's operas "Wozzeck" and Lulu", are the masterpieces of expressionist music.