partie à deux - definitie. Wat is partie à deux
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Wat (wie) is partie à deux - definitie

MUSICAL TERM OFTEN ABBREVIATED TO A2
À deux; A deux; A2 (music)

Folie à Deux (winery)         
  • Ménage à Trois from Folie à Deux
  • Napa vineyards of Folie à Deux
CALIFORNIA WINERY IN THE NAPA VALLEY THAT IS PART OF THE TRINCHERO FAMILY ESTATES
Folie a deux winery; Folie a Deux (winery)
Folie à Deux is a Napa Valley winery in Sonoma County, California, which is part of the Trinchero Family Estates.
Folie à deux (disambiguation)         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Flie a deux (disambiguation); Folie a deux (disambiguation)
A folie à deux (French for "the madness of two") is a rare psychiatric syndrome shared by two people.
Valse à deux temps         
TYPE OF DANCE
Valse a deux temps
Valse à deux temps, waltz à deux temps ("waltz in two beats"), also Valse à deux pas ("waltz of two steps") or Valse Russe ("Russian waltz") (Russian name: вальс в "два па") was a waltz of Russian origin introduced in France in the mid-19th century.

Wikipedia

A due

A due [a dˈduːe] in Italian or à deux [a dø] in French is a musical direction meaning "for two". Most often seen in its abbreviated form a2, the marking signifies that on a staff that normally carries parts for two players, both players are to play the single part in unison. It is generally seen in scores and parts where two players or sections of the same instrument share a staff. The instruction a2 indicates that both players or sections should play the notes indicated, while primo and secondo (often abbreviated to 1. and 2. or Io and IIo) indicate that only a single player or section should play while the other remains tacet.

Increasingly larger groups of players can also be indicated in a similar manner, for instance "a3" for three players ("a tre" in Italian, "à trois" in French), "a4" for four players ("a quattro" in Italian, "à quatre" in French), and so on.

For orchestral strings, playing in unison is usually assumed, but if returning to unison from a divisi passage, "unison" (or "unis.") is traditionally used to indicate this. If returning from a solo string passage (in which only a single string player in a section is performing), "tutti" is used to indicate that the whole ensemble should play once again.