Definition. End — a marking indicating where to end the piece during a D.C. or D.S. repeat.
Fine, Italian for ‘end’, is a marking placed in the score to indicate where the piece should end during a da capo or dal segno repeat. On the first pass through the music, the fine marking is ignored; on the repeat (after D.C. or D.S.), the music ends at the fine marking rather than continuing.
The marking is essential for ABA-form pieces where the repeat would otherwise continue past the desired ending. By placing fine at the end of the A section, the composer ensures that on the repeat (D.C. al fine), the music stops at the close of A rather than continuing into B again.
Without the fine marking, the performer would have no way to know where to stop the repeat. The combination D.C. al fine + fine marking is one of the most common formal devices in classical music.
Italian, ‘end’, from Latin finis.
Note the location of fine on the first pass through the music. On the repeat, stop at fine rather than continuing. The marking is not active on the first pass.
End — a marking indicating where to end the piece during a D.C. or D.S. repeat.
Italian, ‘end’, from Latin finis.
Note the location of fine on the first pass through the music. On the repeat, stop at fine rather than continuing. The marking is not active on the first pass.
Related terms include: Da Capo, D.C. al Fine, Coda.
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