"Segue" would mean that something else is following, but not necessarily the continuation of the same part. In Italian one would say "continua" as to state the prosecution of the same part, but I must admit I don't know if it is actually a standard, not having met such a circumstance up to now. In any case it makes full sense. I wouldn't use "Volti" which means "Turn" but in a formal mode; as matter of fact one would better express himself in Italian using "Volta" which is the equivalent of "Turn" in simple present.
-------- Giovanni Andreani www.giovanniandreani.eu >At 7:32 PM +0100 2/2/11, dc wrote: >>What's the standard Italian term to indicate that a movement isn't >>finished at the end of the page, and that it continues on the >>following page? >> >>Segue? Volti (subito)? >> >>Dennis > >V.S. (I've heard different ideas of what it stands for, but to an >orchestra musician it means turn fast because there's more coming up!) > >Segue means something new follows quickly, often a transition to the >next movement, but that's a different sense. What you're looking for >is that something continues. Typical in a Broadway book--a warning >that an applause segue is coming up so get ready for a quick cue. > >John > > >-- >John R. Howell, Assoc. Prof. of Music >Virginia Tech Department of Music >College of Liberal Arts & Human Sciences >Blacksburg, Virginia, U.S.A. 24061-0240 >Vox (540) 231-8411 Fax (540) 231-5034 >(mailto:[email protected]) >http://www.music.vt.edu/faculty/howell/howell.html > >"We never play anything the same way once." Shelly Manne's definition >of jazz musicians. >_______________________________________________ >Finale mailing list >[email protected] >http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale > _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [email protected] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
