- tune: a succession of notes forming a distinctive sequence; "she was humming an air from Beethoven"
- the perception of pleasant arrangements of musical notes
- (melodic) melodious: containing or constituting or characterized by pleasing melody; "the melodious song of a meadowlark"
- A melody (from Greek μελῳδία - melōidía, "singing, chanting"), also tune, voice, or line, is a linear succession of musical tones which is perceived as a single entity. ...
- Melody is a 1953 Walt Disney short cartoon film, originally released on May 28, 1953. It was the very first cartoon to be filmed in 3-D.
- Melody (aka S.W.A.L.K. (a message traditionally written on the envelopes of love letters by British schoolchildren, standing for Sealed With A Loving Kiss) is a 1971 British film about "puppy love. ...
- Nathalie Lefebvre (born T'Sobbel on January 20, 1977 in Ronse, Belgium), known under the name of Melody, was a Belgian singer. She sang in French-language.
- The following is a list of characters first appearing in the BBC soap opera EastEnders in 1988, by order of first appearance.
- (born February 24, 1982), better known by her stage name Melody (stylized as melody.), is a J-Pop singer and TV host. She debuted on February 19, 2003 with the song "Dreamin' Away", under Toy's Factory. ...
- tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase
- (Melodies) These are fundamental to most music. When several notes of a scale are played consecutively, this is called a melody.
- A succession of musical notes played one after another (usually the most recognizable tune of a song).
- the horizontal dimension of music, referring to the organization of pitches (and in later centuries, particular rhythms) into a line.
- A series of notes that form a tune, phrase, theme, or motive. Repetition is what makes a melody stick in your mind. The melodies you remember are the ones you will like the most. Some melodies are difficult to remember because they don't repeat. ...
- The loudest voice, usually carried by the trumpets or piccolos.
- A parade of notes, one following the other meaningfully.
- In general, a succession of musical tones. It represents the linear or horizontal aspect of music.
- The main theme or tune in a piece of music.
- The perception of notes sounded one at a time; a series of pitches intended to be heard in succession. The melody is the part of a composition that one might sing.
- a pattern of pitches and rhythm that creates a tune or song. In folk music styles, the melody is often maintained by a lead instrument, or a succession of lead instruments, and also by a lead vocalist, or a succession of lead vocalists. ...
- The “tune.” You might hum the melody to yourself long after the concert is over. Melodies are made up of a series of notes connected by steps or skips – called intervals.
- The rational progression of single tones; contrasted with Harmony, the rational combination of several tones.
- A series of tones played in succession to provide an agreeable sound.
- the musical organisation of sounds in time
- Specifically, the topmost line or voice.