kids encyclopedia robot

Ostinato facts for kids

Kids Encyclopedia Facts
Pachelbel Canon bass line (quarter notes)
Ground bass of Pachelbel's Canon
The Kinks You Really Got Me riff
The Kinks' "You Really Got Me" guitar riff repeats below the melody

In music, an ostinato is a short pattern of notes which is repeated many times. The word "ostinato" is related to the word obstinate. It is like a musical idea which is being obstinate and will not go away. The plural can be either "ostinati" or "ostinatos".

An ostinato can last for a section of a piece or it might last for the whole piece of music.

An ostinato can be a repeated group of notes or just a rhythm. It is similar to a riff in jazz. Many kinds of music use ostinati, e.g. classical music, jazz, boogie-woogie and African music.

A ground bass, or basso ostinato, is an ostinato pattern in the lowest notes, which keeps playing while the melodies in the higher notes change. This was often used in baroque musical works. An example is the famous Canon in D by Pachelbel.

An example of a rhythmic ostinato is the first movement from the Planets Suite by Gustav Holst. This is the movement in 5/4 time which describes Mars. Boléro by Maurice Ravel also uses a repeated rhythm all the way through the piece.

An example from popular music is Pink Floyd's Money.

Related pages

Images for kids

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Ostinato para niños

kids search engine
Ostinato Facts for Kids. Kiddle Encyclopedia.