Marcato (short form: Marc.) (Italian for marked) is a musical instruction indicating a note, chord, or passage is to be played louder or more forcefully than surrounding music. The instruction may involve the word marcato itself written above or below the staff or it may take the form of an accent mark, ^, an open vertical wedge. This is essentially an intensified version of the regular accent indicated by >, an open horizontal wedge: It asks for a greater dynamic accent. Like the regular accent, however, it is often interpreted to suggest a sharp attack tapering to the original dynamic, an interpretation which applies only to instruments capable of altering the dynamic level of a single sustained pitch. According to author James Mark Jordan, "the marcato sound is characterised by a rhythmic thrust followed by a decay of the sound"
In jazz big-band scores the marcato symbol usually indicates a note is to be shortened to approximately 2/3 its normal duration, and given a moderate accent.
Marcato is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Moira, I'm singing in the breeze for you
Moira, can't you see that I love you?
All of these words I'm singing
Drift away and fall apart
You don't hear a word I'm saying
And now I nurse a broken heart
Moira, my calendar grows old with age
Moira, I've started counting off the days
Until I see you again
All of these words I'm singing
Drift away and fall apart
You don't hear a word I'm saying
And now I nurse a broken heart
Moira, my shoes are worn and I can't see
Moira, you don't know what you do to me