Wend
CADENCE — *the way a phrase comes to rest.* A cadence is how a musical sentence ends — the little landing at the close of a phrase. Some cadences feel finished and settled; some leave you hanging, wanting more. Endings are punctuation: a cadence is the song's period, comma, or question mark.
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At the MotifLab academy, where a small tune named Trill was the hero of every song, there lived a thoughtful, gentle creature named Wend — and Wend cared about one thing above all: how things end.
Every musical phrase is like a sentence, and Wend shaped the landing at the end of each one. Some of her endings felt finished and settled — a full stop, a door gently closed. Some left you hanging, unresolved, leaning forward for more — a comma, or a question mark. When Trill finished a phrase, it was Wend who decided whether it felt done or felt like it was still asking. The ending changed how the whole phrase felt.
"That ending made me need to hear the next part!" a young composer said.
"That's a cadence," Wend said, tracing a gentle landing curve in the air. "I'm Wend. I keep the cadence — the way a phrase comes to rest. It's how a musical sentence ends — the little landing at the close. Some cadences feel finished. Some leave you hanging, wanting more. Endings are punctuation: I'm the song's period, comma, and question mark."
Trill sang a phrase of his motif. Wend demonstrated: she ended it on a settled, home-resting landing — finished, like a period. "That's a full stop. The phrase is done." Then she ended the same phrase up in the air, unresolved — and everyone leaned forward, waiting. "That's a question mark. The phrase is asking. It needs an answer." She smiled. "A song full of only full stops feels choppy. A song full of only question marks never lets you rest. The art is choosing — finished here, hanging there."
A young composer considered. "So I decide how each phrase ends on purpose?"
"On purpose, every time," Wend said. "When you want the listener to feel settled, end finished. When you want them to lean in for more, leave it hanging. And save your strongest, most finished ending for the very last phrase — that's the one that tells everyone the song is truly, satisfyingly over."
The instructor asked Wend to teach. "The students' phrases all end the same way — or just stop randomly," the instructor said. "Nothing feels shaped. Will you teach them endings?"
Wend was glad to. When she teaches, she gives one rule: "Think of each phrase as a sentence, and choose its punctuation. Want it to feel settled? Land it home, finished. Want to pull the listener forward? Leave it hanging, asking. Vary your endings so the song breathes between rest and question. And make your final phrase the most finished of all — the true period at the end of the whole song."
A young composer ended Trill's middle phrases with gentle question marks and the final one with a settled full stop. The whole song suddenly had shape — leaning forward, then arriving. "It feels like it was going somewhere," the composer said. "That's cadence," Wend smiled gently. "Every ending pointing toward the last one."
After class, Wend lingered, tracing slow landing-curves in the air, the way she did when she was at peace.
For a long time, Wend had carried a quiet melancholy. Her whole art was about endings — the closing, the finishing, the goodbye. While the others made the music happen, Wend was always there at the close, shaping how things stopped. She'd wondered if being the keeper of endings made her the sad one, the friend who was only ever about things being over.
But lingering there, tracing her gentle curves, remembering the young composer's delight that the song felt like it was going somewhere, Wend felt her melancholy soften into a warm, settled peace. Endings weren't sad — they were what gave everything shape and meaning. Without a satisfying close, the loveliest song just trails off and is forgotten; a good ending is what lets a listener feel the whole journey arrive. Shaping how things come to rest was a gift — the gift of making a song feel complete. A gentle, peaceful contentment settled over her, and she traced one last soft landing, content, ready to bring tomorrow's song safely home to rest.
The MotifLab ensemble
Wend is part of MotifLab's distributed-narrative cast. Each character embodies a different curricular primitive; together they teach the full subject.
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Trill
The motif itself — visual posture shifts as the motif develops, inverts, fragments
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Meld
Harmony — notes that bloom underneath to support the melody
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Thrum
Bass — the deep low foundation the whole song stands on
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Clap
Rhythm — the steady beat pattern the song walks on
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Twine
Counter-melody — a second tune that weaves against the main one
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Surge
Dynamics — how loud and soft; how a song breathes
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Ply
Texture — how many layers sound at once; thick or thin
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Tint
Timbre — the color or flavor of a sound
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Nest
Key — the home note the song keeps returning to