Music Flashcards

1
Q

refers to a specific style of music, mostly
associated with the seventeenth century,

A

Classical

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2
Q

is a setting of a poem for solo voice and piano. Typically, it adapts the poem’s mood and imagery into music.

A

Art Song

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3
Q

Usually a choral work with one or more soloists and an instrumental ensemble, has
several movements. It often includes chorales and organ accompaniment.

A

Cantata

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4
Q

originally meant a piece that was sung

A

Cantata

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5
Q

a sacred choral composition, consists of five sections: Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei

A

Mass

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6
Q
  • Was a major achievement of the baroque period
  • A large-scale composition, uses a chorus, vocal soloists, and an orchestra.
  • This type of musical composition unfolds through a series of choruses, arias, duets, recitatives, and
    orchestral interludes.
A

Oratorio

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7
Q
  • An extended composition for an instrumental soloist and orchestra reached its zenith during the classical period of the eighteenth century.
  • It typically contains three movements, in which the first is fast, the second slow, and the third fast.
A

Concerto

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8
Q
  • An orchestral composition, usually in four movements,
  • Came from the classical period of the eighteenth century
  • typically lasts between twenty and forty-five minutes.
A

Symphony

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9
Q

a polyphonic composition based on one main theme or subject, can be written for a group of instruments or voices or for a single instrument like an organ or harpsichord.

A

fugue (fyoog)

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10
Q

began toward the end of the nineteenth century, These included an emphasis on improvisation, percussion, rhythmic complexity, and a characteristic called “call and response.”

A

Jazz

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11
Q

a music genre originating in New Orleans, characterized by improvisation, syncopation, a steady beat, and unique tone colors

A

Blues

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12
Q

also called Dixieland, is a form of jazz originating from spirituals, work songs, and gospel hymns. It features multiple melodic lines improvising simultaneously in the front line, supported by a rhythm section.

A

New Orleans Style

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13
Q

is a type of piano music (occasionally played on other instruments) dating to the
1890s. Mostly growing out of the saloons and dancehalls of the South and Midwest

A

Ragtime

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14
Q
  • Emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, moved away from fixed chord progressions.
  • It is characterized by two main aspects: creative improvisation and original compositions.
  • This style is abstract, dense, and challenging to follow, often disregarding regular rhythmic patterns and melodic lines
A

Free Jazz

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15
Q

In the 1970s and 1980s, jazz combined with elements of rock music to produce an extremely
popular style called

A

Fusion

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16
Q

it has a pounding rhythm accenting the first beat of the measure. It is loud, intense, coarse, and fast in tempo

A

Rock and Roll

17
Q

Gained popularity in the 1970s, has been traced by some sources to the West African and Caribbean traditions of rhymed, rhythmic storytelling.

A

Rap

18
Q

anything that excites
the auditory nerve:

A

Sound

19
Q

the relative highness or lowness we hear in sound, represents a physical phenomenon measurable in vibrations per second.

A

Pitch

20
Q

degrees of loudness or softness in music

A

Dynamics

21
Q

signifies the character of tone that allows us to distinguish a pitch played on a violin, for example, from the same pitch played on a piano.

A

Tone Color

22
Q

individual pulses we hear are called

A

Beats

23
Q

Normal musical practice groups clusters of beats into units called

A

Measures

24
Q

is the rate of speed of the composition.

A

Tempo

25
Q

is a succession of sounds with the rhythmic and tonal organization.

A

Melody

26
Q
  • When two or more tones sound at the same time
  • is essentially a vertical arrangement, in contrast with the horizontal arrangement of melody.
A

Harmony

27
Q

refers to the utilization of a specific key or musical system, relying on major and minor scales in music from the sixteenth to the twentieth century.

A

Tonality

28
Q

In music, texture has
three characteristics:

A

monophony, polyphony, and homophony.

29
Q

When we have a single musical line without accompaniment, we have a texture
called

A

Monophony

30
Q

means “many sounding,” and it occurs when two or more melodic lines of relatively equal interest are performed at the same time.

A

Polyphony

31
Q
A
32
Q

When chords accompany one main melody, we have

A

Homophony

33
Q
  • Used synonymously with opera, refers to serious or tragic opera, usually in five acts.
  • Another name for this type of opera is opera seria (“serious opera”)
A

Grand Opera

34
Q

from the Italian word for “work,” began in late sixteenth-century Florence. It aimed to recreate ancient Greek drama, combining sung or chanted words with spoken dialogue.

A

Opera

35
Q

is comic opera, which usually does not have spoken dialogue. Usually uses satire to treat a serious topic with humor

A

Opera Buffa

36
Q
  • type of opera with spoken dialogue, characterized by popular themes, a romantic mood, and often a humorous tone.
  • more theatrical than musical, usually frivolous and sentimental.
A

Operetta

37
Q
A