Classical Music Vocabulary Flashcards
(40 cards)
Historical style period
A convention of dividing up music history into style periods. These style periods are defined by dates, and each style period has its musical values and traditions.
Genre
For this class, this term refers to what kind of music is being heard. It can refer to instrumentation, size of ensemble, artistic intent, or other ideas.
Instrumental music
Uses only instruments to create sounds
Vocal music
Uses voices to create music. Can be voices alone, or with instruments.
A Capella
Refers to music that is sung by voices with no instruments. It is voices singing alone.
Chamber music
Refers to music performed by a small ensemble (less than 12 musicians), and has no conductor. Musicians rely on each other for guidance and inspiration in rehearsal and performance.
Conductor
A person that leads large ensembles through non-verbal communication. Hand and arm movements are used to communicate and motivate musicians in rehearsal and performance.
Sacred
Refers to music that has a religious or worship intent
Secular
Refers to music that is not religious in intent
Programmatic music
Refers to music that is intended to tell a story, or give specific images to the listener through its sounds.
Absolute music
Refers to music that has no plot, story, or specific meaning. The meaning is meant to be imagined by the listener.
Movement
A self-contained part of a musical composition or musical form. While individual or selected movements from a composition are sometimes performed separately, a performance of the complete work requires all the movements to be performed in succession.
Classical music
Refers to around 1200 years of music! It is a kind of concert music that uses instruments, voices, or both.
Descriptive (or narrative) titles
Give an image or idea about what the music is about.
Night on Bald Mountain, The Watergoblin, and An Alpine Symphony are all examples of descriptive titles.
Generic titles
Seem like a catalog name. They have generic names and numbers. An example of a generic title might be:
Symphony No. 5 in c minor, Op.67. Allegro con brio Andante con moto Scherzo Allegro Allegro
The key
This tells the audience what pitches the composer used as ingredients for the music.
The opus number
Opus numbers are used to catalog the published works of a composer in chronological order. In our example, this would be the 67th piece published by this composer. Opus numbers are not always used. Sometimes a composer is studied so much, they have a special catalog number system just for them selves. For example Mozart has “K” numbers.
Medieval
400-1400 (that’s 1000 years of music!)
Renaissance
1400-1600
Baroque
1600-1750
Romantic
1820-1900
20th Century
1900-present
Classical
1750-1820
A symphony
- It can refer to an actual orchestra.
“I’m going to go hear the symphony this weekend.” - “Symphony” can refer to a piece of music written for an orchestra. It is usually a piece of music in several sections, and can be either absolute or programmatic. There is a specific design, almost a formula, for the symphony. Some of the most admired music for orchestras are symphonies.