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music appreciation

key terms from the first 9 chapters of Norton's "The Enjoyment of Music"

Terms

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Keyboard instruments
piano and organ, do not fit neatly into the Western classification system.
Rhythmic complexities
Upbeats, offbeats, syncopation, polyrhythm
Movements
Large-scale compositions, such as symphonies and sonatas, are divided into sections, or movements.
Homorhythmic Texture
subcategory of homophony in which all the voices move in the same rhythm.
Simple meters
Duple, triple, quadruple
Brass instruments
trumpet, French horn, trombone, and tuba.
countermelody
Secondary, accompanying melody
Four families of instruments
strings, woodwinds, brass, and percussion.
Standard chamber ensembles
include string quartets as well as woodwind quintets and brass quintets.
Percussion instruments
idiophones (xylophone, cymbals, triangle) and membranophones (timpani, bass drum); some instruments are pitched (chimes) while others are unpitched (tambourine).
Meter
Marked off in MEASURES, organizes the BEATS, often starts with a DOWNBEAT
Imitation
when a melodic idea is presented in one voice, then restated in another (canons, rounds)
Triad chord
Most common chord in Western music
Tempo terms
llegro (fast), moderato (moderate), adagio (quite slow), accelerando (speeding up the pace), and ritardando (slowing the pace).
cadences
Small resting period at the end of a phrase
Orchestra
features eighty to one hundred players.
Woodwind instruments
flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, and saxophone.
Scale
Sequence of pitches, makes up a chord
disjunct melody
Moves in large, leaping intervals
Strophic form
common in songs, features repeated music for each stanza of text.
Types of human voice
soprano and alto for female voices, and tenor and bass for male voices.
Polyphony
many-voiced texture based on counterpoint—one line set against another.
Responsorial music
a repetitive style involving a soloist and a group.
Major/minor scales
Harmony is derived from them
Instrument classification
aerophones (such as flutes or horns), chordophones (such as violins or guitars), idiophones (such as bells or cymbals) and membranophones (drums).
melody
Line or tune in music
Timbre
tone color
Consonance
Occurs with the resolution of dissonance
Dynamics
describe the volume, or how loud or soft the music is played; Italian dynamic terms include forte (loud) and piano (soft).
range
A melody's span of pitches
Homophony
occurs when one melodic voice is prominent over the accompanying lines, or voices
Nonmetric
Obscured pulse
Ternary form
A-B-A
Texture
interweaving of the melodic lines with harmony in music.
Sequence
results when a motive is repeated at a different pitch
Drone
Single sustained tone
Instrument
generates vibrations and transmits them into the air.
Stringed instruments
violin, viola, cello, and double bass; plucked strings include harp and guitar.
Monophony
single-voiced music without accompaniment.
Chord
Simultaneous sounding of three or more pitches
Harmony
Describes simultaneous events in music
Heterophony
multiple voices elaborating the same melody at the same time.
Theme
a melodic idea used as a building block in a large-scale work and can be broken into small, component fragments known as motives.
Chamber music
nsemble music for small groups, with one player per part.
Metronome
device that indicates the tempo, or beats per minute, by sounding a pulse.
Tonic
Central tone around which a melody is built, this principle is called tonality
Dissonance
Unstable or discordant harmony
Compound meters
Subdivide each beat into three, rather than two, subbeats
interval
Span between two pitches in a melody
Additive meters
Used in some world musics
Tempo
rate of speed, or pace, of the music.
conjunct melody
Moves in small, connected intervals
rhythm
Moves music forward in time
Conductor
beats patterns with a baton to help the performers keep the same tempo.
phrases
Units that make up a melody
Form
organizing principle in music; its basic elements are repetition, contrast, and variation.
contour
How the melody moves up or down
a cappella singing
no accompaniment.
Ostinato
the repetition of a short musical melodic, rhythmic, or harmonic pattern.
Binary form
A-B

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