Music Appreciation
Galliard
A Renaissance court dance in triple meter.
Meter
A background of stressed and unstressed beats in a simple, regular, repeating pattern.
Gigue/jig
A baroque dance in a lively compound meter.
Fugue
A composition written systematically in imitative polyphony, usually with a single main theme, the fugue subject.
Antiphon
A genre of plainchant usually in a simple melodic style with very few melismas.
Chords
A grouping of pitches played and heard simultaneously.
Recitative
A half-singing, half-reciting style of presenting words in opera, cantata, oratorio, etc., following speech accents and speech rhymes closely. Secco recitative is accompanied by orchestra.
Jongleur
A medieval secular musician.
Duple Meter
A meter consisting of one accented beat alternating with one unaccented beat.
Ostinato
A motive, phrase, or theme repeated over and over again.
Monophony
A musical texture involving a single melodic line.
Homophony
A musical texture that involves only one melody of real interest combined with chords or other subsidiary sounds.
Dance Suites
A piece consisting of a series of dances.
Imitation
A polyphonic musical texture in which the various melodic lines use approximately the same themes.
Phrase
A section of a melody or tune.
Scales
A selection of ordered pitches that provides the pitch material for music.
Basso Continuo
A set of chords continuosly underlying the melody in a piece of Baroque music; the instruments playing the continuo, usually cello plus harpsichord or organ.
Passacaglia
A set of variations on a short theme in the bass.
Motive
A short fragment of melody or rhythm used in constructing a long section of music.
Strophic
A song in several stanzas, with the same music for each stanza.
Aria
A vocal number for solo singer and orchestra, generally in an opera, cantata, or oratorio.
Estampie
An instrumental dance of the Middle Ages.
Timbre
Another term for tone color.
Troubadours; Trouveres
Aristocratic poet-musicians of the Middle Ages.
Opera
Drama presented in music with the characters singing instead of speaking.
Reciting tone
Especially in chant, the single note used for musical "recitation," with brief melodic formulas for beginning and ending.
Chanson
French for a song; a genre of French secular vocal music.
Functionality Harmony
From the Baroque period on, the system whereby all chords have a specific interrelation and function in relation to the tonic.
Sequence
In a melody, a series of fragments identical except for their placement at successively higher or lower pitch levels; in the Middle Ages, a type of plainchant in which successive phrases of text receive nearly identical melodic treatment.
Consonance
Intervals or chords that sound relatively stable and free of tension, as opposed to dissonance.
Dissonance
Intervals or chords that sound relatively tense and unstable.
Forte
Loud
Triple Meter
Meter consisting of one accented beat alternating with tow unaccented beats.
Polyphony
Musical texture in which two or more melodic lines are played or sung simultaneously.
Minor
One of the modes of the diatonic scale, oriented around A as the the tonic; characterized by the interval between the first and third notes containing three semitones.
Major
One of the modes of the diatonic scale, oriented around C as the tonic; characterized by the interval between the first and third notes containing four semitones, as opposed to three in the minor mode.
Minnesingers
Poet-Composers of the Middle Ages in Germany.
Piano
Soft
Rhythm
The aspect of music having to do with the duration of the notes in time.
Melody
The aspect of music having to do with the succession of pitches.
Texture
The blend of the various sounds and melodic lines occurring simultaneously in a piece of music.
Organum
The earliest genre of medieval polyphonic music.
Tonality
The feeling of centrality of one note to a passage of music.
The Mass
The main Roman Catholic service; or the music written for it. The musical mass consists of five large sections: Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei.
Madrigal
The main secular vocal genre of the Renaissance.
Pitch
The quality of "highness" or "lowness" of sound.
Beat
The regular pulse underlying most music; the lowest unit of meter.
Chromatic
The set of twelve pitches between one octave.
Tempo
The speed of music,i.e., the rate at which the accented and unaccented beats of the meter follow one another.
Accent
The stressing of a note-for example, by playing it louder than the surrounding notes.
Liturgy
The system of prayers and worship of a particular religion.
Dynamics
The volume of sound, the loudness or softness of a musical passage.
Plainchant
Unaccompanied, monophonic music, without fixed rhythm or meter.
Motet
Usually a sacred vocal composition. Early motets were based on fragments of Gregorian chant.