Music History - Elements of Music
duple meter
2 beats per measure
triple meter
3 beats per measure
quadruple meter
4 beats a measure; also known as common time
chords
a collection of pitches sounded together
dissonance
a combination of tones that sound discordant, unstable, or in need of resolution; introduces the necessary tension into music
movement
a complete, comparatively independent division of a large-scale work
consonance
a concordant or agreeable combination of tones that produce a sense of relaxation and fulfillment in music
metronome
a device used by musicians to help keep correct tempo
meter
a group of patterns 2, 3, 4, or more; actual measurement of time; the exact number of beats per measure
imitation
a melodic line in one voice and restated in another
strong melody
a melody that a piece of music revolves itself around; a melody that is sometimes "songlike", it is easy to pick up and remember
weak melody
a melody that forces some other element of the music into prominence
improvised melody
a melody which is made up by a performer instantaneously while one plays for an audience
ostinato
a short musical pattern that is repeated persistently throughout a work or a major section of a composition
homophony
a single voice takes over the melodic interest, while accompanying voices take a subordinate role
melody
a succession of single pitches or tones perceived by the mind as a unity
upbeat
are considered as the unaccented beats
scale
collection of pitches arranged in ascending and descending order
triad
consist of tones of the scale, most commonly the root, third, and fifth
syncopation
denotes a deliberate upsetting of the normal pattern of accentuation; emphasis is placed on unsuspecting beats or upbeats
phrase
denotes a unit of meaning within a larger structure; end in a resting place or a cadence
dynamics
denotes the degree of loudness or softness at which the music is played
chromatic
describes a full gamut of notes available within the octave
diatonic
describes melodies or harmonies that are built from the tones of a major of minor scale
round
designed when each voice enters in succession with the same melody
shape
determined by the direction a melody takes as it turns upwards or downwards
simple meter
duple, triple, and quadruple meters that subdivides a beat into 2 parts
compound meter
duple, triple, and quadruple meters that subdivides into 3 parts
crescendo
gradually louder
decrescendo
gradually softer
additive meter
grouping of irregular numbers of beats that add up to an overall larger pattern
call and response
heard in the music of many African cultures as well as Native American music; a singer leader who is imitated by chorus of followers
musical texture
helps explain the complexity of the sound of music
canon
imitation is used throughout the entire length of the piece
function of harmony
implies movement and progression; denotes the overall organization of tones in such a way as to achieve order and unity
ternary form
is a musical form that extends the idea of the statement and departure by bringing back the first section
binary form
is a musical form that is based on a statement and a departure, without a return to the opening section
improvisation
is created in performance as opposed to pre-composed; jazz, rock, and certain non-western music styles rely heavily
theme
is the melodic idea used as a building block in the construction of a musical work
variation
is used when some aspects of the music are altered but recognized
poly rhythms
many rhythms; origins from African and jazz music
disjunct movement
melodies that move in disjointed or disconnected intervals
conjunct movement
melodies that move principally by small intervals in a joined, connected manner
elements of music
melody, rhythm, harmony, musical texture, musical form, tempo and dynamics
multi meters
meters that have 2 meters at the same time
non metric
music without a strong sense of beat or meter; early western music; the pulse is veiled or weak
counterpoint
one musical line sets against another
cadence
punctuates the music the same way that a comma or period punctuates a sentence; may sound inclusive, or may sound final
rhythm
refers to the orderly movement of music on time
musical form
refers to the structure or shape of a work; its basic low of a structure is repetition and contrast
vertical harmony
the characteristic sound which from the vertical stacking of notes to form a chord
range
the distance between the melody's highest and lowest tones
interval
the distance between two pitches
tonic
the first tone of a scale
pitch
the highness or lowness of a tone, depending upon the rate of vibration
harmony
the movement and relationship of intervals ad chords
horizontal harmony
the notes of each melody are dependent on other notes which come before them or follow after them in the same melody
tonality
the principle of organizing around a central tone
beat
the pulsation that is the basic unit of length
sequence
the simplest in repeating the theme or idea but on another pitch
monophony
the simplest, single voiced treatment of melody; the melody is heard without either a harmonic accompaniment or other vocal lines; attention is focused on one single line
drone
used mostly in non-western cultures, it consists of a sustained tone
polyphony
when 2 or more melodic lines are combined, disturbing the same melody; the texture is based on counterpoint
heterophony
when 2 or more voices are heard simultaneously elaborating the same melody; this usually results in a melody combined with an ornamented version of itself; also found in jazz and spirituals