MUHS 2 Final
The years between the end of World War I and the start of World War II are
1918-1939
Which of the following propositions was among Debussy's aesthetic views?
A composer need not be bound by traditional rules of harmonic progression.
Minimalism originated as
A reaction against the intellectual and technical complexity of much modernistic music of the mid 20th century
Match each musical technique or movement to the composer with which it is associated polystylism tintinnabuli neo-Romanticism nuevo tango postminimalism
A. Alfred Schnittke C. Arvo Pärt B. David del Tredici E. Ástor Piazzola D. John Adams
Count Basie Tommy Dorsey Scott Joplin Bessie Smith John Philip Sousa
A. Big Band C. Swing D. ragtime E. the blues B. band marches
Pierrot lunaire The Unanswered Question Petrushka The Rite of Spring Pulcinella
A. expressionism B. experimental music C. cubism D. primitivism E. neoclassicism
Ernst Krenek's Jonny spielt auf examines the cultural dichotomy between
American musical innovation and European tradition
All of the following compositions were responses to contemporary political issues except
Arthur Honneger's Pacific 231
Match each concept or technique to the composer who prominently used it. Harry Partch Krzysztof Penderecki Henry Cowell John Cage Elliott Carter
B. monophonic music C. process music D. assimilation of Asian and Indian elements A. chance music E. metric modulation
General William Booth Enters into Heaven Symphony of Psalms Pierrot lunaire Symphony, Op. 21 Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta
B. polytonality E. neotonality D. Sprechstimme A. Klangfarbenmelodie C. ethnomusicology
To what aspect of Brahms's music did Schoenberg feel indebted with respect to the development of his own compositional technique?
Brahms's method of continuously developing musical motives
After World War II, a highly influential German government-sponsored center for new music emerged in
Darmstadt
film music that is heard or performed by characters in the film.
Diegetic music refers to
Le tombeau de Couperin Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis Golliwog's Cake-Walk Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus Prélude à "L'Après-midi d'un faune"
E. neoclassicism C. Renaissance Revival B. ragtime D. folksong revival movement A. Symbolism
4'33'' was composed as a demonstration of total silence, which Cage regarded as the negative image of music
False
A distinctive feature of bebop is its abandonment of improvisation techniques in favor of notated arrangements
False
A striking phenomenon among foreign composers such as Bright Sheng who have studied in the West has been their resilient faithfulness to the musical styles of their native cultures and their resistance to influence by the Western art music tradition
False
Although broadly acquainted with the French and German musical traditions, Debussy did not have the opportunity to hear or study the music Wagner
False
Because of their popular orientation, American bands in the late nineteenth century excluded European masterworks and cultivated more accessible, native repertoires
False
Despite access to travel and the plethora of communication technologies available in the late twentieth century, musical cultures have largely remained isolated and distinct, without influencing each other significantly
False
During the 1920s and 1930s, the Mexican government suppressed the traditional arts of indigenous peoples and promoted instead ascendant European styles
False
Following the brutality and savagery of World War I, European composers largely abandoned their earlier allegiances to nationalist musical styles and identities
False
In his Afro-American Symphony, William Grant Still abandoned the traditional four-movement symphonic design and used a one-movement, programmatic form modeled on Liszt's symphonic poems
False
Samuel Barber was the first American composer to use and promote serial techniques to composers and audiences in the United States
False
Schoenberg's career represented a radical rejection of the ideas and procedures he found in the Austro-German tradition of classical music extending from J. S. Bach to Mahler
False
Unlike Stravinsky and Bartók, Ives disdained vernacular and folk musical genres and did not use them in his music.
False
Use of twelve-tone rows forced Schoenberg to abandon traditional musical forms and invent new ones for his works of the 1920s and 1930s
False
The metaphor of musical collage aptly describes the compositional techniques applied in
General William Booth Enters into Heaven
A leading institute for the study of electronic music, founded by Pierre Boulez, is
IRCAM
Which of the following statements most accurately describes early twentieth-century modernist music?
It sought innovation while maintaining ties to older repertoires and traditions
Fascism first emerged as a ruling political movement in
Italy in the 1920s
Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue was advertised as a
Jazz Concerto
The ground-breaking minimalist works of La Monte Young and Terry Riley were closely contemporary with
John F. Kennedy's assassination
Match each composer to the figure who inspired one of his compositions Kurt Weil Sergei Prokofiev Paul Hindemith Silvestre Revueltas Aaron copland
John Gay William Shakespeare Matthias Grünewald Federico García Lorca Thorton Wilder
The following works are all by Prokofiev except
King David
Who among the following composers pursued a successful career writing Broadway musicals in the 1930s and 1940s?
Kurt Weil
In Liturgie de cristal, Messiaen uses constructive techniques based most closely on those of
Medivial Isoshtyhms
The proposition that avant-garde methods or products of composition that are incomprehensible or imperceptible to average listeners are analogous to specialist theories and methods of modern scientific research is associated with
Milton Babbitt
Hector Villa-Lobos's Bachianas brasileiras embrace
Neo-Classism
The last movement of Crawford Seeger's 1931 String Quartet is notable for its
Palindrone Form
Who wrote the music for the opera Einstein on the Beach?
Philip Glass
Francis Poulenc took inspiration from
Popular french song
Which of the following is one of Stravinsky's neoclassical works?
Pulcinella
Nature and environmental issues have been prominent themes in the works of
R. Murray Schafer
serialism Tone Clusters Polytonality harmonic fluctuation Spatial music
Ruth Seeger Henry Cowell Darius Milhaud Paul Hindemeth Edgard varese
Which of the following twentieth-century composers remained most committed to traditional tonality?
Samuel Barber
The earliest atonal compositions included
Schoenberg's The Book of the Hanging Gardens and Ives's The Unanswered Question
The first successful electronic instrument was the
Theremin
Which of the following statements is true of Krenek, Gershwin, Copland, and Milhaud?
They all incorporated blues or jazz idioms in their music
During the Depression and New Deal eras, Ruth Crawford Seeger and Aaron Copland both
Took interest in indigenous American musical traditions
Treating aspects of musical other than pitch according to the principles of Schoenberg's twelve-tone composition has been called
Total Serialism
Early modernist composers around 1900 had to contend with the domination of concert programs by well-established classics by Mozart and Beethoven
True
Harry Partch's music employs not only unusual scales and tunings inspired by non-Western musical systems, but also instruments of his own invention
True
John Cage's Concert for piano and orchestra is closely connected to his ideas about the role of indeterminacy in composition
True
The Symphony of Psalms, like many of Stravinsky's earlier works, uses an octatonic scale as the source of some of its melodic and harmonic material
True
The songs of African slaves proliferated and were absorbed into the American musical vernacular in part because slaveholders considered this music harmless or even useful True or False
True
Varèse's ideas about spatial music had an important influence on the next generation of European and American composers
True
Louis Armstrong's primary instrument was the
Trumpet
Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta illustrates Béla Bartók's use of all the following elements except
Twelve Tone Rows
In the film scores written by European musicians like Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Max Steiner during the 1930s, one typically finds
Wagnerian leitmotives and modernist dissonance
Of the following composers, who was the only one to reside in Europe during World War II?
Webern
The Path to the New Music is
Webern's essay arguing that twelve-tone music was an inevitable result of the evolution of music
Benjamin Britten's Peter Grimes is about
a nineteenth-century story of a fisherman ostracized by his fellow villagers
The technique of "tintinnabuli" is based on a rule-based relationship between
a principal melody and a tonic triad
Act III of Berg's Wozzeck is organized as
a series of inventions, each focused on a different musical element.
In the United States, avant-garde composers of the decades after World War I were widely and most often supported by the patronage of
academic institutions
The plot of Wozzeck is drawn from
an early nineteenth-century German drama
When we claim that works such as Krzysztof Penderecki's Threnody: To the Victims of Hiroshima or Iannis Xenakis's Metastaseis are organized by "processes," we mean that these works
are a succession of gradual changes in instrumental timbres, textures, and registers
The blues typically uses
certain scale degrees in natural as well as flattened form
Bartók learned about folk music by
collecting and publishing it himself
Expressionist Painters
depicted darkly distorted objects or people in an attempt to convey the anxieties of urban life
Phonograph disc technology advanced in 1948 when
discs were designed that could contain almost six times as much music as earlier ones
Olivier Messaien's compositions were strongly influenced by his
fervent Catholic faith
In the 1960s, Ornette Coleman and his ensemble developed a style of jazz known as
free jazz
Schafer's environmental music
is to be performed outside of the concert hall
Band transcriptions were primarily intended to
make popular orchestral works performable by wind bands
In his works from the 1970s and later, Arvo Pärt used a compositional style heavily influenced by
medieval chant and early chant polyphony
Since the 1980s the musical style that has proved most adaptable and widely integrated into both art and popular music has arguably been
minimalism
What is Hindemith's concept of Gebrauchsmusik?
music that could be played by younger or amateur performers
John Cage's mature ideas about music include the proposition that
musical compositions need not be permanent or fixed things ??
Music created electronically from prerecorded sounds was known as
musique concrète
Schoenberg's argument for atonality was based in part on his observation that
nineteenth-century chromaticism and wide-ranging modulations had weakened the pull of tonic pitches
Broadly speaking, one of the most important functions of film musicals in the 1930s was to
offer respite from the deprivations of the Great Depression
In twelve-tone music, the original form of the row is called the
prime
Luigi Russolo was an important figure in the
promotion of a musical aesthetic that reflected the influence of modern industrial society
Although different in many ways, Benjamin Britten and George Crumb both
responded to contemporary political and social issues in their compositions
Avant-garde techniques of electronic music composition were first enabled by the invention of
tape recorders
Klangfarbenmelodie is
the coordination of changes in pitch with changes of tone color.
The description of much early twentieth-century music as "post-tonal" refers to
the diverse new ways in which composers organized pitch.
A decline of amateur participation in music performance in the United States after the 1920s can be most directly attributed to
the invention and use of electric sound recording
predominant motivation for many developments in musical style in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries has been
to make music more sensuously appealing and comprehensible for listeners
Treating aspects of musical other than pitch according to the principles of Schoenberg's twelve-tone composition has been called
total serialsim
Steve Reich's musical style in the 1970s was decisively influenced by
traditional African drumming
Despite their general aesthetic agreements, the composers of Les Six composed in widely divergent styles.
true
How does Higdon depict the cathedral in her blue cathedral?
with melodic lines that spiral upward and then down
The Nazis disapproved of all the following except
works by Enlightenment-period composers like Mozart and Beethoven