Music 1 Final Exam Terms
Bel Canto
"beautiful singing"; vocal style characterized by perfect legato and agile delivery; Pauline Viardot
Tonic
"home key; The opening and closing passages of a work are virtually always in the home key."
Dramma Giocoso
"joking drama"
Romanticism
(19th century) higher and more intense experiences and forms of expression
Big Band Jazz/Swing
10-25 players; bigger audiences (predominantly white), bigger auditoriums, detailed arrangements, less improvisation, rich color/timbre combinations; Duke Ellington, "Conga Brava"
Sonata Form
ABA' form: made up of exposition, development, and recapitulation Mozart; Don Giovanni, "Overture"
Da Capo Aria
ABA' form; start with A, goes into a contracting section, then similar section to A Handel, "La giustizia"
Fluxus
An international coalition of visual artists, writers, and musicians, mostly centered in NYC in the 1960s and 1970s; The main characteristics of the performance are that it is easy to do, no training is needed, there are simple props. it can be done anywhere by anyone, and it blurs the line between art and life Bird Call performance; spilled water demonstration
Secco
Continuo Handel, "There were shepherds"
Lied (Lieder)
German song(s); "Im wunderschonen Monat Mai"
Rondo Form
In the symphonies and other multi-movement genres of the Classical era, it was used mainly for fast, closing movements. A rondo begins with a full-fledged tune (A) and comes back to it after episodes (B, C, etc.) serving as spacers between appearances (ABACA, ABACABA); Haydn Symphony No. 101 in D, Fourth Movement
Chance Operations, Aleatory Music
Music whose composition and/or performance is undetermined by the composer; the composer has made a deliberate withdrawal of control; I Ching, Book of Changes; John Cage, Solo for Voice No. 11
Accompanied
Orchestra; Handel, "There were shepherds"
Polyrhythms
Severel (complex) overlapping rhythms; Carnaval bands and dances (Comparsas)
Silk Road Ensemble
The Silk Road Ensemble is a musical collective; loose collective of as many as 59 musicians, composers, arrangers, visual artists and storytellers from Eurasian cultures. The ensemble uses various instruments from the Silk Road region.
Minuet and Trio
Third movement in a classical symphony; Haydn, Symphony No. 99 in E-flat, Third Movement
Socialist Realism
a creative method based in the truthful, historically concrete artistic reflection of reality in its revolutionary development; "Roses for Stalin" (1949)
Ballets Russes
a dance company formed by impresario Sergei Diaghilev that specialized in the performance of "Russian-folklore"; Commissioned The Rite of Spring
Blues
a genre of black folk songs whose subjects often deal with loneliness, trouble, and unhappiness
Singspiel
a genre of opera characterized by spoken dialogue; they are generally romantic and funny by nature; Die Entführung aus dem Serail, Overture
Concerto
a large composition for a solo instrument(s) & orchestra
Exposition
a large, diverse section of music in which the basic material of the movement is presented; made up of first theme, bridge, second group, second theme, and cadence group
Symphony
a large-scale, multi-movement work for orchestra; Beethoven, Symphony No. 5
Melisma
a lot of melody over one syllable
Modernist vs. Modern
a particular self-consciousness of being at the forefront of new developments; an -ism anti-traditionalism, radical experimentation
Ragtime
a piano playing style developed by black musicians with a particular rhythmic style where the left had played on the beat and the right hand would "rag" off teh beat; The Pineapple Rag; The Maple Leaf Rag
Solo
a piece or a section of a piece played or sung featuring a single performer, who may be performing completely alone or supported by an accompanying instrument such as a piano or organ, a continuo group (in Baroque music), or the rest of a choir, orchestra, band, or other ensemble
Trill
a quick succession of two notes; alternation between two notes in quick succession
Pentatonic Scale
a scale built on five notes
Tenor
a singing voice between baritone and alto or countertenor, the highest of the ordinary adult male range
Recapitulation
a step-by-step overview; the music remains in the same key, the tonic key
Double Stop
a stringed instrument plays more than one string at a time
Gesamtkunstwerk
a total work of arts, a multimedia of music, dance, drama, and spectacle; originally applied to the operas of Wagner, who wanted his operas to combine music, acting, visual arts, and architecture; Stravinsky's The Right of Spring, Beyonce's Lemonade
Primary/First Theme
a tune, a group of small phrases that sound as though they might grow into a tune, or just a motive or two with a memorable rhythmic character.
Alto
a voice, instrument, or part below the highest range and above tenor, in particular
Ornamentation
addition of fast notes and special effects to melody, making it more expressive; gives the artist some artistic license
Castrato
an adult male soprano or alto who was castrated before puberty Farinelli (1994)
Primitivism
an aesthetic movement that purported to value the arts of tribal people; Paul Gauguin
Intro
any material that precedes the primary theme zone (P). It stands outside the exposition
Dialect
attempts at mimicking the linguistic nuances of a particular people and region; "I Got Plenty of Nothing" from Porgy & Bess
Dominant
away from home
Janissary Band
bands that traveled with turkish armies
Fragmentation
breaking up melodic material into smaller parts
Impresario
business director of an opera house; Sergei Diaghilev
Arpeggio
chord broken so that its pitches are played in succession rather than simultaneously; Bach, Well-Tempered Clavier Book 1, Prelude
Parallel Chords
chords with added intervals that do not resolve in ways typical of tonality; Debussy, Sunken Cathedral
Kantor
church music director
Opera Buffa
comic opera; Classical opera buffa works with the same elements, except that the fully musical numbers include ensembles as well as solo arias; Mozart, Don Giovanni, "Ho Capito"
Coda
concluding section in any musical form Mozart; Don Giovanni, "La ci darem la mano"
Kapellmeister
court music director
Through-Composed
each stanza is set differently; "Die alten, bosen Lieder"
New Orleans Jazz
early roots of jazz; 6-8 players; 3 melody instruments (trumpet, trombone, clarinet); rhythm section Louis Armstrong
Galant Style
emphasis on textual clarity, clear phrasing, and singabilty analog to elegant courtly conversation (wit, banter)
Coloratura
fast scales and turners over a single syllable in a word "Pensieri voi mi tormente"
Jazz
firmly American roots, firmly associated with American cultury; an ornamented performance style based on improvisation around a tune/song; highly syncopated where accents emphasize the "backbeat"
Double-Exposition Form
first section of the movement is played twice, first by the orchestra alone, and the second time by the soloist accompanied by the orchestra
Rubato
flexible use of time; use time as liberally as you want; artistic license
Development
free space for elaboration of musical material we have already encountered
Cadenza
improvised, vituosic solo passage to showcase technique; singer left to wow the audience when the chorus drops out
Program Music
instrumental music accompanied by some sort of story or narrative; music that attempts to represent extra-musical concepts without resorting to sung music; Indigena (1991)
Continuo
instruments play the bassline; usually cello and harpsichord Bach, Brandenberg Concerto No. 3
Scatting
jazz technique using onomatopoeic or nonsense syllables sung to improvised melodies; Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong's rendition of "Summertime"
Bass
lowest vocal range
Call and Response
musical interaction between a leader and chorus, usually involving repitition or another form of reply in alteration; "It Ain't Necessarily So"
Ritornello
musical material introduced at the beginning of a piece/movement that frequently "returns" Vivaldi, Violin Concerto in G, La Stravaganza, First Movement
Homophony
one main melodic line Handel, "Hallelujah"
Secondary Theme
one new theme that stands out by its melodious quality
Meter
recurring pattern of stresses or accents that provide the pulse or beat
Circle of Fifths
relationship among the 12 tones of the chromatic scale, their corresponding key signatures, and the associated major and minor keys
Spiritual
religious folk song that originated outside an established church and passed down by African Americans through oral tradition; Wade in the Water
Ostinato
repeating rhythmic figure, often in the bass line-repeated with cyclical regularity Vivaldi, Second Movement; Procession of the Oldest and Wisest One; Mi Gente; "Bitches Brew" has a trumpet ostinato
Song Cycle
series of songs(poems) united by a common theme; Robert Schumann, Dichterliebe; Beyonce, Lemonade
Opera Seria
serious, heroic opera of the Baroque period in Italy Julius Caesar
Strophic Form
setting a poem using the same music for each stanza of the text; "Im wunderschönen Monat Mai"
Monophony
single melodic line Gregorian Chant
Glissando
slide from one note to another; rapidly sliding up or down the musical scale.
Concertino
solo instrument(s) playing with an orchestra; flute, violin, harpsichord
Grand opera
style of opera developed in the mid-19th century Paris, featuring historical plots, ornate costumes, and spectacle (a lot going on)
Recitative
style of speech-like singing; certain words are accented
Stretto
subects are presented in quicker succession Bach, Well Tempered Clavier Book 1, Fugue
Ripieno
the accompnaying instruments; violin, viola, cello, violone, continuo (harsichord)
Timbre
the character of quality of a particular song differetn from its pitch or intensity
Lindomania
the consumer craze for Jenny Lind related in the 1850s, especially in the US and England
Soprano
the highest of the four standard singing voices. "Pensieri voi mi tormente"
Tonality
the idea that different harmonic areas have different functions; refers to the hierarchy and relationship between home and tonic keys; the homing instinct that we sense in melodies
Theme and Variations
the initial theme is first presented, changing certain aspects of it in each variation; Haydn, Symphony No. 94 in G
Tutti
the orchestra all together
Fugue Subject
the principal theme or melodic idea
Fusion
the process of combining or synthesizing two or more distinct identities into a new instrumentation, rhythms, melodies, harmonies, narratives, inter alia; Orquesta Sinfonica, Simon Bolivar
Polytonality
the simultaneous use of two or more keys; Stravinsky's Signs of Spring, Girls' Dance
Fugue Exposition
the subject is first presented
Fugue Entry
the subject reappears in whole
Orientalism
the systematic study of the "East"
Bridge
the transition that includes modulation (a change in key)
Blackface Minstrelsy
theatrical presentation of ostensible elements in black life in song, dance, and speech performed by white actors impersonating blacks with burnt cork and presented life as blacks. Later, minstrelsy evolved to include the participation of black performance; Sportin Life in Porgy & Bess, The Original Jim Crow
Subdominant
tonic to dominant
Bebop
trumpet, saxophone, and rhythm section (with piano); smaller band again, high technical virtuositiy and improvisation; even more adventurous harmonies and rhythms Charlie Parker: bebop saxophonist; "Out of Nowhere" was the basis for bebop and swing
Polyphony
two or more melodic lines Handel, "Hallelujah"
Chromaticism
using all 12 notes of chromatic scale (all the white and black skills)
Teleology
viewing actions in terms of their ultimate end or goal