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Music Appreciation

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Term
Definition
melody, harmony, rhythm   three elements of music  
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melody and rhythm   move horizontally  
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harmony   move vertically  
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phrase   musical sentence  
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cadence   a resting place in music  
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pianoforte   the name of the keyboard in the classroom  
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soft loud   pianoforte means  
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Italian   musical terms are in the ________ language  
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grave, andente   two words which mean slow  
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allegro, presto   two words for fast  
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woodwind, brass, string, percussion   four categories of instruments  
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clarinet, bassoon, flute, piccolo   woodwind instruments  
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trumpet, french horn, tuba, trombone   brass instruments  
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violin, viola, cello, bass   string instruments  
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cymbal, bass drum, triangle, snare drum, kettledrum   percussion instruments  
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middle ages, renaissance, baroque, classical, romantic, 20th century   periods of western civilization in order  
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quintet   ensemble with 5 people  
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trio   ensemble with 3 people  
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quartet   ensemble with 4 people  
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monophonic   music for one voice or parts  
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polyphonic   music for two or more voices or parts  
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homophonic   a melody supported by instrumental accompaniment  
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melody   succession of single pitches that we hear as a recognizable whole  
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range   the distance between the lowest and highest notes  
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contour   melody's overall shape as it turns upward or downward or remains static  
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climax   the high point in a melodic line  
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rhythm   the movement of music in time  
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duple meter   alternates a strong downbeat with a weak beat  
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triple meter   basic pattern with three beats to a measure - one strong beat and two weak ones  
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quadruple meter   contains four beats to the measure with a primary accent on the first beat and a secondary accent on the third  
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harmony   the simultaneous combination of sounds  
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chromatic scale   twelve half steps that make up the octave  
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major scale   the most familiar sequence of pitches  
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minor scale   sounds quite unusual, has a lowered, or flattened third note  
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texture   melodic lines may be thought of as the various threads that make up this musical fabric  
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monophony   simple texture using a single voice  
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polyphony   describes a texture in which two or more different melodic lines are combined  
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homophony   a single voice takes over the melodic interest, while the accompanying lines are subordinate  
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binary form   based on a statement and a departure, without a return to the opening section (two-part)  
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ternary form   extends the idea of statement and departure by bringing back the first section (three-part)  
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tempo   rate of speed of the music  
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dynamics   denote the volume at which music is played  
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crescendo   growing louder  
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decrescendo   growing softer  
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voice   the oldest instrument  
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aerophones   produce sound by using air  
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chordophones   produce sound from a vibrating string stretched between two points  
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idiopohones   produce sound from the substance itself  
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membranophones   drum-type instruments that are sounded from tightly stretched membranes  
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in the chapel   meaning of a cappella  
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harpsichord, pipe organ   earliest keyboard instruments  
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sacred music   music for religious purposes  
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secular music   music for entertainment  
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genre   a more general term that suggests something of the overall character of the work as well as its function  
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opus number   cataloguing system to identify a musical work/piece  
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oral transmission   the preservation of music without the aid of written notation  
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humanism   the nude human form, denied or covered for centuries, was revealed as a thing of beauty and used for anatomical study  
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1818   Florence established  
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1830   UNA established  
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monasteries   members of these religious communities who preserved the learning of the ancient world and transmitted it, through their manuscripts, to later European scholars  
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melismatic   up to five or six notes sung to a syllable  
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responsorial   practice of group repetition of a leader's text-music phrase has its roots in ancient Jewish practice  
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pavane, saltarello, ronde   dance types  
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madrigal   an aristocratic form of poetry and music that flourished at the Italian courts as a favorite diversion of cultivated amateurs  
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virtuosity   remarkable technical skill  
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figured bass   numeral put above or below the bass note by the composer to indicate the chord required  
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basso continuo   provided a foundation over which a vocal or instrumental melody could unfold  
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major-minor tonality   one of the most significant changes in all music history  
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castrato   a male singer who was castrated during boyhood in order to preserve the soprano or alto register of his voice for the rest of his life  
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improvisation   played a significant role in Baroque music  
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opera   a large-scale drama that is sung  
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chorales   weekly hymns created by Luther and his followers  
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Lutheran cantata   the resulting elaboration-of-chorale, a sort of musical sermon on the original hymn  
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mass   service in the Catholic church  
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1750-1825   Baroque period  
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oratorio   one of the great Baroque sacred vocal forms, descended from the religious play-with-music of the Counter-Reformation  
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Handel   wrote Messiah  
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da capo aria   the composer usually did not write out the third verse since it duplicated the first, allowing the star singer the opportunity to ornament or elaborate the third part on the fly  
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suite   a group of short dances performed by a diverse array of instruments  
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Vivaldi   wrote The Four Seasons  
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Handel   wrote the Water Music  
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subject   main theme of a song  
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fugue   a contrapuntal composition in which a single theme pervades the entire fabric, entering in one voice and then in another  
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