Music • Pure art form: freedom from physical restrictions of space applied to other arts • Responsibility of the listener: we have only the moment to capture the music • Active listening- the ability to hear perceptively • Classical forms: specific style of music from the 17th century, art music Musical Elements • • • • • • • Sound Rhythm Melody Harmony Tonality Texture Form Sound: 4 basic properties • Pitch: relative highness or lowness of a sound; measurable in sound waves (vibrations per second) • Dynamics: degree of loudness or softness (size of the sound wave) • Timbre or tone color: distinguishing physical qualities of the instrument that is sounding • Duration: length of time a sound vibration is maintained without interruption Rhythm: beat, meter, tempo • Beat: individual pulses • Meter: groupings of beats into units called measures / simple meters are triple or quadruple • Syncopation: when accent is on the unaccented • Tempo: the rate of speed of the composition • Tempo markings: metronome marking, or accelerando and ritardando • Rubato: when a performer takes liberties with the tempo Tempo Terms • • • • adagio (slow) andante (moderate), allegro (fast) presto (very quick) Melody: succession of sound with rhythmic & tonal organization • Melody is linear and horizontal • A melody may not be a tune, tune implies sing-ability • Theme: central musical idea that may be restated and varied • Motif: short melodic or rhythmic idea around which a composer may design a composition Melodic Contour • Conjunct- comprising notes close to each other • Disjunct- contains intervals or leaps of a third or more • Melodic contour- the shape of the melody line Harmony: two or more tones sounding at the same time • Harmony is a vertical arrangement, and moves through time • Interval- two tones played simultaneously or the space between two different tones • Chord- three or more tones sounding simultaneously Piano Keyboard Harmonic Progression: harmonic movement forward in time • Consonance- intervals sounding sonorous and stable in their arrangement • Dissonance- intervals sounding relatively tense and unstable • Cadence- harmonic movement resolving (or not) to the tonic or root note of the scale • Modulate- harmonic movement from one key or tonal center to another Harmony: tonality • Tonic- the root or first note of a scale or key • Major tonality- seven different notes within an octave, comprised of a set pattern of whole and half steps • Minor tonality- diatonic (standard) scale with half step between second and third degrees and any of several intervals above the fifth Atonal- absence of tonal center and of harmonies derived from a diatonic scale Texture • Monophonic- single musical line without accompaniment. Voices or instruments playing at the same time with the same notes in unison. Gregorian chant is an example. • Polyphonic- counterpoint; when two or more melodic lines of equal interest are played or sung simultaneously. • Homophonic- chords accompany one main melody. Here the composer focuses attention of the melody by supporting it with subordinate sounds. Most popular music is from this genre. More About Texture • Texture implies spatial connotations • Sonority- describes the relationship of tones played at the same time • Open texture- large intervals between tones has a thinner, or more open, sonority • Closed- chord with small intervals between its tones has a tight, thick, or close sonority FORM- type or genre; the structure or shape of a musical piece • Concerto- extended composition for solo instrument and orchestra • Sonata- instrumental piece written in several movements for one to eight players • Suite- set of dance inspired movements in the same key but differing in tempo, meter, and character • Fugue- based on one theme that, throughout the piece, is imitated by different melodic lines Symphony • A symphony is an orchestral composition • Usually in four movements, from twenty to fortyfive minutes long • The sequence usually begins with an active fast movement, then changes to a lyrical slow movement, moves to a dance-like movement, and closes with a bold fast movement • The first movement of the sequence is most always in sonata form Sonata Form • Exposition- states two or more main themes • Development- takes the original themes and develops them with fragmentations and modulations • Recapitulation- returns to original material, restating the opening themes • Coda- concluding part of the piece that integrates the previous themes or ideas Composition & Notation • Dynamic levels: pp (pianissimo) very soft to ff (fortissimo), to mp (mezzo, moderately soft or loud) very loud • Crescendo- becoming louder; decrescendobecoming softer • Note Values (duration) & rests (silences): whole, half, quarter, eighth Instrument Classifications • Voice- soprano, contralto, tenor, baritone, bass • Strings- violin, viola, cello, bass, harp • Woodwinds- flute, piccolo, oboe, English horn, clarinet, bassoon • Brasses- trumpet, horn, trombone, tuba • Percussion- snare & bass drums, timpani, triangle, cymbal, xylophone • Electronics- synthesizer OPERA- integrates drama, poetry, visual art, & architecture with music • Grand opera- serious & tragic, treats heroic subjects in highly stylized manner • Opera buffa- comedic opera • Operetta- light, humorous, popular themes • Leitmotif- repeated theme that relates to a character or idea • Aria- highly dramatic solo piece with orchestra • Recitative- sung dialogue • Libretto- text the opera music is set to