Download Aural Revision Grade 6

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
Transcript
Aural Revision: Grade 6
Question A: To sing or play from memory the upper part of a two-part phrase played twice
by the examiner.
Question B: To sing a melody from score, with an accompaniment played by the
examiner.
Question C: To identify a cadence as perfect or imperfect.
V - I :Perfect Cadence (full stop)
Ends on the tonic home chords after the dominant, and sounds finished.
I,II or IV – V :Imperfect Cadence (comma)
Sounds like the music should continue after a breath as it ends on the
dominant not the tonic.
Is this piece in major or minor?
Listen to the key-chord to work it out, and see if you can hear the key-chord
in the cadences.
Question D: (i)Identify features of a piece played by the examiner:
(ii) Clap the rhythm of a short extract played twice by the examiner, then say
whether it is in 2, 3, or 4 time.
Dynamics:
Piano, mezzo-piano, mezzo-forte, forte
Gradation of Tone: Crescendo (get louder), Diminuendo (get softer)
Articulation:
Legato (smooth) Staccato (detached/spikey)
Tempo Changes:
Are there any changes in tempo (speed) ?
Accelerando (get faster) or Rallentando (get slower)
A tempo (back to the original speed)
Tonality:
Major (happy and bright), Minor (sad and dark)
Texture:
How is the music layered together?
Homophonic (melody with accompaniment)
Contrapuntal (multiple tunes vs each other)
Rhythm:
Listen for how many beats in a bar. Which beats are stressed and are
there any distinctive patterns? Dotted? Swing?
Form
Binary:
AB =2 Clear Sections, each usually ending with a cadence. The material may
be similar but not the same.
Ternary:
ABA Introduces the A section, has a contrasting B section, then returns to A.
Descriptive: Some music is written as if it describes a scene or mood, and so does not have
such a formal structure.
Phrase Structure: Listen to the musical sentances in the piece.
Are the phrases the same length? Or is one longer or shorter?
Often a piece will end with a longer phrase. How did the composer vary the phrases?
Change key? Change tonality? Adding ornamentation? Exact repetition? Sequences?
Dance Rhythms
Waltz:
Well-known dance in 3 time. Listen for the ‘oom-cha-cha’ accompaniment.
Minuet:
Stately old-fashioned dance also in 3 time. The chords often change within
the car as the tempo is much slower. You would hear a Minuet either in a
Baroque dance suite or an early classical sonata.
Gigue:
Always in 2 or 4 time, with a cantering rhythm and lively tempo.
Musette:
Listen for the drone bass in this piece.
Tarantelle:
An Italian Dna,ce very fast and generally in 4/5
Sarabande:
Often coupled with a Gigue, it is a slow piece in 3 time with the stress on the
2nd beat of the bar.
Gavot:
In 4 time, often starting on the 3rd beat of a bar. Often 2 staccato beats before
the first full bar.
March:
In 2 or 4 time, often with dotted rhythms at a marching tempo.
Swing:
Listen for gentle syncopations and a feeling of compound time. Often the first
beat of the bar is missing, and quavers are played:
Style or Period
Baroque:
Very often contrapuntal
Composers: Scarlatti, JS Bach, Handel.
Classical:
Clearly defined music with obvious cadences, very often chordal
accompaniments.
Composers: Haydn, Mozart, early Beethoven.
Romantic:
Very often descriptive/mood music, chords are more complex, song-like
melodies and it can be very passionate.
Composers: Chopin, Schumann, Tchaikovsky.
20th Century: Development of chords, can be very dissonant harmony, different effects:
Richard Rodney Bennett: Tuneful with some slightly more dissonant
harmony.
Christopher Norton: Swing or Jazz Music
Bartok: Folk melodies, with a modern, percussive flavour.
How does the style of the music give us a clue as to the period and composer?
Any Baroque or early Classical music had to make do without a sustain pedal, as it was
written for the Harpsichord or Clavichord. Therefore we often have highly decorated
cadences, and often there is ornamentation to fill out the gaps. Though you cannot
presume that a piece with ornamentation is automatically Baroque.
The range of the piece can also be an indication as to the period. They keyboard was added
to at both ends at the end of the Classical period, so if you hear very high or low notes, it is
more likely to be from the Romantic or 20t Century.
And remember . . .


Be clear and confident (even if you are not sure!)
Use the Italian Terms