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Year 8 Revision Guide 1. Instruments of the Orchestra String Violin Viola ‘Cello Double Bass Harp Guitar Woodwind Flute Oboe Clarinet Bassoon Piccolo Recorder Saxophone Brass Trumpet French Horn Trombone Tuba Instrumental Techniques: Pizzicato = plucked strings Arco = bowed strings Glissando = sliding up or down notes e.g. on trombone or piano 2. Elements of Music Pitch Tempo Dynamics Texture Timbre Duration Attack and Decay How high or low the sound is The speed of the music The volume of the music How many layers of sound The type of sound/instrument The length of the notes How the piece begins or ends HIGH/LOW FAST/SLOW LOUD/QUIET THICK/THIN WIND/STRING/SKIN etc SHORT/LONG SUDDEN/GRADUAL 3. Pitch 4. Rhythm = quaver = ½ beat = crotchet = 1 beat = semibreve = 4 beats = 2 quavers = 1 beat = minim = 2 beats Percussion Timpani Snare Drum Xylophone Tambourine Cymbal Triangle Maracas 5. Theme and Variations You will be asked to describe how the same melody/tune is changed in different ways. Use your understanding of the musical elements to indicate similarities and differences between different versions/variations. Musical Element What it Means and Vocabulary to Use Melody Pitch Chords/Harmony Rhythm Tempo Texture Tune. Notes/melody/accompaniment. High, low pitched. Happy sounding = Major, sad sounding = Minor Short notes, long notes. Sustained notes (held on). Speed of the music. Fast, moderate, slow. How many instruments playing. Thin texture = only a few instruments, Thick texture = lots of instruments. Getting thicker, getting thinner. Volume of the music. Loud, quiet/soft. Getting louder, getting softer. Family of instruments, main instruments used. Woodwind, brass, percussion & strings. How is the music put together? Sections of the piece of music. Section A, B, etc. Instruments/other parts other than the melody. Broken chords (each note of a chord played one after the other), block chords (all notes of a chord played at the same time). Dynamics Timbre Structure Accompaniment 6. Latin American Music Types of dance: Tango = dance of Argentina and Uruguay Bossa Nova and Samba = carnival music of Brazil Salsa and Rumba = uses exciting rhythms from Cuba Instruments: Panpipes = hollow pipes of various lengths made of bamboo, each producing a different pitched note. Charango = like a mandolin (a little guitar). Guitar Harp Drums/percussion = bombo (low pitched drum), cabasa, claves, guiro and maracas. Vocabulary: Ostinato = short repeating rhythm or accompanying melody. Syncopated rhythm = melody or rhythm which has notes which are ‘off beat’, played on the ‘ands’. 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 7. The Blues Blues is a type of Jazz music which began in America in the early 20th century. It is a mixture of African Music (brought over by the slaves and sung in the fields whilst they worked) and Western music. The 12 bar blues – a chord structure used in the blues which is repeated. It consists of 3 chords played in a set pattern: C = CEG(Bb) F = FAC(Eb) G = GBD(F)* C C C C F F C C G F C C A chord is 2 or more notes played at the same time. The chords used most often have 3 notes and are called TRIADS. *The fourth note in brackets can be added to make the chord sound jazzy. Musicians would use the BLUES SCALE to improvise (make up on the spot, without rehearsal) over the chord pattern. Call and response is a technique often used in Blues music where one singer/instrument plays a phrase and another singer/instrument responds. 8. Impressionism A movement beginning in the late 19th century, Paris with composers like Debussy. Composer chose notes and melodies for colour, which did not always fit within a key which we typically use. Vocabulary Cluster chords = notes played very close together Chromatic = notes played in half steps e.g. C – C# - D Pentatonic scale = a five note scale Drone = continuously repeated note, often low pitched. Graphic score = music notated using symbols to be interpreted by the musician. Free rhythm = music played without a strict sense of pulse or rhythm.