Você está na página 1de 13

LICENSURE EXAMINATION FOR TEACHERS (LET)

Refresher Course

WHAT TO EXPECT
WESTERN MUSIC

Focus: Western Music from the Middle Ages to Contemporary times

Competencies:

1. Chronicle the history of Western Music from the middle ages to the 20 th century.
2. Analyze Western Music according to musical qualities

PART I – CONTENT UPDATE

A. MUSIC IN THE MIDDLE AGES (450-1450)

- Gregorian chant – consists of melody set to sacred Latin texts and sung without
accompaniment. The chant is monophonic in texture. The melodies of Gregorian
chant were meant to enhance specific parts of religious services.

- The Church Modes – consist of seven different tones and an eighth tone that
duplicates the first an octave higher. The church modes were the basic scales of
western music during the middle ages and Renaissance and were used in secular
as well as sacred music.

Church modes consist of authentic (range of an octave above the finalis)


and plagal (range of fifth above and fourth below the finalis).

Authentic Plagal
Dorian Hypodorian
Phrygian Hypophrygian
Lydian Hypolydian
Mixolydian Hypomixolydian
Aeolian Hypoaeolian
Locrian Hypolocrian
Ionian Hypoionian

- Secular Music in the Middle Ages - music outside the church composed during
the 12th and 13th centuries by French nobles called the troubadours and trouveres.
The songs were usually performed by court minstrels, and most of them deal with
love; but there are also songs about the Crusades, dance songs, and spinning
songs.

- The Development of Polyphony: Organum – Medieval music that consists of


Gregorian chant with one or more additional melodic lines. Between 900 and 1200
organum became truly polyphonic and the melody added to the chant became
more independent.

- Composers:
a. Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) – composer of “O Successores”
(You successors) was one of the most creative and many-sided
personalities of the middle ages.
b.
c. Guillaume de Machaut (1300-1377) - famous both as a musician and
a poet.

B. MUSIC IN THE RENAISSANCE (1450-1600)

- Characteristics of Renaissance Music:

1. The texture is polyphonic.

2. Typical choral piece has four, five or six voice parts of nearly equal
melodic interest.

3. Imitation among the voices is common: each presents the same


melodic idea in turn, as in a round.

4. Homophonic texture, with successions of chords, is also used,


especially in light music, like dances.

5. Renaissance music sounds fuller than medieval music.

6. The bass register was used for the first time, expanding the pitch range
to more than 4 octaves.

7. Period of “golden age” of unaccompanied – a capella – choral music.

- Sacred Music

1. Motet – is a polyphonic choral work set to sacred Latin text other than
the ordinary of the mass.

2. Mass – is a polyphonic choral composition made up of five sections:


Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus and Agnus Dei.

3. Secular Vocal Music: Madrigal – a piece for several solo voices set
to a short poem, usually about love. A madrigal like a motet, combines
homophonic and polyphonic textures.

4. Secular Instrumental Music: Dance Forms – the development of


independent instrumental music grew out of two sources: the use of
instruments to double or replace parts of a vocal composition and the
use of instruments for dance music.

- Composers:
a. Josquin Desprez (1440-1521) – master of Renaissance music.
Composed music for masses, motets and secular vocal pieces. “Ave
Maria…virgo serena” is the outstanding choral work.

b. Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525-1594) – devoted himself to


Catholic Church music that includes 104 masses and some 450 other
sacred works. “Pope Marcellus Mass” is the famous mass by Palestrina
written for a capella choir of six voice parts: soprano, alto, two tenors
and two basses.

c. Thomas Weelkes (1575-1623) – an organist and church composer.

C. MUSIC IN THE BAROQUE (1600-1750)


- Characteristics of Baroque Music:

1. Baroque pieces usually express one basic mood: what begins joyfully
will remain joyful throughout
2. Rhythmic patterns heard at the beginning of a piece are repeated
throughout it.
3. Baroque melody creates a feeling of continuity.
4. Paralleling continuity of rhythm and melody in baroque music is
continuity of dynamic level: the volume tends to stay constant for a
stretch of time.
5. Polyphonic in texture.
6. Chords became increasingly important during the baroque period.
7.
- Early Baroque (1600-1640) – composers’ favored homophonic texture over the
polyphonic texture typical of Renaissance music.

- Middle Baroque (1640-1680) – the church modes scales governed music for
centuries gradually gave way to major and minor scales.

- Late Baroque Period (1680-1750) – many aspects of harmony – including an


emphasis on the attraction of the dominant chord to the tonic – arose in this period.
Instrumental music became as important as vocal music for the first time. Late
baroque composers gloried in polyphony.

- Single Vocal Forms

1. Recitative – is a free form for solo voice with accompaniment in which the vocal
melody approximates the natural rhythm and pitch inflection of the text.
2. Aria – is a song for solo and accompaniment in which the vocal part is written
in a fairly complex style, often with several notes to each syllable of the text.
3. Chorale – sung in unison or in four-part block chord style.

- Multi-movement Vocal Forms

1. Opera – is a drama sung with instrumental accompaniment and presented with


appropriate scenery, costumes and staging.
2. Cantata – is a composite vocal form in several movements for solo voice and
instrumental accompaniment or for solo voices, chorus and instrumental
accompaniment.
3. Oratorio – is a composite vocal work for soloists, chorus and orchestra based
on a sacred or secular text.

- Single Movement Instrumental Forms


1. Sectional Dance Form – dances written in rounded binary form.
2. Orchestral Overture – an instrumental composition which serves as an
introductory movement for an opera, oratorio or cantata or as the first
movement of a composite instrumental piece.
3. Fugue – is a composition based on polyphonic imitative treatment of a short
theme known as the subject.

- Multi-Movement Instrumental Forms


1. Sonata da chiesa (Italian: church sonata) – written for solo instruments
2. Sonata da camera (Italian: chamber sonata) – is a composite instrumental
work based on dance forms.
3. Suite – an important Baroque instrumental form for solo harpsichord,
clavichord or orchestral instruments. It is also a dance movement: allemande,
courante, sarabande and gigue.

- Composers:
a. Johanne Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) – German composer, organist,
harpsichordist, violist and violinist whose sacred and secular works for
choir, orchestra, and solo instruments drew together the strands of
Baroque period and brought it to its ultimate maturity. Works:
“Branderburg Concerto,” “Air on G-String,” “Toccata and Fugue in D
minor,” “Organ Mass” and “The Magnificat.”

b. Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) – one of the most important


composers in early baroque era. Created the earliest operatic
masterpiece “Orfeo”. The last opera by Monteverdi is “L’incoronazione
di Poppea (The Coronation of Poppea).”

c. Henry Purcell (1659-1695) – an English organist and Baroque


composer of secular and sacred music. Works: “Dido and Aeneas,”
“The Fairy Queen” (an adaptation of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer
Night’s Dream), “King Arthur”, and “Jubilate Deo”.

d. Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741) – Italian composer, priest, and virtuoso


violinist and known for composing instrumental concertos, especially
for the violin, as well as sacred choral works and over 40 operas.
Works: “The Four Seasons,” “Twelve sonatas for two violins and basso
continuo (opus 1),” “La Stravaganza for twelve violin concertos.”

e. George Frideric Handel (1685-1759) – a master of Italian opera,


English oratorios, anthems and organ concertos. Works: “Messiah,”
“Water Music,” “Music for the Royal Fireworks,” “For unto Us a Child Is
Born.”

D. MUSIC OF CLASSICAL PERIOD (1750-1820)

- Characteristics of Classical Music:

1. Emphasis on beauty, elegance and balance.


2. Homophonic Texture
3. Classical melodies are among the most tuneful and easiest to
remember.
4. Sonata form was the most important design.
5. The orchestra increases in size and range. The harpsichord falls out of
use. The woodwind becomes a self-contained section.

- Single Movement Instrumental Forms

1. Binary Form – form of movement with two principal themes or two distinct
sections.
2. Ternary Form – form of movement with three principal themes or three
sections.
3. Rondo Form – a typical pattern which letters representing thematic sections
(ABACABA) there are five and seven part rondo forms.
4. Variation Forms – One of a set of series of transformations of a theme by
means of harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic changes and embellishments.
5. Sonatina Form – in essence, a miniature version of sonata-allegro form, but
with shorter themes, an abbreviated or occasionally omitted development
section, and a generally lighter character.

- Multi-Movement Instrumental Forms

1. Sonata Form – refers to the form of a single movement and consists of three
main sections: the exposition, where the themes are presented; the
development, where themes are treated in new ways; and the recapitulation,
where the themes return. The three main sections are often followed by a
concluding section, the coda. These sections are all within one movement.
2. Concerto – an extended composition for a solo instrument and orchestra,
frequently in a sonata form.

- Single-Movement Vocal Forms

1. Recitative
2. Aria
3. Song
4. Chorus
-
- Multi-Movement Vocal Forms

1. Opera – show significant advances in style and technique.

- Composers:
a. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) – one of the most amazing
child prodigies, prolific and influential composer in the history of
classical music. Works: “Eine Kleine Nachtmusik,” “Don Giovanni,”
“Symphony No.40 in g minor,” “The Marriage of Figaro.”

b. Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827) – represents the highest level of


musical genius. He opened new realms of musical expression and
profoundly influenced composers throughout the 19th century. Works:
“Symphony No. 5 in c minor,” “Piano Sonata in C minor Op.13,”
“Moonlight Sonata.”

c. Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) – the first master of Viennese


Classicism and the Father of Symphony. Works: “The Creation,” “The
Seasons,” “Surprise Symphony,” “Trumpet Concerto in E Flat Major.”

d. Niccolo Paganini (1782-1840) – composer, guitarist and virtuoso


violinist. Works: “Caprice No. 24 in A minor,” “Tarantella,” “God Save
the King.”

E. ROMANTIC PERIOD (1820-1900)

- Characteristics of Romantic Music:


1. Describe as subjectivity, emotionalism, longing exuberance,
imbalance, fantasy.
2. Emphasis on self-expression and individuality of style.
3. Expressive aims and subjects
4. Nationalism and Exoticism
5. Program music
6. Expressive tone color
7. Colorful harmony
8. Expanded range of dynamics, pitch and tempo

- Forms of Orchestral Music:

1. Program Symphony – is a composition in several movements as its


name implies, a symphony with a program. Usually, each movement has
a descriptive title.

2. Concert Overture – has one movement, usually in sonata form. The


romantic concert overture was modeled after the opera overture, a one
movement composition that establishes the mood of an opera.

3. Symphonic poem or tone poem – is also in one movement. Symphonic


poems take many traditional forms – sonata form, rondo, or theme and
variations – as well as irregular forms.
4. Incidental music – is music to be performed before and during a play. It
is “incidental” to the staged drama, but it sets the mood for certain scenes.
Interludes, background music, marches, and dances are all incidental
music.

- Art Song – a composition for solo voice and piano. Poetry and music are intimately
fused in the art song.

- Strophic Form – repeating the same music for each stanza of the poem. Strophic
form makes a song easy to remember and is used in almost all folk songs.

- Through-Composed Form – writing new music for each stanza. Through-


composed form allows music to reflect a poem’s changing moods.

- Song Cycle – a cycle may be unified by a story line that runs through the poems
or by musical ideas linking the songs.

- Composers:

a. Franz Schubert (1797-1828) – earliest master of the romantic art song


wrote some 600 lieder, nine symphonies, liturgical music, operas, some
incidental music, and large body of chamber and solo piano music.
Works: “Unfinished Symphony,” “Serenade,” “Symphony No.8 in B
minor.”

b. Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) – composer, pianist and conductor.


Works: “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “Italian Symphony,” “Hebrides
Overture.”

c. Frederic Chopin (1810-1849) – composer, genius of the piano who


created a unique romantic style of keyboard music. Works: “Nocturne
in E flat Major,” “Etude in C minor,” “Polonaise in A flat Major.”

d. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) – was one of the most loved of


Russian composers. His music is famous for its strong emotion, and his
technical skill and strict work habits helped guarantee its lasting appeal.
Works: “Nutcracker Suite,” “Romeo and Juliet,” “Sleeping Beauty,”
“Swan Lake.”

e. Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) – the most popular of all opera


composers. Works: “Rigoletto,” “La Donna e Mobile,” “Aida,” “La
Traviata.”

F. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC AND BEYOND

- Characteristics of 20th century music:

1. Tone color became more important of music than ever before.


2. Many techniques considered uncommon before were being used
during this time.
3. Many composers used noiselike and percussive instruments.
4. Glissando, a rapid slide up or down the scales.
5. Percussion instruments became a major part of 20th century music.
6. Dissonant chords were becoming just as common as consonant
chords.
7. Many emphasized irregularity and unpredictability.
8. The time signature would often change in the middle of piece.
- Impressionism – musical style that stresses tone color, atmosphere and fluidity,
typical of Debussy.

- Expressionism – musical style stressing intense, subjective emotion and harsh


dissonance, typical of German and Austrian music of the early 20th century.
- Neoclassicism – musical style marked by emotional restraint, balance and clarity,
inspired by the forms and stylistic features of 18th century music.

- Nationalism – Inclusion of folksongs, dances, legends, and other national material


in a composition to associate it with the composer’s homeland; characteristic of
romantic music.

- Exoticism – Use of melodies, rhythms, or instruments that suggest foreign lands;


common in romantic music.

- Minimalist music – is characterized by steady pulse, clear tonality, and insistent


repetition of short melodic patterns; its dynamic level, texture, and harmony tend
to stay constant for fairly long stretches of time, creating a trancelike or hypnotic
effect.

- Electronic instrument – whose sound is produced, modified or amplified by


electronic means.

- Free Jazz – jazz style that departs from traditional jazz is not being based on
regular forms and established chord patterns.

- Jazz – music rooted in improvisation and characterized by syncopated rhythm, a


steady beat, and distinctive tone colors and performance techniques. Jazz was
developed in the United States predominantly by African American musicians and
gained popularity in the early twentieth century.

- Jazz Rock (fusion) – style that combines the jazz musician’s improvisatory
approach with rock rhythms and tone colors.

- Ragtime – style of composed piano music, generally in duple meter with a


moderate march tempo, in which the pianist’s right hand plays a highly syncopated
melody while the left hand maintains the beat with an “oom-pah” accompaniment.

- Popular Music – belongs to any of a number of musical genres “having wide


appeal” and is typically distributed to large audiences through the music industry.
It stands in contrast to both art music and traditional music.

- Composers:

1. Arnold Schoenberg (Austrian, 1874-1951) – composer and theorist


whose intransigent method of organizing music according to twelve
equal notes profoundly influenced the direction of 20th century music.
Works: “Pierrot Lunaire,” “A Survivor from Warsaw,”

2. Claude Debussy (French, 1862-1918) – composer, originator of


musical Impressionism. Works: “Clair de Lune,” “String Quartet in G
minor,” “Nocturne,” “Fantaisie for piano and orchestra.”

3. Bela Bartok (Hungarian, 1881-1945) – a composer whose style was


intimately welded to his pioneering folk music research. Work:
“Concerto for Orchestra,” “Third Piano Concerto,” “Violin Concerto.”

4. Sergei Rachmaninoff (Russian, 1873-1943) – composer, pianist and


conductor. Work: “Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini,” “Prelude in C
sharp minor,” “Symphonic Dances.”
5. Aaron Copland (American, 1900-1990) – greatly distinguished and
exceptionally gifted composer. Work: “Appalachian Spring,” “The Cat
and the Mouse for piano,” “Sonata in G major for piano.”

6. John Cage (American, 1912-1992) – writer, philosopher, and visual


artist of the experimental school, who radically changed the course of
20th century music. Work: “Sonatas and Interludes,” “Dream,” “Water
Music.”

7. Miles Davis (American, 1926-1991) – outstanding black American jazz


trumpeter and bandleader. Work: “Miles Runs the Voodoo Dow,” “Miles
Davis Quintet.”

PART II – ANALYZING TEST ITEMS

1. This music originates from the populace and is handed, spread, and passed orally.
It has simple melody.

a. Folk music c. New age


b. Acoustic music d. Ethnic music

2. Which of the following styles of performing is used by Schoenberg in his


composition “Pierrot Lunaire” where the lyrics of the song are half-sung and half-
spoken?

a. Inversion c. Sprechstimme
b. Rap d. Retrograde

3. Who among the following personalities is a well-known impressions composer of


the 20th century?

a. Bela Bartok c. Igor Stravinsky


b. Arnold Schoenberg d. Claude Debussy

4. Which of these compositions are not from the Classical era?

a. The Marriage of Figaro c. Symphonies Fantastique


b. Fur Elise d. Don Giovanni

5. It is a free form for solo voice with accompaniment in which the vocal melody
approximates the natural rhythm and pitch inflection of the text.

a. Recitative c. Aria
b. Chorale d. Hymn

6. It is a song for solo and accompaniment in which the vocal part is written in a fairly
complex style, often with several notes to each syllable of the text.

a. Recitative c. Aria
b. Chorale d. Hymn

7. Who is the composer of the “Branderburg Concerto”?

a. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart c. Johanne Sebastian Bach


b. Ludwig Van Beethoven d. Franz Josef Haydn

8. It is the period of subjectivity, emotionalism, imbalance and fantasy.

a. Romantic c. Classical
b. Contemporary d. Baroque
9. It is a religious or sacred song, usually a metrical poem to be sung by a
congregation.

a. Anthem c. Motet
b. Hymn d. Gregorian Chant

10. In which period in music history was the new tonal system invented characterized
by the different kinds of ideology and music, the use of important technologies in
producing sound and music and the widespread nationalistic spirit of music?

a. 16th century c. 18th century


b. 19th century d. 20th century

11. It is sung in unison or in four-part block chord style.

a. Chorale c. Recitative
b. Aria d. Oratorio

12. The United States most important contribution to the world of music which is
improvised, syncopated, and with blues notes.

a. Opera c. Broadway musicale


b. Jazz d. Swing

13. His music was characterized as extroverted, grandiose and dramatic. Among his
works are, The Messiah, Judas Macabeus, Water Music and Fireworks Music.

a. George Frederick Handel c. Johann Sebastian Bach


b. William Byrd d. Antonio Vivaldi

14. A dance of Polish origin, in ¾ time and moderate tempo; formerly in animated
processional style, but now merely a slow promenade opening a ball.

a. Polonaise c. Fantaisie Impromptu


b. Nocturne d. Etude

15. Outstanding black American jazz trumpeter and bandleader.

a. Miles Davis c. John Cage


b. Aaron Copland d. Sergei Rachmaninoff

16. Text of the opera, oratorio and cantata.

a. Libretto c. Script
b. Score d. Book

17. A short coda.

a. Fine c. Codetta
b. Coda d. Dal Segno

18. The opening section of the sonata movement, in which the principal themes are
presented for the first time.

a. Exposition c. Recapitulation
b. Development d. Fine
19. The working out or evolution of a theme by presenting it in varied melodic,
harmonic, or rhythmic treatment.

a. Exposition c. Recapitulation
b. Development d. Fine

20. Which of the following best describes the characteristic of popular music?

a. Popular music may be the music of the hour as everyone else in community is
singing it.
b. Popular music covers a wide genre composed of alternative, folk, acoustic,
heavy metal, hip-hop, jazz, new age, rap, rhythm and blues and rock.
c. Popular music combines and regulates sounds of varying pitches to produce
musical composition of varying emotions and ideas.
d. Popular music is promoted live and by print media.

PART III – ENHANCING TEST TAKING SKILLS

1. Period when the individual sought to revolt against established rules and traditions
of previous eras. Composers sought to express their own creative identities.

A. Renaissance C. Pre- Baroque


B. Baroque D. Classical

2. Era of ecstasy and exuberance; of dynamic tensions and sweeping gestures;


passion for large and noble objects.

A. Classical C. Contemporary
B. Romantic D. Modern

3. The foundation of Western Art was laid in this long period. Vocal polyphony was
begun in which musical interest is sharp equally between parts which move
independently to produce an interwoven texture. Notation of the sounds developed
in this period: Syllable names for the note of the scale was invented by Guido d’
Arezzo which is the basis of the modern Solfeggio system.

A. Renaissance C. Pre-Baroque
B. Baroque D. Classical

4. It’s qualities are free and chance use of sounds, improvisation, processed music
and sounds programmed into computers characterized by diverse methods and
approaches to music.

A. Classical C. Contemporary
B. Romantic D. Modern

5. Their works feature such factor as terraced dynamic, bel canto and an incessant
rhythmic drive. The major and minor modes gradually replacing the church modes
and moderate modulation to related keys replacing the practice in remaining in one
tonality.

A. Renaissance C. Pre-Baroque
B. Baroque D. Classical

6. Music was with no regular metric grouping, has narrow range, average tessitura
and conjunct motion. Tonal organization is basically that of the church modes.
Dynamics were not indicated in most music of this period. Texture was
predominantly monophonic.
A. Renaissance C. Pre-Baroque
B. Baroque D. Classical

7. The period that gives impression of greater stability, repose, clarity, balance,
objectivity and traditionalism where composers attempted to create music which is
formal, strict in proportion and moderate in expression.

A. Classical C. Contemporary
B. Romantic D. Modern

8. The greater part of the music of this period is vocal and the formal element in this
music is largely governed by considerations of the text. Much of the music is
irregular in motive and phrase construction.

A. Renaissance C. Pre-Baroque
B. Baroque D. Classical

9. An extended composition for a solo instrument and orchestra, frequently in sonata


form.

A. Concerto C. Fugue
B. Symphony D. Motet

10. An orchestral composition of from three or five distinct movements or divisions,


each with its own themes and its own development.

A. Concerto C. Fugue
B. Symphony D. Motet

11. A sacred vocal composition in contrapuntal style, without accompaniment.

A. Concerto C. Fugue
B. Symphony D. Motet

12. A musical introduction to an opera or oratorio.

A. Overture C. Symphony
B. Intermezzo D. Interlude

13. An instrumental strain or passage connecting the lines or stanzas of a hymn.

A. Overture C. Symphony
B. Intermezzo D. Interlude

14. The famous composer, pianist and conductor who composed the famous “A
Midsummer Night’s Dream”.

A. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky C. Felix Mendelssohn


B. Frederic Chopin D. Arnold Schoenberg

15. The composer militantly removed from the “Mighty Five” and the most popular
composer under the Soviet regime. King of Russian Waltz.

A. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky C. Felix Mendelssohn


B. Frederic Chopin D. Arnold Schoenberg

16. The composer, genius of the piano who created a unique romantic style of
keyboard music.
A. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky C. Felix Mendelssohn
B. Frederic Chopin D. Arnold Schoenberg

17. The composer and theorist whose intransigent method of organizing music
according to twelve equal notes profoundly influenced the direction of 20th century
music.

A. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky C. Felix Mendelssohn


B. Frederic Chopin D. Arnold Schoenberg

18. This music is characterized by steady pulse, clear tonality, and insistent repetition
of short melodic patterns; its dynamic level, texture, and harmony tend to stay
constant for fairly long stretches of time, creating a trancelike or hypnotic effect.

A. Minimalist Music C. Electronic Instrument


B. Free Jazz D. Jazz

19. The sound is produced, modified or amplified by electronic means.

A. Minimalist Music C. Electronic Instrument


B. Free Jazz D. Jazz

20. The style that departs from traditional jazz is not being based on regular forms and
established chord patterns.

A. Minimalist Music C. Electronic Instrument


B. Free Jazz D. Jazz

ANSWER KEY:

PART II – ANALYZINF TEST ITEMS


1. A 11. A
2. C 12. B
3. D 13. A
4. C 14. A
5. A 15. A
6. C 16. A
7. C 17. C
8. A 18. A
9. B 19. B
10. D 20. B

PART III – ENHANCING TEST TAKING SKILLS

1. A 11. D
2. B 12. A
3. C 13. D
4. D 14. C
5. B 15. A
6. C 16. D
7. A 17. D
8. B 18. A
9. A 19. C
10. B 20. B

Você também pode gostar