The Concepts Of Music!!!!!!
OOH ok!! my music class used to SUCK at aural lol cuz half of us never did it in years 9 or 10 so we had less experience n shit..if u get wat i mean but yeh ok, the concepts of music:
ED PITT - a perfect acronym to remember what they are. (he's brad's brother
ok lame i know but yeh...)
Expressive techniques
Duration
Pitch
Instrumentation (or performing media)
Texture
Tone colour
also - SS - style and structure. ALWAYS mention these two! its like...a rule or something.
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EXPRESSIVE TECHNIQUES -
usually descibed by 'dynamics' which refers to the volume of sound ie. P - soft, mp - moderately soft, pp - very soft, < - gradually getting louder, f - loud, mf - moderately loud, ff - very loud, > - gradually getting softer, terraced dynamics - sudden changes from loud to soft, gradual changes in dynamics, accents, silence, rubato.
DURATION -
refers to the length of sounds.
another acronym for it is MR TB: metre, rhythym, tempo and beat.
describe the METRE. it is changing or constant? any syncopation? eg. overall or in certain parts. what are the note values? eg. sustained notes, dotted notes, etc.
ok now for RHYTHYM. are there rhythmic patterns? what instruments play them? riffs, ostinatos, repetitive patterns, poly rhythyms, cross rhythyms (god i hate typing that word)
the TEMPO - is it lively, animated, dramatic, constant motion, pauses? does it sounds fast and happy or slow and sad? what texture does the rhythym create? homophonic, polyphonic, monophonic, thin, sparse, full, dense etc.
and the BEAT. does it stay the same or change? is it steady, indefinite, strong or weak? are there accents? eg. regular/irregular.
PITCH -
pitch refers to the highness and lowness of sounds, and the MELODY.
is there one main melody or many different ones? motif, riffs, walking bass, ostinatos, caconic, polyphonic, monophonic, round, counter melody, descent.
what is the shape or contour of the melody? are they movements by steps, scale-like, leaps, ascending, descending, awkward intervals, reguarly occurring intervals, narrow, a wide range of notes, decorated, imrpovised, question/answer, imitation, call/response, contrasting, unbalanced phrases etc.
what is the overall effect of the melody? flowing, lyrical, abrupt, jumpy repetitive. what is the tonality? major/minor, chromatic, atonal, centers on a particular note, the use of modulation.
and finally, is it associated with a particular period? Baroque, church, classical, romantic, 20th century, medieval, jazz, popular, cultural, etc etc.
the HARMONY: refers to the organisation of sounds into patterns.
toanlity also comes into the harmony just like it does in pitch. is it major, minor, modal, atonal, pentatonic etc.
is modulation used?
are the chords traditional? eg, chords I, IV, V etc. or clusters of sound.
are the chords added on? 7ths, 9ths, 11ths.
is there dissonance? resolved, unresolved, use of suspension.
descrie chord patterns used. 12 bar blues, pedal point, drone, alberti bass, appegios, block chords, oom-pah-pah.
describe the overall effect of the harmonies and tone colour created.
INSTRUMENTATION -
pretty basic this one; what instruments are used.
percussion eg. piano, drum kit, timpani, xylophone, glockenspiel (cant spell...) etc pretty musch anything that you HIT
wind - clarinet, oboe, bassoon, flute, etc.
strings - electric and acoustic guitar, bass guitar, violin, viloa, upright bass (is that the same as double bass?!), cello.
brass - sax, trumpet, horn/french horn, trombone.
electronic - synthesiser
TEXTURE -
refers to the layers of sound.
HOMOPHONIC: one main melodic line with accompaniment.
MONOPHONIC: one single melodic line, NO assompaniment.
POLYPHONIC: many lines of equal importance.
what is the degree of intensity? thick, thin, sparse, scattered, smooth, rough, coarse, silky.
describe instruments used and the roles they play. what are they doing in each layer of texture? imitation, caconic, question/answer, antiphonal, counter melodies, vocal harmonies, call/reposnse, walking bass, appegios, block chords, riffs, motifs, melodic interjections, pauses, dynamic levels (loud/soft etc.)
TONE COLOUR -
a particular quality of sound that distinguishes one sound source from another.
what instruments are playing?
(try to always name them specifically or by their groups eg, strings, wind etc. if you cant, just say "it sounds like...")
-voice, male or female. solo, duet, accompanied, unaccompanied, small ensemble, large ensemble, rock band, orchestra, small chamber groups, jazz band, string quartet, woodwinde ensemble, brass ensemble, choir, folk group, electronic, bass guitar, rhythm guitar, acoustic/electric, lead guitar, piano, syntehsiser, violin, viola, cello, double bass, flute, clarinet, oboe, trumpet, french horn, trombone, timpani, cymbals, xylophone, gong, drums (hi-hat, toms, bass drum, snare), sax, string instrument, pipes, percusiion instrument etc.
once youve indentified the instrument, descirbe wat it is doing and the tone: plucked, bowed, hit, strummed, blown, dark, bright, airy, ligt, sombre, intense, dramatic, mellow, peircing, Spanish, Asian, African, Aboriginal, Indian, Irish etc.
STRUCTURE -
pretty simple... intro, verse, chorus, verse, bridge, chorus, outro.
STYLE -
is it rock, jazz, popular, opera, folk, medieval, environmental, jazz, renaissance, baroque, etc etc.
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ok i really hope this helps shit took me forever to type it all out lol but yeh
good luck!!
oh and one more tip - PRACTICE as MUCH as you CAN!! just pick up any cd thats lying around and play a song. start by writing down the structure and what you hear, then go through ED PITT and name as much as you can. after, go through it again looking at your notes (or what ive written
) to see what you missed etc. aural is fairly easy once u get the hang of it!! cheers