GCSE Music Revise Guide 2016
GCSE Music Revise Guide 2016
GCSE Music Revise Guide 2016
AQA GCSE Music (8271) Revise Guide
Element type Area of Study Page
Core content (course breakdown) 2
Listening – Study Pieces (Part B of the Listening Exam)
Melody AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 4 – 7
AoS2: Popular Music 8
AoS3: Traditional music 8 – 9
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 9
Harmony AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 9 – 11
AoS2: Popular Music 12
AoS3: Traditional music 12 (empty)
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 12
Tonality AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 12 – 14
AoS2: Popular Music 15
AoS3: Traditional music 16
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 16
Structure AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 17 – 19
AoS2: Popular Music 20 – 21
AoS3: Traditional music 21
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 22 24
Sonority AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 24 – 26
AoS2: Popular Music 26 – 32
AoS3: Traditional music 32 – 33
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 33
Texture AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 35 (tables on 34 – 35)
AoS2: Popular Music 35 (tables on 34 – 35)
AoS3: Traditional music 36 (tables on 34 – 35)
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 36 (tables on 34 – 35)
Tempo, Metre and AoS1: Western classical tradition 1650‐1910 36 – 40
Rhythm
AoS2: Popular Music 40 – 41
AoS3: Traditional music 42 – 44
AoS4: Western classical tradition since 1910 45 – 46
1. Western classical tradition 1650‐1910
The Coronation Anthems The orchestra music of The piano music of The Requiem of the late
and Oratorios of Handel Haydn, Mozart and Chopin and Schumann Romantic period
Beethoven
A few example features as copied from an exam paper: balanced phrases, typical rhythmic
emphasis on first and third quavers, homophonic / melody and accompaniment texture, some
chromatic movement in the melody, melodic decoration, thematic development
2. Popular music
Music of Broadway Rock music of 1960s and Film and computer Pop music 1990s to
1950s to 1990s 1970s gaming music 1990s to present
present
A few example features as copied from an exam paper: syncopation, Latin American dance
rhythms, vocal pitch inflection, Q&A between vocal and piano, use of brushes in drum kit, typical
samba double bass line
3. Traditional music
Blues music from 1920– Fusion music Contemporary Latin Contemporary folk
1950 incorporating African music music of the British Isles
and/or Caribbean music
A few example features as from an exam paper from a piece of Indian classical music (not listed
above): acciaccatura, mordent, melodic decoration, drone, pitch bend, sitar, tablas, harmonium.
Other features could be: 12 bar blues, syncopation, polyrhythm etc.
4. Western classical tradition since 1910
The orchestral music of British music of Arnold, The orchestral music of Minimalist music of John
Copland Britten, Maxwell‐Davies Zoltán Kodály and Béla Adams, Steve Reich and
and Tavener Bartók Terry Riley
A few example features as copied from an exam paper: use of syncopation, chromatic sections,
swung rhythms, rubato/ tempo changes, disjunct melody, melodic sequences, glissando
2
Listening – Study Pieces (Part B of the Listening Exam)
These are the four areas of study along with the study pieces:
1. Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910. The study piece for this area of study is ‘Symphony
101 in D major, The Clock, movement 2’ by Haydn. This is compulsory.
2. Popular Music. The study piece for this area of study is ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club
Band’ by The Beatles (with a focus on ‘With a Little Help from my Friends’, ‘Within You,
Without You’ and ‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’).
3. Traditional Music. The study piece for this area of study is ‘Smooth’ by Santana (with a focus
on ‘Smooth’, ‘Migra, Migra’ and ‘Love of my Life).
4. Western classical tradition since 1910. The study piece for this area of study is ‘Saturday
Night Waltz’ and ‘Hoedown’ from ‘Rodeo’ by Aaron Copland.
For two areas of study (one of which must be Western classical tradition 1650‐1910),
students must be able to critically appraise the music from the specified study pieces using
knowledge and understanding of:
• the effect of audience, time and place on how the study pieces were created, developed and
performed
• how and why the music across the selected areas of study has changed over time
• how the composer’s purpose and intention for the study pieces is reflected in their use of
musical elements
• relevant musical vocabulary and terminology for the study pieces
Learning and musical language (for part A and B of the listening exam) is centred on the musical
elements of melody, harmony, tonality, structure, sonority (timbre), texture, tempo, metre, rhythm,
dynamics and articulation. The pages that follow are organised by these musical elements.
Staff notation in the exam
You should be able to write staff notation within short passages of up to eight bars in a melodic way
(in keys up to four sharps and flats) and rhythmically (including simple and compound time)
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Element type: Melody
Melody in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 ‐ 1910
Melody: A linear succession of musical tones that the listener perceives as a single entity. A
tune. It is a ‘horizontal’ structure (as opposed to ‘vertical’ harmony)
Conjunct: Progressing melodically by step (in intervals of a second). This melody () is
completely conjunct:
Disjunct: Progressing melodically by leap (in intervals larger than a second). The example
below (Webern’s 1940 piece, ‘Variations for Orchestra’ is made up of predominantly large
leaps:
Triadic: Melodic movement based on triadic shapes. A triad is a standard three note chord
i.e. the root, third and fifth. C, E, G for example). Here are the triads as chords (not one note
at a time in a melodic shape:
Here are the notes of a C major triad in a melodic shape (called ‘Alberti bass’):
Broken chords: Voicing the notes in the chord one by one. This could be ascending and
descending through the notes in a triad or something more complex such as this example:
Arpeggio: Movement through the notes in a chord, generally in an ascending and
descending order
4
Scalic: A melodic shape where notes ascend or descend through the notes in a scale
Intervals within the octave :
Passing notes: A transition note in the melody that briefly clashes with harmony when
moving between consonant harmonies.
5
Diatonic: Adjective describing major and minor scales and also modes. The opposite of
chromatic music which introduces notes not in the prevailing key. Diatonic harmonies,
intervals, passages etc. are made up with notes of the key of the moment
Chromatic: When notes not in the key of the moment are used i.e. any sharp or flat in the
key of C (which has no sharps or flats). When sharps and flats appear, they are known as
‘accidentals’; here are the rules for playing accidentals:
Slide: A musical ornament which instructs the performer to begin two or three scale steps
below the marked note and "slide" (usually) upward—that is, move stepwise diatonically
between the initial and final notes. See also ‘glissando.
Portamento: On a synthesizer, this is a ‘glide’ from pitch to pitch. In classical music (played
on the violin for example), this implies sliding in a romantic way to and from some notes
Ostinato: A persistently repeated figure or musical rhythm
Phrasing: a phrase is a group of notes forming a unit of a melody.
Articulation: The process of sounding and transitioning between notes. i.e. tenuto, staccato
or legato (below)
Tenuto (articulation where the note is held to
its full length a little louder)
Staccato (articulation where notes are
shortened)
Legato or slur: (articulation where notes are
played or sung smoothly and connected)
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Tie: A tie is not a type of articulation but it
often gets confused with a slur or legato
marking. It means hold the note
or
Ornamentation (including acciaccaturas appoggiaturas). Ornaments or embellishments are
musical flourishes that are not necessary to carry the overall line of the melody, but serve
instead to decorate or "ornament" that line. Many ornaments are performed as "fast notes"
around a central note. See the following table of ornaments.
Acciaccatura: a grace note
performed as quickly as
possible before an essential
note of a melody. An ornament.
Appoggiatura: an added note
that is important melodically
(unlike the acciaccatura) and
suspends the principal note by
subtracting from its time‐value.
An ornament.
Trill: a musical
ornament consisting of a rapid
alternation between
two adjacent notes, usually
a semitone or tone apart
Turn: a short figure consisting
of the note above the one
indicated, the note itself, the
note below the one indicated,
and the note itself again. An
ornament.
Mordent: a rapid alternation
between an indicated note, the
note above (called the upper
mordent, inverted mordent,
or pralltriller) or below (called
the lower mordent or mordent),
and the indicated note again.
An ornament
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Melody in Area of study 2: Popular music
• Riff: short rhythmic, melodic, or harmonic figures repeated to form a structural framework
• Pitch bend: An effect which makes a note slide to a higher or lower pitch (often used on
synthesizers)
• Melisma: Vocal music is ‘melismatic’ when more than one note is sung to each syllable. The
opposite to ‘syllabic’. Mariah Carey loves melisma: “All I want for Christ‐mas is”‐ all syllabic;
“yooooooou“ –melismatic.
• Hook: A musical idea, often a short riff, passage, or phrase, that is used to "catch the ear of
the listener” (often in the chorus)
• Slide: The sliding up or down through notes in a scale
• Glissando: A glide from one pitch to another (often abbreviated as ‘gliss’ or a wavy or
straight line between the highest and lowest note)
• Improvisation: The art of a spontaneous composition of music in performance. This may
take the form of an ornamentation, variation of a song or theme, or completely new
material. Greatly used in jazz
• Ostinato: A persistently repeated figure or musical rhythm
• Blue notes: Usually said to be the lowered third, lowered fifth, and lowered seventh scale
degrees. Though the blues scale has a minor‐like tonality, it is commonly 'forced' over major‐
key chord changes, resulting in a distinctively dissonant conflict of tonalities
Melody in Area of study 3: Traditional music
• Blue notes: Usually said to be the lowered third, lowered fifth, and lowered seventh scale
degrees. Though the blues scale has a minor‐like tonality, it is commonly 'forced' over major‐
key chord changes, resulting in a distinctively dissonant conflict of tonalities
• Pentatonic: Music that uses the pentatonic scale. This is a scale that uses five notes in an
octave (for example, the black keys or CDEGA). Pentatonic scales are very common and are
found all over the world.
• Whole tone: A scale comprising of whole tones only (instead of full tones and semitones as
found in a major scale). Because there are no leading notes, the scale creates a blurred,
indistinct effect.
• Modal: A piece that uses a mode. See ‘tonality’ for detail.
• Slide/glissando/portamento: Types of ‘sliding’ effects. In some contexts, such as on the
synthesizer, the portamento is continuous whereas in classical music the portamento and
glissando can be partial
• Pitch bend: An effect which makes a note slide to a higher pitch (such as on a synthesizer)
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• Appoggiaturas: See the ornamentation table above
• Ostinato: A persistently repeated figure or musical rhythm
• Riff: Short rhythmic, melodic, or harmonic figures repeated to form a structural framework
• Scat: Scat singing is vocal improvisation (in jazz) with wordless vocables, nonsense
syllables or without words at all.
• Melisma: Vocal music is ‘melismatic’ when more than one note is sung to each syllable. The
opposite to ‘syllabic’. Mariah Carey loves melisma: “All I want for Christ‐mas is”‐ all syllabic;
“yooooooou“ – melismatic.
• Improvisation: The art of a spontaneous composition of music in performance. This may
take the form of an ornamentation, variation of a song or theme, or completely new
material. Greatly used in jazz
Melody in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
• Ostinato: A persistently repeated figure or musical rhythm
• Motifs: a motif (or) motive is a short musical idea, a salient recurring figure, musical
fragment or succession of notes that has some special importance in or is characteristic of a
composition: "The motive is the smallest structural unit possessing thematic identity". In
Jaws, the notes EF form the shark’s ‘motif’.
• Melisma: Vocal music is ‘melismatic’ when more than one note is sung to each syllable. The
opposite to ‘syllabic’. Mariah Carey loves melisma: “All I want for Christ‐mas is”‐ all syllabic;
“yooooooou“ – melismatic.
Element Type: Harmony
Harmony in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
• Harmony: The use of simultaneous pitches (tones, pitches) or chords. Harmony refers to the
‘vertical’ aspect of music as opposed to the ‘horizontal’ aspect of a melodic line.
• Diatonic vs. chromatic: Very often, diatonic refers to musical elements derived from the
major and minor scale (and even modes). Chromatic most often refers to structures derived
from the chromatic scale, which consists of all semitones.
• Consonant vs. dissonant: Consonant intervals are usually described as pleasant and
agreeable. Dissonant intervals (clash and) are those that cause tension and desire to be
resolved to consonant intervals. Here are two resolved chord progressions and one
unresolved chord:
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• Pedal vs. drone: A pedal tone is a repeated note, typically with other notes around it. When
a pedal tone is being performed the player will keep returning to the note even though he is
playing other notes. The pedal note is typically in the bass (lowest) note, however there are
instances where the pedal note is in the highest note. Most musical instruments we know of
today do this because the ability of the instrument is not capable of playing a drone. A drone
is a note that is played and held continuously throughout a piece of the song or the entire
song. A drone does not stop at all and it does not change notes. It is usually an interval of a
fifth (such as in the bagpipes)
• Cadences: The chord sequence that appears at the end of a phrase. Perfect and plagal
cadences sound finished whereas imperfect and interrupted cadences do not.
Perfect cadence: Dominant (V/5) to tonic (I/1) Sounds complete
• Tièrce de Picardie: The surprise sounding of a major third as a final chord in piece otherwise
in a minor key. i.e. if in C minor, the last chord of the piece is C major.
• Chords: You must learn major and minor chords and their associated symbols and be able to
identify them in aural and written form. See description below (Major and minor chords):
• Major and minor chords: Identify these using chord symbols/roman numerals. Capital
letters represent major chords (i.e. A = A Major) while lower case letters represent minor
chords (i.e. a=a minor). ‘A min’ or ‘Am’ are also ways of representing the A minor chord. A
major triad is comprised of a major third with a minor third on top whereas a minor third is
comprised of a minor third with a major third on top.
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• Inversions: Triads can be described as being in root position, 1st inversion and second
inversion. Chords of four notes can have a third inversion.
Names of each degree in the scale:
I (1) Tonic i.e. C Do
Roman numerals are often used to refer to a chord based on a given degree. For example, in
C Major, the chord C (comprised of the notes C, E and G) is referred to as I. This helps us to
see relationships between chords more easily.
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Harmony in Area of study 2: Popular music
• Power chords: In guitar music, especially electric guitar, a power chord (also fifth chord) is
a chord that consists of the root note and the fifth. Power chords are commonly played
on amplified guitars, especially on electric guitar with distortion. Power chords are a key
element of many styles of rock and especially heavy metal music.
• Chord symbols e.g. C7: Capital letters stand for major chords and lower case, stand for
minor chords i.e. ‘A’ = A major whereas ‘a’ = a minor. The number represents the degree of
the chord that is added.
• Stock chord progressions: The only example the AQA gave of a ‘stock chord progression’
was the 50s progression shown below. I have added a couple of other famous chord
progressions that are regularly used.
50s progression I, vi, IV, V (C Am F G).
Pachelbel’s canon I‐V‐vi‐iii‐IV‐I‐IV‐V (C G Am Em F C F G)
12 bar blues I‐I‐I‐I‐IV‐IV‐I‐I‐V‐IV‐I‐I (CCCC FFCC GFCC)
Harmony in Area of study 3: Traditional music
Harmony in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
Chromatic: When notes not in the key of the moment are used i.e. any sharp or flat in the
key of C (which has no sharps or flats).
• Dissonant: Dissonance occurs when a note clashes with another creating a jarring effect. The
opposite of ‘consonant’.
• Pedal: Pedal or ‘pedal point’ is a harmonic device where a note, usually in the bass but
sometimes higher, is held below changing harmonies above with which it may be
concordant (consonant) or discordant (dissonant). See the ‘texture’ table for an example.
Element Type: Tonality (types of scales)
Tonality in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
• Tonality: For GCSE purposes, this word refers to scales or keys. Tonality is a musical system
that arranges pitches or chords to induce a hierarchy or perceived relations, stabilities and
attractions. For example, the pitch or triadic chord with the greatest stability is called the
tonic, and the root of the tonic chord is perceived to the key of a piece or song.
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• Major and minor scales: Learn the keys signatures below. You can use the circle of fifths
diagram to help you to memorise the following table:
C Major
A minor
0 sharps or flats:
G Major F Major
E minor D minor
1 sharp (#) 1 flat (b)
D Major B flat Major
B minor G minor
2 sharps 2 flats
A Major E flat Major
F sharp minor C minor
3 sharps 3 flats:
E Major A flat
major
C sharp minor
F minor
4 sharps
4 flats
Order of sharps Order of flats (b) in
(#) in key key signatures:
signatures:
F ather B lanket
C hristmas E xploded
G ave A nd
D ad D ad
A n G ot
E lectric C old
B lanket F eet
(reverse order of
sharps)
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• Modulation: The movement from one key to another. Possible types of modulation that you
could encounter are (a) modulation to dominant or the subdominant in major or minor keys
(b) modulation to the relative major or minor i.e. beginning in C m and modulating to A
minor (c) modulation to the tonic major or minor i.e. beginning in C major and modulating to
C minor.
• Circle of fifths: the following table shows all the major and minor keys; it can help you to
understand how they are related.
• In order to work out the first four major keys that use sharps (#), begin at C, count 5 notes
including C (CDEFG) and this takes you to G / G major (1 sharp). Count another 5 notes
including G (GABCD) and you get to D / D major (2 sharps). Count another 5 notes including
D (DEFGA) and you get to A / A major (3 sharps). Count another 5 notes including A (ABCDE)
and you get to E / E major (4 sharps).
• In order to work out the first four major keys that use flats (b), begin at C, count back 5
notes including C (CBAGF) and this takes you to F / F major (1 flat). Count back another 5
notes including F (FEDCB) and this take you to B flat major (2 flats). Count back another 5
notes including B (BAGFE) and this takes you to E flat major (3 flats). Count back another 5
notes including E (EDCBA) and this takes you to A flat major (4 flats).
• Working out minor keys: Relative minor keys (that have the same key signature as their
major equivalent) are based on the sixth degree of the major scale. To find the relative
minor begin at the tonic of the major scale (C for example) and, including C, count 6 notes
(CDEFGA). This takes you to A minor. Alternatively, you could begin at C and count 3 notes,
including C and go backwards (CBA) to land on the same note.
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Tonality in Area of study 2: Popular music
• Pentatonic: Music that uses the pentatonic scale. This is a scale that uses five notes in an
octave (for example, the black keys or CDEGA). Pentatonic scales are very common and are
found all over the world. The blues scale is based on the pentatonic scale.
• Modal: Modes are scales that you may hear being used from time to time in jazz (‘My
Favourite Things’ by John Coltrane), folk music (‘Scarborough Fair’) and film music (Pirates of
the Caribbean). Modes follow a slightly different set of rules to major and minor scales (i.e.
the dominant is not always the fifth). Each mode in its simplest version (using white notes
only) is listed in table below.
Students often find it difficult to compose using chord I, IV and V in a major scale i.e. C, F and G in C
major. They often use modal chord progressions instinctively without realising it; this may be
because they have been used so many times that they do not sound interesting to them. Here are
some typical progressions:
C Ionian chord progression C (I) Dm (ii) G (V)
D Dorian chord progression Dm (ii) Em (iii) Dm (ii) G (V)
E Phrygian chord progression Em (iii) F (IV) Em (iii) Dm (ii)
F Lydian chord progression F (IV) G (V)
G Mixolydian chord progression G (V) Dm (ii) G (V) F (IV)
A Aeolian chord progression Am (vi) F (IV) G (V)
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• Blues scale: The Blues scale consists of 6 different notes. They are the 5 notes of the minor
pentatonic scale, plus one additional note. The note added is the diminished 5th (o5)
measured from the scale tonic. The blues scale has a minor‐like tonality, it is commonly
'forced' over major‐key chord changes, resulting in a distinctively dissonant conflict of
tonalities
Tonality in Area of study 3: Traditional music
• Modal: See tables and definition above.
• Pentatonic: Music that uses the pentatonic scale. This is a scale that uses five notes in an
octave (for example, the black keys or CDEGA). Pentatonic scales are very common and are
found all over the world.
Tonality in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
• Pentatonic: Music that uses the pentatonic scale. This is a scale that uses five notes in an
octave (for example, the black keys or CDEGA). In the Western Classical tradition since 1910,
you may hear the pentatonic scale in Gamelan influenced minimalist music.
• Whole tone: A scale comprising of whole tones only (instead of full tones and semitones as
found in a major scale). Because there are no leading notes, the scale creates a blurred,
indistinct effect. Debussy used this scale in ‘Prélude à l'après‐midi d'un faune’ and Bartok
used this scale in the fifth movement of his Concerto for Orchestra.
• Modal: See the tables above.
• Tonal ambiguity: Where the key is not easily identifiable. Diminished sevenths, tritones
(whole tone scale); semitonal progressions (twelve note scale); empty fifths; free
chromaticism; lack of cadences (fluid tonality); oscillating major‐minor triads; high level
dissonance; unresolved appoggiatura chords. Increased use of these features resulted in the
collapse of the tonal system in music.
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Element Type: Structure
Structure in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
• Structure: Musical form. This refers to the overall structure or plan of a piece of music, and it
describes the layout of a composition as divided into sections.
• Binary: Binary form is a musical form in two related sections, both of which are usually
repeated. Binary is also a structure used to choreograph dance. In music this is usually
performed as A‐A‐B‐B. Binary form:
• Ternary: Ternary form, sometimes called song form, is a three‐part musical form where the
first section (A) is repeated after the second section (B) ends. It is usually schematized as A–
B–A. Examples include the da capo aria "The trumpet shall sound"
from Handel's Messiah, Chopin's Prelude in D‐Flat Major (Op. 28) and the opening chorus
of Bach's St John Passion. Ternary form (as seen in ‘Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star’:
• Rondo: Possible patterns in the Classical period include: ABA, ABACA, or ABACABA.
• Arch‐shape: Music in at least five sections with the structure ABCBA. The overall form is
symmetrical, most often around a central movement. The sections need not be repeated
verbatim but must at least share thematic material.
• Through‐composed: Music with no pre‐conceived structure. Develops continuously and
generally without repeats of sections. Many examples of this form can be found
in Schubert's "Lieder" (such as his Lied "Der Erlkönig"., where the words of a poem are set to
music and each line is different.
• Theme and variations: A form where a long musical statement (the theme) is varied in
following passages or movements. Variation forms include ground
bass, passacaglia, chaconne, and theme and variations. Ground bass, passacaglia and
chaconne are typically based on brief ostinato motifs providing a repetitive harmonic basis
and are also typically continuous evolving structures. 'Theme and variation' forms are
however based specifically on melodic variation, in which the fundamental musical idea,
or theme, is repeated in altered form or accompanied in a different manner.
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• Sonata: A composition for an instrumental soloist, often with a piano accompaniment,
typically in several movements with one or more in sonata form.
• Sonata form: A type of composition in three sections (exposition, development, and
recapitulation) in which two themes or subjects are explored according to set key
relationships. It forms the basis for much classical music (since the middle of the 18th
century) including the sonata, symphony and concerto.
• Minuet and trio: A classical minuet movement typically contains a main minuet (an
aristocratic dance in ¾ meter) in binary form, followed by a trio (a noticeably lighter and
sweeter section) also in binary form, followed by a ‘da capo’ (back to the beginning) repeat
of the main minuet. It is basically a large‐scale ABA form.
Diagram of a minuet and trio:
• Scherzo and trio: After 1800, Beethoven and other politically minded composers replaced
the aristocratic ‘minuet’ with a heavier, ‘folk‐derived’ dance in 6/8 meter called a scherzo
(which means “a common joke” in Italian), creating a similar design called Scherzo and Trio
form (the standard 3rd movement form of the late Classic period).
• Waltz: A dance in triple meter (3/4). A waltz typically sounds one chord per bar. The
accompaniment style particularly associated with the waltz is to play the root of the chord
on the first beat and the upper notes on the second and third beats (in an ‘oom, cha, cha’
rhythm). ‘Oom cha cha’ Waltz accompaniment:
Typical waltz rhythm
• Hoe‐Down: A hoedown is a quick American folk dance (or ‘square dance’) dance in duple
meter (fast 2/4 time) often played on the fiddle (violin)
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• Call and response: Two distinct passages usually played by different musicians where the
second phrase is heard as a direct response to the first. Here is an example (although not
from Classical music)
• Ground bass: a short theme, usually in the bass, which is constantly repeated as the other
parts of the music vary. Here is the ground bass from Pachelbel’s Canon.
• Continuo: Basso continuo (or continuo) is a form of musical accompaniment used in the
Baroque period. It means “continuous bass”. It was played by a keyboard instrument (mostly
a harpsichord or organ) and another bass instrument (mostly the cello but sometimes a
bassoon). Here is a continuo (formed of a harpsichord and cello):
• Cadenza: A virtuoso solo passage (where the soloist can show off) inserted into a movement
in a concerto or other musical work, typically near the end. In this example you can see a
piano score (which would be a reduction of the orchestral score) with the soloist’s music
above. When the cadenza begins, the pianist stops playing and the soloist performs their
own interpretation based on the smaller notes. In this case, the composer has instructed the
soloist to speed up (acceler.) and slow down (rall.) as well as get quieter towards the end:
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Structure in Area of study 2: Popular music
• Popular music songs traditionally use the same music for each verse of stanza of lyrics (as
opposed to songs that are "through‐composed", an approach used in classical music). Pop
and traditional forms can be used even with songs that have structural differences in
melodies. The most common format is intro, verse, pre‐chorus, chorus (or refrain), verse,
pre‐chorus, chorus, bridge ("middle eight"), verse, chorus and outro. A song structure (that
seems to get students some of the highest marks) is verse, verse, chorus, verse, bridge,
chorus, chorus.
• Intro/outro: Intro (short for introduction) is the first section of a song (generally before the
first verse); it often uses some of the best music in order to set the mood and is often
designed to grab the listener’s attention. Outro is a term only really used in the realm of pop
music to describe the ending (perhaps after a final chorus).
• Verse / Chorus: Verse – chorus form is a musical form common in popular music, used in the
blues and rock and roll since the 1950s. Verses share a melody but different lyrics whereas
choruses generally share the same melody and lyrics. The chorus often sharply contrasts
with the verse melodically, rhythmically and harmonically, and assumes a higher level of
dynamics and activity, often with added instrumentation.
• Bridge: The ‘bridge’ is a contrasting section in a song (that uses verses and choruses) that
prepares for the return of the original material section (the verse or chorus).
• Middle 8: Another term often used to describe the bridge (see above). The middle 8 is so
called because it is a section in a song that tends to happen towards the middle of the song,
and tends to be eight bars in length. Its purpose is to break up the simple repetition of a
verse/chorus/verse/chorus structure by introducing new elements into the song.
• Break: In popular music, a break is an instrumental or percussion section during a song that
creates a ‘break’ from the main parts of the song or piece.
• Twelve‐bar blues: The 12‐bar blues is one of the most prominent chord progressions in
popular music. It has a distinctive form in lyrics, phrase, chord structure and duration. In its
basic for, it is predominantly based on the I, IV, V chords of a key (and can be played in any
key). Each 12 bar pattern is known as a chorus; here is the most common version (along with
the ‘walking bass’ line), CCCC FFCC GFCG (or C on repeat):
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• 32 bar form: The AQA don’t ask you to learn this specifically. The thirty‐two‐bar form, also
known as the AABA song form, American popular song form and the ballad form, is a song
structure commonly found in Tin Pan Alley songs and other American popular music,
especially in the first half of the twentieth century. At its core, the basic AABA 32‐bar song
form consists of four sections, each section being 8 bars in length, totalling 32 bars. ‘Over
the Rainbow’, ‘Blue Skies’ and Willie Nelson’s ‘Crazy’ are good examples. The 8 bar blues
(see the blues tables below) was often used to create a blues variant of the standard 32‐bar
song; ‘Stagolee’, ‘Worried Life Blues’ and ‘How Long Blues’ are good examples.
Section A (8 bars) “Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high…”
Section A (8 bars) “Somewhere over the rainbow, blue birds fly…”
Section B (8 bars) “Someday I’ll wish upon a star, wake up where…”
Section A (8 bars) “Oh somewhere over the rainbow, blue birds fly…”
• Drum fill: A shortened musical passage played on the drum kit, which helps to sustain the
listener’s attention and punctuate the end of a section.
Structure in Area of study 3: Traditional music
• Strophic: Strophic form (also called "verse‐repeating" or chorus form) is the term applied to
songs in which all verses or stanzas of the text are sung to the same music (such as ‘The
Drunken Sailor’). The opposite of strophic form, with new music written for every stanza, is
called through‐composed.
• Verse / chorus: Verse – chorus form is a musical form common in popular music, used in the
blues and rock and roll since the 1950s. Verses share a melody but different lyrics whereas
choruses generally share the same melody and lyrics. The chorus often sharply contrasts
with the verse melodically, rhythmically and harmonically, and assumes a higher level of
dynamics and activity, often with added instrumentation.
• Cyclic: For purposes of the AQA syllabus, we have been told that this is a repeating form
(such as the 12 bar blues). In actuality, pieces in true cyclic form have common themes in all
the movements i.e. in the four‐note theme of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony or the leitmotif in
the main theme that reoccurs throughout ‘Star Wars’. Marvin Gaye’s ‘What’s Going On’
album has been described as a ‘song cycle’ due to the theme from the title track that is
repeated in other songs.
• Call and response: Two distinct passages usually played by different musicians where the
second phrase is heard as a direct response to the first.
• Popular song forms: Structures in popular songs are typically sectional, repeating forms such
as strophic form, verse‐chorus form, thirty‐two‐bar form and the twelve‐bar blues. These are
detailed above.
• 16‐bar blues vs 12‐bar blues: The sixteen‐bar blues (has numerous versions and) can be a
variation on the standard twelve‐bar blues or on the less common eight‐bar blues. Sixteen‐
bar blues is also used commonly in ragtime music. Here are examples:
8 bar I I IV IV I V I,IV I,V
blues
12 I I I I IV IV I I V IV I I
bar
blues
16 I I I I IV IV I I V V IV IV I I I I
bar
blues
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Structure in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
Minimalism / minimalist music: An avant‐garde (experimental and ‘new’) movement in
music that originated in the New York ‘Downtown’ scene of the 1960s; it was initially viewed
as a form of experimental music called the New York Hypnotic School. Prominent features of
the technique include consonant harmony, steady pulse (if not immobile drones), stasis or
gradual transformation, and often reiteration of musical phrases or smaller units such
as figures, motifs, and cells. It may include features such as additive process and phase
shifting which leads to what has been termed ‘phase music’. Minimal compositions that rely
heavily on process techniques that follow strict rules are usually described using the
term ‘process music’. The movement originally involved dozens of composers, although only
five (Young, Riley, Reich, Glass, and later John Adams) emerged to become publicly
associated with American minimal music. Steve Reich is one of minimalism’s most famous
composers; he liked to experiment with tape loops and ‘phase shifting’ (where an identical
recorded loop would gradually move out of sync with another i.e. the piece “It’s Gonna
Rain”). Clapping Music (below) is one of his most famous compositions:
Cell: In minimalist music, a ‘cell’ is a small rhythmic and (possibly) melodic design that can
be isolated, or can make up one part of a theme. The cell may be distinguished from
the ‘figure’ or ‘motif’. It can be defined as the smallest indivisible unit, unlike the motif,
which may be divisible into more than one cell. A cell can be developed, independent of its
context, as a melodic fragment, it can be used as a developmental motif. It can be the source
for the whole structure of the work; in that case it is called a ‘generative cell’. Bar one of
‘Clapping Music’ (above) is the ‘cell’.
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Serialism: A method or technique of composition that uses a series of values to manipulate
different musical elements. Serialism began primarily with Arnold Schoenberg's twelve‐tone
technique (though some of his contemporaries were also working to establish serialism as a
form of post‐tonal (i.e. non‐major / minor scale) thinking). Twelve‐tone technique orders the
twelve notes of the chromatic scale, forming a row or series and providing a unifying basis
for a composition's melody, harmony, structural progressions, and variations. Other types of
serialism extend the technique to other musical dimensions (often called "parameters"),
such as duration, dynamics, and timbre.
Tone row: In ‘serialism’, the tone row is the original order of the 12 notes of the chromatic
scale. The prime ‘tone row’ can be composed or created randomly (‘P0’ below), played
backwards (in ‘retrograde’); in its ‘inversion’ the intervals can be turned upside down so that
E to F (the semitone above) becomes E to E flat (the semitone below). The ‘inversion’ can
also be played backwards in the ‘retrograde inversion’. The ‘Tone Row Matrix’ below
illustrates the many ways that one tone row can be treated:
Here are four notes of a different ‘tone row’:
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Chromatic: The ‘chromatic scale’ is a scale that uses all 12 pitches (see below for a chromatic
scale from C to C). ‘Chromaticism’ is a word used to describe notes that do not belong in a
key (i.e. if a C sharp or A flat was used in the key of C major that has 0 sharps / flats).
Serialism is a technique which is completely chromatic.
Atonal music / atonality: Music without a tonal centre, or key. ‘Atonality’ usually describes
compositions written from about 1908 where a hierarchy of pitches focusing on a
single, central tone (such as the D major scale or F minor scale for example) is not used, and
the notes of the chromatic scale function independently of one another. Some famous
composers of atonal music are Berg, Schoenberg and Webern. The term atonality describes
music that does not conform to the system of tonal hierarchies that
characterized classical European music between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries.
Atonality vs. serialism: While they can sound similar (mostly due to dissonance), atonality is
not bound by the rules of serialism. Whereas atonal music abandons traditional rules of
using scales, serialism has its own set of rules for using the chromatic scale. Atonal music
mostly sounds dissonant but it can sound tonal (as if it is using a scale); Schoenberg said that
dissonances are really just “remote consonances” and when you look at the harmonic series,
he's right!
Element Type: Sonority (Timbre)
Sonority (Timbre) in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
AQA: “Instruments and voices singly and in combination as found in music, including that for solo
instruments, concertos, chamber groups”. The exam board is not specific about what this means; I
hope the following helps you!
• Sonority: The sonority of a sound is its relative loudness and how it resonates compared to
other sounds.
• Timbre: The character or quality of a musical sound or voice. It can describe the sound
quality and ‘colour’ or the quality of tone distinctive of a particular singing voice or musical
instrument.
• Solo instrument: An instrument playing the main melody either on its own or accompanied
by a piano or an orchestra (for example)
• Transposing instrument(s): A musical instrument whose music is notated at a pitch different
from the pitch that actually sounds (which is known as ‘concert pitch’). Transposition is a
convention of music notation. One reason for doing this is to make it easier to move
between instruments in the same family (such as the saxophone (in E flat), clarinet (in B flat)
and flute (C))
• The string section of the orchestra: First violins, second violins, violas, cellos, double basses
• The woodwind section of the orchestra: Instruments that generate sound with the use of a
reed (clarinet, oboe, bassoon) or through air hitting the edge of the mouthpiece (flute or
piccolo)
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• The brass section of the orchestra: Instruments that generate sound when the vibration of
the lips is amplified through the mouthpiece (trumpet, trombone, French Horn, tuba)
• The percussion section of the orchestra: Timpani drums (also known as kettle drums),
xylophone, triangle, cymbals (and even the piano when it is used in the orchestra)
• Symphony: An extended musical composition (often of four movements) played by a
symphony orchestra
• Concerto: The use of the word concerto has changed over time. If you are asked to identify a
concerto in the exam, it will be because a solo instrument is being accompanied by an
orchestra.
(concerto = soloist plus orchestra)
• Chamber music: A type of classical music that is composed for a small group of instruments
– traditionally a group that could fit in a palace chamber or a large room.
• Duet: A composition for two performers in which the performers have equal importance to
the piece.
• Trio: An ensemble of three performers. Types of trio include the jazz trio, string trio (two
violins and a cello), power trio (guitar, bass guitar and drum kit in popular music) or…
• Piano Trio: An ensemble of a piano and two other performers – mostly a violin and cello. It is
not an ensemble of three pianos.
(piano trio = piano plus two other performers)
• Quartet: An ensemble of four performers
• Quintet: An ensemble of five performers
• String quartet: An ensemble of four string instruments: two violins, a viola and a cello.
• String orchestra: An orchestra consisting solely of a string section (the first and second violin
players, the viola, cello and double bass)
• Male voice choir: A choir comprising only male voices
• Boys’ choir: A choir comprising only the voices of boys (as heard in a Cathedral)
• Mixed voice choir: A choir comprising male and female voices
• SATB: Abbreviation for Soprano (high female voice), Alto (lower female voice), tenor (male
voice) and bass (low male voice)
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Instrumental techniques e.g….
• Arco: Instrumental technique written on musical scores to instruct a string player to play
‘with the bow’
• Pizzicato: Instrumental technique written on musical scores (often as the abbreviation
‘pizz’) to instruct a string player to pluck (instead of playing with the bow)
• Con sordino: The Italian for ‘with the mute’. On a brass instrument a mute muffles the
sound when it is placed in the end of the instrument whereas on a violin or cello a rubber
mute is clipped onto the bridge (the wooden bit that holds the strings up above the
fingerboard) to achieve a muffled effect
Sonority (Timbre) in Area of study 2: Popular music
• Standard contemporary instrument types e.g. electric guitar, bass guitar, synthesiser, organ
From left to right:
Princess Leah: lead vocal
Han Solo: rhythm guitar
Darth Vader: Bass guitar
C3PO: organ/synthesizer
R2D2: synthesizer
Luke Skywalker: lead guitar
Chewie: Drum kit
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• Specific instrument types e.g. sitar, dilruba. (These are the AQA’s words; if you don’t know
what an instrument is, describe it using a similar instrument. These are listed under popular
music mainly because of the use of these instruments by such bands as The Beatles.
Sitar: A plucked stringed Dibruba: An Indian (bowed) string Harmonium: A type of portable,
instrument used mainly in instrument pump organ. Here is an Indian
Hindustani music and Indian harmonium (with the pump at the
Classical Music: back):
Tambura/ tanbura / tampura: a Tabla (hand drums): percussion Swarmandal: Indian
long‐necked plucked string instrument which is often used harp / zither that is today most
instrument found in various in Hindustani classical music and in commonly used as an
forms in Indian music; it does not the traditional music accompanying instrument for
play melody but rather supports of India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, vocal Hindustani Classical music.
the melody by providing a and Sri Lanka. The playing technique is
continuous drone: complex and involves extensive use of
the fingers and palms in various
configurations to create a wide variety
of different sounds and rhythms,
reflected in mnemonic syllables (bol).
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Instrumental techniques
• Palm mute (pm): An instrumental technique for guitar and bass guitar, executed by placing
the side of the picking hand across the strings. This produces a muted sound.
• Hammer‐on (ho): A playing technique (generally on a guitar) performed by sharply bringing
a fretting‐hand finger down on the fingerboard causing a note to sound. The opposite of the
pull‐off (below)
• Pull‐off (po): A technique performed by ‘pulling’ the finger off a string (using the fretboard
hand) on a guitar (generally) to cause a note to sound.
• Bend: String bending is a basic guitar technique, used a lot in blues and rock but also found
a bit in most other styles (except classical). The idea is to "bend" (push a string across or
over the fingerboard with your left hand fingers) so that the string gets tighter and the pitch
goes up
• Slide guitar/bottleneck: A style of guitar playing in which a glissando effect is produced by
moving a bottleneck or similar device over the strings. Used especially in the blues.
• Strumming: A strum or stroke is a sweeping action where a fingernail or plectrum brushes
past several strings in order to set them all into motion and thereby play a chord. Here are
some typical strumming patterns that you could use:
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• Picking: Guitar picking is a group of hand and finger techniques a guitarist uses to produce
notes. These techniques involve plucking, strumming, brushing, etc. Picking can be done
with: A (pick (plectrum)) held in the hand or by using the fingers / fingernails. Here are some
typical picking patterns:
• Pitch bend: A facility in a synthesizer that enables the player to change the pitch (generally
by a small amount)
• Drum kit components and techniques
Some basic beats are
written below.
The ‘x’ represents the
hi hat (but you could
play it with the ride
cymbal sound),
the bottom note is the
bass drum and
the middle one is the
snare (or ‘side’) drum.
You could add tom‐
tom sounds when you
need a fill and the
crash cymbal at the
beginning of a section.
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Drum kit techniques:
Roll / drum roll: a technique
the percussionist employs to produce a
sustained sound, over the value of the
written note. Rolls are used by
composers to sustain the sound and
create other effects, the most common
of which is using a roll to build
anticipation.
Flam: A flam consists of two single
strokes played by alternating hands
(RL or LR). The first stroke is a quieter
grace note followed by a louder primary
stroke on the opposite hand. The two
notes are played almost simultaneously,
and are intended to sound like a single,
broader note
Rimshot: simultaneously hitting
the rim and head of a drum with a drum
stick. The sound is part normal snare
and part loud, woody accent, generally
sharper, brighter and more cutting since
it produces large amounts of overtones.
Cross sticking / cross stick: When the tip
of a drumstick is placed on the head
near one of the bearing edges and the
edge of the stick is struck against the rim
opposite the tip, creating a dry, high
pitched "click" similar to a set
of claves. The stroke is used to simulate
claves in Brazilian bossa nova and also
used for ballads in rock, pop,
and country.
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• Vocal timbres e.g. falsetto, belt, rap, beat‐boxing, scat singing
Falsetto A vocal timbre used by male singers to sing notes higher than their normal arrange. Used
by the Bee Gees to good effect on the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack
Belt Belting is a technique by which a singer sings above their chest register at a loud volume. It
is often described and felt as supported and sustained yelling (such as in The Beatles’
‘Twist and Shout’
Rap Rapping is spoken or chanted rhyming lyrics.
Beat‐boxing Vocal timbre in which the sounds of a drum machine or drum kit are imitated with the
voice.
Scat singing Improvised jazz singing in which the voice is used in imitation of an instrument (generally
using syllables / vocables like “doo‐be, doo‐be, be‐bop, do‐wah” etc.
Vibrato A rapid, slight variation in pitch in singing (or on some musical instruments) producing a
stronger, or richer tone. It sounds like a wobble.
• Specific instrumental techniques e.g. slap bass
• Slap bass: On the bass guitar (in funk music), slap bass is a technique where the strings are
‘slapped’ generally using the thumb to create a metallic, thunk sound. On the double bass
(in rockabilly music) this is pulling the strings away from the fingerboard until they snap
back onto the fingerboard.
• Specific instrumental effects e.g. amplification, distortion
Amplification: The use of an amplifier, a natural or artificial device intended to make a signal stronger.
Distortion: Distortion and overdrive are forms of audio signal processing used to alter the sound of
amplified electric musical instruments, usually by increasing their ‘gain’. The sound is often
described as more intense, gravelly, compressed, warm, dirty or a fuzz effect (depending on
the type of distortion used)
Phase: A sweeping effect
Chorus: A chorus effect (often generated with a guitar pedal) is created when individual sounds with
approximately the same timbre and very similar pitch converge and are perceived as one.
Flange: ‘Flanging’ is an effect produced by mixing two identical signals together, one signal delayed by
a small and gradually changing period, usually smaller than 20 milliseconds.
Wah‐wah: A ‘wah’ effect can be created on the electric guitar using a ‘wah‐wah’ pedal.
Sampling: The act of taking a portion of one sound recording (using a sampler) and reusing it as an
instrument or sound recording in a different song or piece.
Reverb: This will probably be the answer if you are asked what the effect is on the vocal part. Short for
‘reverberation’. The persistence of sound after a sound is produced (but not an echo)
Panning: The distribution of sound across (and movement of sound between) left and right speakers
Delay vs. Echo Delay is the effect of a repeating, sound which retains the clarity of the original. The repeated
sounds on an echo effect gradually decay with the changing tone.
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Specific technological recording techniques e.g. Automatic double tracking (ADT) and
Direct input transformer (DIT)
Automatic double‐tracking (ADT): Using a tape loop to double a vocal recording in order to
thicken the sound. This is used by The Beatles on their Sgt. Pepper album.
Direct input transformer (DIT): Recording an electric instrument (electric guitar for example)
by plugging it directly into the mixing desk rather than miking it through a speaker.
Sonority (Timbre) in Area of study 3: Traditional music
• Generic families of instruments as found in traditional/world music e.g. steel drums
Tuned Percussion instruments:
Steel drums: tuned percussion Marimba vs Xylophone: Both have Glockenspiel (tuned) vs triangle
instruments from Trinidad and wooden keys and are hit with beaters (untuned): The glockenspiel has
Tobago. metal keys
Untuned percussion instruments:
Djembe drums: Rope‐tuned, Bodhran: Untuned Irish drum. The Timbale(s): Cuban / Latin drum
West African, skin covered ‘heartbeat’ of Irish music similar to the snare drum. Often
drums played with bare hands used to lead
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• The use of technology, synthesised and computer‐generated sounds, sampling and the use
of techniques such as reverb, distortion and chorus. See the table above (under ‘Popular
Music’)
• Drone: A continuous note or chord (often with an interval of a fifth) i.e. as used in bagpipes.
• Vocal techniques e.g. falsetto, vibrato, rap (see the table above under ‘Popular Music’)
Sonority (Timbre) in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
• Specific families of instruments: strings, woodwind, brass, percussion. See Western
Classical tradition (1650 – 1910) for detail.
• Use of technology, synthesised and computer‐generated sounds
• Drum machine: A drum synthesizer
• Sequencing / sequencer: A computer programme (such as Logic or Cubase) that allows the
composer to play and record sounds.
• Synthesizer: An electronic musical instrument that generates electric signals that are
converted to sound through instrument amplifiers and loudspeakers or headphones
• Loops / looping: A repeating section of sound material; short sections of material can be
repeated to create ostinato patterns. A loop can be created using a wide range of music
technologies including digital samplers, synthesizers, sequencers, drum machines, tape
machines, delay units, or they can be programmed using computer music software.
• Tape manipulation / tape loops: Tape loops are loops of magnetic tape used to
create repetitive, rhythmic musical patterns or dense layers of sound when played on a tape
recorder. In the 1980s, analog audio and tape loops with it gave way to digital audio and
application of computers to generate and process sound.
• Microphone techniques: There exist a number of well‐developed microphone techniques
used for miking musical, film, or voice sources i.e. use of and getting rid of audio feedback
and background noise, using mono or stereo, miking acoustic as opposed to electric
instruments, using a ‘pop‐shield’ to reduce vocal plosives.
• Organ / piano roll: A music storage medium used to operate a player piano, piano player
or reproducing piano. A piano roll is a continuous roll of paper with perforations (holes)
punched into it. The perforations represent note control data. The roll moves over a reading
system known as a 'tracker bar' and the playing cycle for each musical note is triggered
when a perforation crosses the bar and is read. Ligetti used the roll to enable his music to
be played at a high speed.
• Instrumental techniques e.g. vamping (see below)
• Vamping: To ‘vamp’ is to repeat a short, simple passage of music. In Terry Riley’s ‘In C’
(which consists of 53 short, numbered musical phrases, lasting from half a beat to 32 beats)
for example, each phrase may be repeated an arbitrary number of times. Vamping is a term
more commonly heard in popular music.
• Gamelan: a traditional instrumental ensemble in Java and Bali, including many bronze
percussion instruments. Gamelan music has inspired many composers since 1910 (such as
Debussy, Satie and John Cage (particularly in his prepared piano music))
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Element Type: Texture
Texture: For the purposes of the exam, ‘texture’ refers to the relationship
between, and number of musical layers. For example, a thick texture
contains many ‘layers’; one of these layers could be a string section or
another brass. A single voice would be a thin texture.
Polyphonic/contrapuntal texture – A
texture that employs polyphony (a style of
music in two or more parts in which each
part is independent and of equal
importance. Therefore, polyphonic music
implies the use of counterpoint (as heard in
the motet, canon and fugue). Composers
include Palestrina, Byrd and Bach
Imitative – Music which uses imitation: a
device in part‐writing in which one voice
repeats (or approximately repeats) a musical
figure previously stated by another voice.
Canon and fugue employ imitation with
strict rules.
Canonic –A canon is a polyphonic
(contrapuntal) work in which a melody,
stated by one part is repeated by one or
more voices in turn, each entering before
the previous part has finished. This results in
overlapping. Music that uses this technique
is described as ‘canonic’.
Antiphonal – A term that derives from the
practise of alternating performances
between sets of singers stationed apart. The
same effect can be employed with musical
instruments.
Descant – A counter melody higher than the main melody.
Layered – Music built up of several strands. Also a method of producing music in a studio.
Tutti – All the orchestra playing together (often after a cadenza in a concerto or a solo in a symphony).
Homophonic texture – Texture in which
parts move together presenting a top
harmony with accompanying chords.
Melody with accompaniment – Another way
of describing homophonic texture. This could
be more obvious though i.e. a clear tune and
a broken chord accompaniment for example.
Many popular music styles use a solo singer
with a piano or guitar accompaniment.
Harmonic texture – A little used term that describes music with a predominant melody and harmonic accompaniment. A
better term to use is ‘homophonic’.
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Chordal texture – The parts move together
in the same rhythm but at different pitches.
Octaves – An octave is the interval of eight
steps, e.g. C to C on the white notes of the
piano. Instruments playing the same notes
but 8 steps apart are playing in octaves.
Doubling – Where two different instruments play the same music.
Unison – The sound of two or more voices
(or parts) singing (or playing) at the same
pitch.
Single melody line – one voice or instrument playing a melody with no accompaniment.
Monophonic – One melody line (which could
be played by any number of voices / parts).
Pedal note – A note that is held while the
harmonies change (mostly in the bass)
Drone: A continuous note or chord (often
with an interval of a fifth) i.e. as used in
bagpipes or in Indian music on the tambura
A cappella – Unaccompanied voices. Not
really a texture but the AQA listed it here.
Below, the textures from the table are listed for each Area of Study. They are grouped quite
sensibly so that you can see related textures.
Texture in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
• Harmonic/homophonic/chordal • polyphonic/contrapuntal • imitative, canonic, layered •
antiphonal • a cappella • monophonic/single melody line • melody and accompaniment • unison,
octaves.
Texture in Area of study 2: Popular music
(none listed)
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Texture in Area of study 3: Traditional music
• A cappella • imitative • layered/layering. (See table above)
Texture in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
• Drones • imitative • layered/layering. (See table above)
Element Type: Tempo, Metre and Rhythm.
Tempo, Metre and Rhythm in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
• Tempo: The speed or pace of a given piece or subsection; how fast or slow. You will need to
be able to describe some tempi (the plural of tempo) in Italian. Here are some examples and
a very rough guide to their corresponding bpm (beats per minute). You will notice that the
Italian words are often an expressive indication as well as indicating speed:
Slow tempo Grave (very slow and solemn: 40bpm or slower)
Largo (broad, very slow and dignified: 42 ‐ 66bpm),
Adagio (slow but not as slow as largo: 58 – 97bpm)
Medium tempo Andante (moving along / walking pace: 76‐108bpm)
Moderato (moderate speed: 66 – 126bpm)
Fast tempo Vivace (quick and lively: 140bpm)
Allegro (quick, lively and bright: 84‐144bpm)
Presto (very quick: 100‐152bpm)
Slowing down Rallentando (or the abbreviation rall.)
Ritardando (or the abbreviation rit.)
Both terms are interchangeable
Speeding up Accelerando (or the abbreviation accel.)
Pause
(This symbol indicates that the note below should be held. It implies
that you slow down towards it)
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• Rhythm: For GCSE purposes, this means note (and rest) values and their names. Rhythm
refers to the length of sounds. You need to really be familiar with semibreve, minim,
crotchet, quaver and semiquaver note values:
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• Metre: For GCSE purposes, this means the time signature (see the table of simple and
compound time signatures below). Metre is the rhythmic structure of music, the patterns of
accents heard in regularly recurring measures of stressed and unstressed beats at the
frequency of the music’s pulse.
• Simple and compound time: This refers to time signatures; see below.
Simple time signatures Compound time signatures
(where each pulse is first divided into two) (where each pulse is first divided into three)
• Top number= number of pulses in a • Top number= number of quaver pulses
bar in a bar
• Bottom number=4 (which • Bottom number=8 (which represents
represents crotchets) quavers)
• There is no number representing the
overall pulse; you just have to
remember that the overall pulse is
divided into 3)
2 6
4 8
(1&2&1&2&) (1&a2&a1&a2&a)
2/4 is also described as split common time.
The symbol below symbolises ‘split common
time’ (also 2/4)
3 9
4 8
(1&2&3&1&2&3&) (1&a2&a3&a1&a2&a3&a)
4 12
4 8
(1&2&3&4&1&2&3&4&) (1&a2&a3&a4&a1&a2&a3&a4&a)
4/4 is also described as common time. This
is the symbol for common time:
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• Pulse: The speed of the underlying beat. The BPM (or beats ber minute)
• Regular: Regular rhythms are rhythms that follow that standard division of a beat i.e. when
in simple time signatures the beat is divided in 2 or when in compound time signatures the
beat is divided into 3. The opposite is ‘irregular’ (see below in Traditional music) where you
may hear the use of triplets or duplets.
• Anacrusis: A note (or notes) that precede the first downbeat in a bar.
• Augmentation: The lengthening of the time values of notes in a melodic part (perhaps
making each note twice as long). Opposite of ‘diminution’ (below)
• Diminution: The shortening of the time values of notes in a melodic part (perhaps making
each note half the length). Opposite of ‘augmentation’ (above).
• Hemiola: a musical figure in which, typically, two groups of three beats are replaced by
three groups of two beats, giving the effect of a shift between triple and duple metre.
• Dotted rhythms: A repeated rhythm in which the beat is unequally divided into a long
dotted note and a short note.
• Double dotted rhythms: A double-dotted note is a note with two small dots written after it.
Its duration is 1¾ times its basic note value. In some eras / styles, a single dot after a
note implied that a double dotted rhythm should be played.
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• Triplets: A triplet is a type of tuplet (an irregular rhythm) where a beat that is normally sub‐
divided by two is divided by three.
• Scotch snap: The Lombard rhythm or Scotch snap is a syncopated musical rhythm in which a
short, accented note is followed by a longer one. In effect, it is the reverse of a dotted
rhythm.
• Rubato: Italian for ‘stolen time’, rubato is a speeding up and then slowing down of the
tempo of a piece at a soloist or conductor’s discretion.
Tempo, Metre and Rhythm in Area of study 2: Popular music
• BPM (beats per minute): Beats Per Minute. 60BPM means one beat per second, 120 BPM
means two beats per second. You should be able to estimate a BPM; while you don’t need
to know this, it can be helpful to see how genres of dance music have their own standard
(average) BPM:
Dub / reggae 60 – 90 bpm
House 120 – 130 bpm
Hardcore / gabber 160 – 200 bpm
• mm (metronome marking): The same as ‘bpm’/ ‘BPM’. This will generally be shown using a
note value and a number (the beats per minute):
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• Groove: The sense of propulsive rhythmic “feel” or a sense of “swing”. In jazz, it can be felt
as a persistently repeated pattern. Groove is key to much popular music.
• Backbeat: A strong accent on one of the normally unaccented beats of the bar (mostly beat
2 and 4), used especially in jazz and popular music.
• Syncopation: Syncopation involves a variety of rhythms which are in some way unexpected
which make part or all of a tune off‐beat. It is a placement of rhythmic stresses or accents
where they wouldn’t normally occur. Syncopation is used in virtually all contemporary
popular music.
• Off‐beat: In music that progresses in 4/4 time, counted as “1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4” the first beat of
the bar (downbeat) is usually the strongest accent in the melody and the likeliest place for a
chord change, the third is the next strongest: these are the “on” beats. The second and
fourth are weaker – the “off‐beats”. Subdivisions (like quavers) that fall between the pulse
beats are even weaker and these, if used frequently in a rhythm (such as in reggae), can also
make it “off‐beat”.
• Shuffle: A swing or shuffle rhythm is based around a triplet feel. The basic shuffle rhythm is
created by leaving out the middle note of each three‐note triplet group.
• Swing/swung: the term swing is used to describe the sense of propulsive rhythmic "feel" or
"groove" created by the musical interaction between the performers, especially when the
music creates a "visceral response" such as feet‐tapping or head‐nodding (such as in jazz
music).
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Tempo, Metre and Rhythm in Area of study 3: Traditional music
• Irregular: An irregular rhythm is any rhythm that involves dividing the beat differently from
what is allowed by the time signature, such as the use of triplets in a (simple time) 4/4
piece or duplets in a (compound time) 12/8 piece. Time signatures such as 5/4 make a pulse
feel irregular due to the emphasis on beat 1 and 4 (as if the time signature was a bar of
three beats immediately followed by a bar of two beats)
• Free: A consistently changing rhythm where the pulse is shifting and irregular (making it
difficult to hear), speeding up and slowing down.
• Skank: The skank (also known as the ska stroke or ska upstroke, or bang) is
a guitar strumming technique that is used mostly in the performance of ska, rocksteady,
and reggae music. Reggae is most easily recognized by the skank; the guitar usually plays a
short, percussive, "scratchy chop sound [chord]," on beats 2 and 4, often supported by
staccato piano (late 1960s to the early 1980s) or synthesizer. See below:
• Bubble: A reggae rhythm (‘reggae bubble’) as can be seen in the organ part below. The
bubble rhythm is usually played on the organ or synthesizer in reggae music to support the
‘skank’ rhythm.
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• Clave (Bo Diddley type beat): The clave is a rhythmic pattern used as a tool for rhythmic
organization in Afro‐Cuban music. It is present in a variety of genres such as Abakuá music,
rumba, conga, son, mambo, salsa, songo, timba and Afro‐Cuban jazz.
Bo Diddley (below) was a performer who had his greatest success in the 1950s with his
rhythmic guitar style and his signature ‘Bo Diddley’ rhythm, a simple five‐accent clave
rhythm that is a cornerstone of hip hop, rock, and pop.
• Augmentation: The lengthening of the time values of notes in a melodic part (perhaps
making each note twice as long). Opposite of ‘diminution’ (below)
• Diminution: The shortening of the time values of notes in a melodic part (perhaps making
each note half the length). Opposite of ‘augmentation’ (above).
• Anacrusis: A note (or notes) that precede the first downbeat in a bar.
• Hemiola: a musical figure in which, typically, two groups of three beats are replaced by
three groups of two beats, giving the effect of a shift between triple and duple metre.
• Polyrhythm: Polyrhythm is the simultaneous use of two or more conflicting rhythms that
are not readily perceived as deriving from one another, or as simple manifestations of the
same meter. This rhythmic conflict may be the basis of an entire piece of music (cross‐
rhythm), or a momentary disruption.
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• Bi‐rhythm: A bi‐rhythm is a specific type of polyrhythm, consisting of two independent
rhythms played simultaneously.
• Cross‐rhythm: A specific form of polyrhythm. It refers to when the rhythmic conflict found
in polyrhythms is the basis of an entire musical piece. i.e.
• Shuffle beat: A swing or shuffle rhythm is based around a triplet feel. The basic shuffle
rhythm is created by leaving out the middle note of each three‐note triplet group. The
shuffle beat is made up mainly of a triplet feel and the use of a snare drum on beat 2 and 4
(the ‘backbeat’ – see below)
• Backbeat: A strong accent on one of the normally unaccented beats of the bar (mostly beat
2 and 4), used especially in jazz and popular music.
• Syncopation: Syncopation involves a variety of rhythms which are in some way unexpected
which make part or all of a tune off‐beat. It is a placement of rhythmic stresses or accents
where they wouldn’t normally occur. Syncopation is used in virtually all contemporary
popular music.
• Off‐beat: In music that progresses in 4/4 time, counted as “1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4” the first beat of
the bar (downbeat) is usually the strongest accent in the melody and the likeliest place for a
chord change, the third is the next strongest: these are the “on” beats. The second and
fourth are weaker – the “off‐beats”. Subdivisions (like quavers) that fall between the pulse
beats are even weaker and these, if used frequently in a rhythm, can also make it “off‐
beat”.
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Tempo, Metre and Rhythm in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
• Irregular vs. free: An irregular rhythm is any rhythm that involves dividing the beat
differently from what is allowed by the time signature (such as the use of triplets) whereas
the term ‘free rhythm’ relates to a changing tempo.
• Augmentation vs. diminution: Lengthening or shortening of time values
• Anacrusis: The ‘upbeat’ (see ‘Happy Birthday’ examples)
• Hemiola: a musical figure in which, typically, two groups of three beats are replaced by
three groups of two beats, giving the effect of a shift between triple and duple metre.
• Rubato: Italian for ‘stolen time’, rubato is a speeding up and then slowing down of the
tempo of a piece at a soloist or conductor’s discretion.
• Polymeter: When music feels as though it has two different time signatures playing at the
same time i.e. the top part feels like 5 pulses whereas the bottom feels like 4:
• Polyrhythm: When the beat tempo of two parts is different throughout a piece:
Polyrhythm can be heard in Stravinsky’s ‘Rite of Spring’ where it sounds as if competing
rhythmic patterns are fighting for the same space.
• Bi‐rhythm: A bi‐rhythm is a specific type of polyrhythm, consisting of two independent
rhythms played simultaneously.
• Cross‐rhythm: A specific form of polyrhythm. It refers to when the rhythmic conflict found
in polyrhythms is the basis of an entire musical piece. i.e.
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• Syncopation: Syncopation involves a variety of rhythms which are in some way unexpected
which make part or all of a tune off‐beat. It is a placement of rhythmic stresses or accents
where they wouldn’t normally occur. Here is an example by Stravinsky:
• Off‐beat: In music that progresses in 4/4 time, counted as “1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4” the first beat of
the bar (downbeat) is usually the strongest accent in the melody and the likeliest place for a
chord change, the third is the next strongest: these are the “on” beats. The second and
fourth are weaker – the “off‐beats”. Subdivisions (like quavers) that fall between the pulse
beats are even weaker and these, if used frequently in a rhythm, can also make it “off‐
beat”.
Element Type: Dynamics and articulation.
Dynamics and articulation in Area of study 1: Western classical tradition 1650 – 1910
Gradation of dynamics as follows:
pp Abbreviation of the Italian ‘pianissimo’ meaning ‘very softly’.
p Abbreviation of the Italian ‘piano’ meaning ‘soft’.
mp Abbreviation of the Italian ‘mezzo piano’ meaning ‘moderately
soft’.
mf Abbreviation of the Italian ‘mezzo forte’ meaning ‘moderately
loud’.
f Abbreviation of the Italian ‘forte’ meaning ‘loud’.
ff Abbreviation of the Italian ‘Fortissimo’ meaning ‘Very loud’.
Crescendo Becoming gradually louder.
/cresc.
Diminuendo / Becoming gradually softer.
dim.
Sforzando / sfz. Suddenly loud.
‘Hairpin’ dynamic that indicates a crescendo.
‘Hairpin’ dynamic that indicates a diminuendo.
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• Common signs, terms and symbols.
Treble clef
Bass clef
Pause sign
Natural sign (to cancel out sharp or flat notes)
8ve+ Play an octave higher.
Repeat
Dynamics and articulation in Area of study 2: Popular music
Dynamics and articulation in Area of study 3: Traditional music
Dynamics and articulation in Area of study 4: Western classical tradition since 1910
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Possible Questions in the Listening Exam (as copied directly from an exam paper)
Melody
1. On which note of the scale does the vocal line end?
2. Add phrase marks to bars (1 to 6 for example – on a score)
3. On a score, fill in the missing notes (in given bars) using the given rhythm (of quavers/ crotchets/
minims/ tied notes that are floating above an empty section of the stave).
4. In the first two lines of each verse (in given lyrics), which of the following intervals is sung to the two
syllables of ‘mambo’ (for example): second / third / fourth / fifth?
5. Which of the following patterns (from four different scored options) matches the notes played by
the guitar in the opening bars?
Harmony
1. How many chords can you hear during the first verse?
2. Identify (with tick boxes / bar numbers) the four bars where the chords change
3. Which one of bars 3, 4, 5 and 6 uses the same chord as bar 1?
4. Are the chords major or minor / which are major, which are minor?
5. Name the cadences at (the end / the middle – often at places on a score)
Tonality
1. What is the tonality of this excerpt?
2. To which of the following keys does the music modulate at (a point on the score): dominant, relative
minor, subdominant?
Structure
1. This excerpt opens with a repeated bass pattern. How many times is this played during the excerpt?
Sonority (Timbre)
1. Name the melody instrument heard after the vocal section.
2. To which family do the instruments in this excerpt belong?
3. Name the instrument playing the melody in this excerpt.
4. Name the type of vocal ensemble heard in this excerpt.
Texture
1. Which musical term best describes the texture of this excerpt?
2. Describe the texture of the majority of this excerpt.
Tempo, metre and rhythm
1. Which rhythm (from a selection of notated rhythms) best matches the rhythm of the chords / the
melody / the violin etc.
2. Which of the (given words relating to rhythm) is a feature of the rhythm of this excerpt?
3. This excerpt is in 4/4 time. Identify the number of the beat that is most emphasised: 1, 2, 3, 4.
4. Describe the tempo/ speed of this excerpt
Dynamics and articulation
No questions could be found in the specimen paper but points were awarded in open questions for
descriptions of dynamics and articulation
Contextual questions (about style / genre):
1. Identify three features used in the instrumental introduction typical of ‘Rock and Roll’
2. Identify two melodic features used in this excerpt typical of Blues music
3. Identify two features used typical of the music of the Classical period.
4. Identify two features used in the excerpt typical of this style of Jazz music.
5. Identify three features used in this excerpt typical of Indian classical tradition
6. Identify five features used in this excerpt typical of Twentieth Century orchestral music.
Mixed up: One question asks you to pick 2 terms (from a list) that apply to an excerpt. The terms are from
different areas of study i.e. falsetto (sonority), canon (structure), homophonic (texture)
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