GR 6 Module
GR 6 Module
GR 6 Module
Reference:
Deped Module
Tasks:
In this module, you will do learning activities to help you understand and experience
what you read about. You will listen to a few musical examples. You will learn to sing
two folksongs from the Tagalog region .You will also be doing two interviews plus a
special project to be submitted towards the end of the module. Tests and some learning
activities require you to answer questions. Do not write anything on this module because
other students will also be using it. Write your answers in your Music Notebook. Write
the title of the test or activity, draw a box beside it, and then write your answers below the
title. Each time you finish a test or activity, put a check on the box. The examples below
will guide you.
Check your answers using the Answer Key. Record your score in your notebook.
Perfect Score: 20
Music is something that people do or make. A musical piece is just a piece of paper
until a musician picks it up and performs it. When he does, then music is produced. A
person can even make music without using a musical piece. Your mother may have
invented a soothing melody to put you to sleep when you were a little child. The organist
in your church often makes up her own accompaniment for a song when there is no
musical piece available for it. Whatever the case, music-making is a purposeful act by a
person or group of persons.
Lesson 2: “Let’s Talk About Sounds”
By now you should already understand that music is a varied human activity that
involves meaningful sounds to express emotions or communicate ideas. In this lesson,
we will look more closely at four important things that characterize all sounds: 1) timbre,
2)duration, 3) pitch, and 4) intensity. These are better known as the “properties of
sound.”
Duration
Duration has to do with the length of sounds. Some sounds are short, just like the
chirping of birds or the sound of water droplets falling into a deep, empty can. Some
sounds are longer, like a ringing school bell or the sound of a carpenter’s saw cutting
through a piece of wood. Still other sounds go on and on and on, just like the siren of an
ambulance. Music is made up of combinations of long and short sounds.
Pitch
Pitch has to do with how high or low a sound is. There are sounds that have high pitch,
like the scream of a frightened girl or the sound of a policeman’s whistle. On the other
hand, the mooing of a cow and the horn blasts of a big ship leaving the pier has
somewhat low pitches. Music is made up of combinations of high and low pitches.
Intensity
When you describe sounds by how loud or how soft they are, you are talking about
intensity. A glass vase crashing to the ground produces a fairly loud sound. The horns
of cars and buses blowing in a traffic jam make even louder sounds. Whispers, on the
other hand, are soft, like giggles inside a quiet library. In music, intensity is better known
as an expressive element called dynamics.
All sounds have timbre, duration, pitch, and intensity. However, not all sounds are
musical sounds. Baby cries in the hospital nursery, as well as the horns of cars, trucks,
and jeeps on a busy street are not music. They are simply noise. It is when sounds are
organized and performed in a meaningful and purposeful way that they become “music.”
Before you take Self-Test II, make sure you have finished all the activities in this lesson.
Have you written answers in your notebook? Have all the boxes been checked?
Self-Test II [ ]
Match the items on Column A with the items on Column B by writing the correct
letter on the blank. Answers may be used more than once.
Check your answers using the Answer Key. Record your score in your notebook.
Perfect Score: 5 My Score: ________