1 / 19

GCSE Music Revision 2014

GCSE Music Revision 2014. Exam Overview. 90 minutes Based on the 12 set works Divided into 2 sections: A and B Section A (8 questions. 68 Marks in total) Section B (1 question. 12 Marks in total) . Section A – You will be required to identify:. Melodic Devices Ornamentation Ostinato

stash
Télécharger la présentation

GCSE Music Revision 2014

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GCSE Music Revision 2014

  2. Exam Overview • 90 minutes • Based on the 12 set works • Divided into 2 sections: A and B • Section A (8 questions. 68 Marks in total) • Section B (1 question. 12 Marks in total)

  3. Section A – You will be required to identify: Melodic Devices • Ornamentation • Ostinato • Riffs • Use of Imitation • Pedal Point • Sequences • Rhythmic Devices • Syncopation • Swung rhythms • Dotted Rhythms • Triplets • Time signatures • Instruments • Differences between extracts Musical Elements • Pitch • Duration • Dynamics • Tempo • Timbre • Texture • Structure • Major, minor, modal, chromatic and pentatonic scales /tonalities • Context of composition

  4. Section A – You will be required to: • Complete short exercises of melody and/or rhythm • Describe the historic & stylistic background to the actual set work • Relate a given extract to the context of Music History • Justify opinions on music hard using appropriate vocabulary(e.g. I dislike this music due to the lack of melody & irregular rhythms)

  5. Section B (12 Marks) • You will choose one question from a choice of two • Section B is based on one set work • You will first be asked to place the set work in a wider context, for example: • In which country was this piece of music composed? • What style is this piece of music written in?

  6. Section B (12 Marks) • You will then be asked a question which encourages you to demonstrate a more in-depth knowledge of the set work’s musical features, including: • Structure • Tonality • Texture • Instrumentation • Dynamics • Tempo • Melody • Rhythm • Technology

  7. Set Works Summary 2014

  8. Area of Study 1: Handel: Chorus: And the Glory of the Lord from the Messiah • Organ can be heard on the first note. There is no harpsichord. • Textures – monophony, Imitation, Homophonic ending • Vocal writing – use of melodies, counterpoint • Voice types – SATB • “Doctrine of Affection” – it’s a joyful piece, one mood throughout • Dynamics – terraced – they build up • Baroque – historical placement and basic features. • Oratorio – definition • Type of instrumental ensemble (small orchestral group with strings at the heart)

  9. Area of Study 1: Mozart: 1st Movement from Symphony No. 40 in G Major • Symphony – definition, placement of the extract • Orchestra – which instrument is missing? • Instrumentation • Sonata form in some detail – identify sections aurally • Key/tonality/harmony – know the importance, not necessarily be able to identify • Textures • Dynamics • Classical – historical placement and basic features • Notation question • Cadences – all four

  10. Area of Study 1: Chopin: Prelude No. 15 in D Flat Major, Op. 28 • Importance of piano writing in the romantic period • Techniques eg. pedal, sostenuto/cantabile writing • Romantic - historical placement and basic features • Rubato • Virtuosity • Pedal note • Why “raindrop” – refer to features in the music • Key/tonality of the section heard in the exam • mood • Pitch/dynamic range

  11. Area of Study 2: A Schoenberg: Peripetie from Five Orchestral Pieces, Op 16 • Hexachords – a 6 note idea which can be used horizontally or vertically • Klangfarbenmelodie – melodic line snakes through the parts • Hauptestimme – principal voice and Nebenstimme – secondary voice • Transformation of the hexachord • Texture/timbre – contrasts and combinations, spot families of instruments • 20th Century orchestra • Structure – not aurally obvious, but initial horn theme comes back • Elements of music • Background to serialism to give context • Expressionism

  12. Area of Study 2: L Bernstein: Something’s Coming from Westside Story • Song from a musical • Based on Romeo and Juliet • This song is sung by Tony • Mood of anticipation and optimism –how is this created? • Orchestra • Use of rhythm - syncopation • Jazz/Latin influence – WCM orchestra • Use of tritone • Structure (could fill in the blanks) • Possible melodic dictation • Ostinato/bass riff • Changing meter • Blue notes

  13. Area of Study 2: S Reich: 3rd Movement (fast) from Electric Counterpoint • Minimalism techniques – note addition, layering, resultant melody (you hear something not really played), ostinatos, phasing (not really in this piece – more of a canon.) • Why “Electric Counterpoint” ? • Instrumentation • Texture • Tonality – diatonic, quite static, ambiguous at the start Gmajor ? E minor?? E minor when the bass starts, moves to C minor and back to E minor. • Time signature.

  14. Area of Study 3: M Davis: All Blues from the album Kind of Blue • Meter – 6/4 (there will be a multiple choice question) • Drums played with brushes • Chord sequence – 12 bar blues with links, altered chord in 3rd line 7 #9 has major and minor 3rd simultaneously. • Texture • Riff in bass and piano • Spot the instrument • Use of trumpet mute • Improvisation • Structure • Tonality – modal • Head arrangement • C7 could be described as Gm7 ambiguous • Vocab – head, changes, front line. rhythm section, improvisation • General question about 5 elements of music, and development from blues • Where might you hear this? • Where has it come from? Influences? • Piano style – comping/vamping, not accompanying

  15. Area of Study 3: J Buckley: Grace from the album Grace • Meter 6/8 • Structure • Use of effects • Drop D tuning allows easier power chords (bar over bottom 3 strings). Just tune bottom string down to D rather than the usual E • Alternative rock • Use of power chords with deliberate dissonance from upper 3 strings, goes with the chorus lyric “wait in fire” • Guitar techniques – pull-offs, string bending, slurs, hammer-ons, string bending, slides. • Repeated riff – up 2 frets followed by a power chord

  16. Area of Study 3: Moby: Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad? From the album Play • Use of effects – Reverb (used to create distance), compression, EQ, delay • Structure - breakdown • Texture (opening, build up, end) • Use of samples – not cleaned up, background noise adds to emotion • Chord sequence

  17. Area of Study 4: Capercaillie: Skye Waulking Song • Folk/pop fusion • Instruments – names and how played (eg blown, plucked) How does instrumentation change through the structure • Vocals – Gaelic – type of voice • What is a Waulking song? Traditionally has call and response telling story/gossip/news. Not allowed to repeat more than 1 line, so nonsense syllables give time to think. • Use of nonsense syllables • Legend/story • Structure - Intro, verses, solo, fade • Complete chord sequence for a question • Tonality – ambiguous at start, major with modal feel • Texture – heterophonic, v slight differences, starts v. thin with gradual build as instruments join • Purpose of song – how does the music fit this? • Describe the tempo • Instrumental techniques eg violin at start • identify meter – multiple choice • Mood – sad

  18. Area of Study 4: Rag Desh • Instrumentation – sarod (plucked), sarangi (bowed), tabla, cymbals, Pakhanaj (double headed drum). • Vocal style – ornamented, bending notes • Different sections – recognise chracteristics • Rag deshis the tonality • Tal • Order of instrumental entries • Use of drone • Contextual placement • Comparison of 3 rags (section A question)

  19. Area of Study 4: Koko: Yiri • Texture – compare the introduction to the rest • Instrumentation – spot the instrument • Possible spot the rhythm questions • Oral tradition/master drummer • Repetition/ostinato (probably a sentence completion question) • Purpose • Melody • Call and response • What is Balfan doing at the start ? = Improvising • Rhythmic devices – polyrhythms, syncopation

More Related