SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Music
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
performing-arts
,
music
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Album conceived as an integrated whole - with interrelated songs arranged in a deliberate sequence.
Cakewalk
Classic blues
Chuck Berry
Concept album
2. A person who writes the words for songs
Jerry Lee Lewis
Boogie Woogie
A cappella
Lyricist
3. Pitched/unpitched - dynamic - timbre or tone color
Bessie Smith
sound
Beach Boys
The Rolling Stones
4. A musical genre that emerged in black communities of the Deep South-especially the region from the Mississippi Delta to East Texas-sometime around the end of the nineteenth century
Bob Dylan
Bessie Smith
Blues
Arranger
5. The first successful singing cowboy; born in Texas - He was a successful film star and a popular country and western musician. Helped establish the 'western' component of country and western music. Developed a style designed to reach out to a broader
Refrain
Electric Guitar
Gene Autry
Bel canto
6. American popular songs from the Tin Pan Alley style of songwriting that remain an essential part of the repertoire of today's jazz musicians and pop singers.
Bob Dylan
Crooning
Standards
Scat singing
7. A version of a previously recorded performance; often an adaptation of the original's style and sensibility - and usually aimed at cashing in on its success.
Cover version
Frank Sinatra
cadence
Standards
8. Chord - consonance - dissonance
Concept album
motive
Harmony
Chuck Berry
9. A theme that is elaborated on in a piece of music
motive
Ragtime
Countrypolitan
Brian Wilson
10. Brilliantly clever and articulate lyricist and songwriter - fine rock 'n' roll vocal stylist - and pioneering electric guitarist. One of the first black musicians to consciously forge his own R&B styles for appeal to the mass market. Also known for h
Motown
Chuck Berry
The Rolling Stones
Berry Gordy - Jr.
11. Host of the popular teen-oriented television show American Bandstand
Syncopation
Ragtime
George Gershwin
Dick Clark
12. Record company founded by Berry Gordy Jr. in Detroit.
Bob Dylan
Jerry Lee Lewis
Motown
Herman Parker
13. The principal medium for disseminating popular sings until the advent of recording in the 1890s.
Electronic recording
Sheet music
Tempo
Crooning
14. The 'Godfather of Soul.' He was known for his acrobatic physicality and remarkable charisma on stage. No other single musician has proven to be as influential on the sound and style of black music as James Brown.
James Brown
Brian Wilson
A cappella
Harmony
15. The most significant single figure to emerge in country music during the immediate post-World War II period. Williams wrote and sang many songs in the course of his brief career that were enormously popular with country audiences at the time; between
Rockabilly
Acoustic recording
Aretha Franklin
Hank Williams
16. Nickname for a stretch of 28th Street in New York City where music publishers had their offices—a dense hive of small rooms with pianos where composers and 'song pluggers' produced and promoted popular songs. The term - which evoked the clanging soun
Banjo
Tin Pan Alley
Louis Armstrong
Classic blues
17. The B section of AABA song form found in the refrain of a Tin Pan Alley song. The bridge presents new material: a new melody - chord changes - and lyrics.
Bridge
Crooning
Scott Joplin
Electric Guitar
18. Beat - meter - syncopation
Rhythm
Gene Autry
Beat
Banjo
19. Pianist - composer - arranger - and bandleader; widely regarded as one of the most important American musicians of the twentieth century. As a composer and arranger - he devised unusual musical forms - combined instruments in unusual ways - and creat
Patsy Cline
Duke Ellington
ASCAP
Ethel Merman
20. Country vocalist who scored crossover hits with songs such as 'I Fall to Pieces -' and 'Crazy -' both recorded in 1961.
Patsy Cline
cadence
Ragtime
urban folk
21. A short musical passage
Paul Whiteman
phrase
The Rolling Stones
Jerry Lee Lewis
22. Rock group from Liverpool - England - who dominated American popular music during the mid-1960s and started the 'British Invasion.' The band included John Lennon and George Harrison on lead and rhythm guitars and vocals - Paul McCartney on bass and v
Polyphonic
Berry Gordy - Jr.
Minstrel Show
The Beatles
23. Repeating section within a song - consisting of a fixed melody and lyrics repeated exactly - typically following one or more verses.
Chorus
Form
Janis Joplin
Sheet music
24. A guitarist and inventor - designed his own eight-track tape recorder and began in 1948 to release a series of popular recordings featuring his own playing - overdubbed to sound like an ensemble of six or more guitars.
ASCAP
Les Paul
Blues
Strophic
25. Rock group from Liverpool - England - who dominated American popular music during the mid-1960s and started the 'British Invasion.' The band included John Lennon and George Harrison on lead and rhythm guitars and vocals - Paul McCartney on bass and v
Form
soul music
The Beatles
12-bar Blues
26. A short musical passage
A cappella
The Rolling Stones
Lyrics
phrase
27. Bandleader for the most successful dance orchestra of the 1920s. He billed himself as the 'King of Jazz -' widened the market for jazz-based dance music - and paved the way for the Swing Era.
Paul Whiteman
Chuck Berry
Ragtime
Lyrics
28. The scale systems central to Western music; a series of pitches organized in a specific order of whole- and half-step intervals. The major scale can give music a feeling of openness and brightness - whereas a minor scale can give music the feeling of
Cover version
Major/Minor
Standards
sound
29. The words of a song.
Lyrics
Beach Boys
Chorus
The Supremes
30. Urban folk singer and songwriter; he took his stage name from his favorite poet - Dylan Thomas. His songs include hits such as 'Blowin' in the Wind -' 'Mr. Tambourine Man -' and 'Like a Rolling Stone.'
Big Band
Scott Joplin
Ballad
Bob Dylan
31. The B section of AABA song form found in the refrain of a Tin Pan Alley song. The bridge presents new material: a new melody - chord changes - and lyrics.
Elvis Presley
Bridge
Boogie Woogie
Classic blues
32. The most successful white blues singer of the 1960s. Born in Port Arthur - Texas - Joplin came to San Francisco in the mid-1960s and joined a band called Big Brother and the Holding Company.
Janis Joplin
Cover version
Bluegrass
Les Paul
33. The 'Godfather of Soul.' He was known for his acrobatic physicality and remarkable charisma on stage. No other single musician has proven to be as influential on the sound and style of black music as James Brown.
Tin Pan Alley
Cole Porter
Hook
James Brown
34. Black female vocal group who were featured artists with Motown Records in the 1960s. Their song 'You Can't Hurry Love' was a Number One hit in 1966.
Boogie Woogie
The Rolling Stones
Texture
The Supremes
35. The underlying pulse of a song or piece of music; a unit of rhythmic measure in music.
'The twist'
ASCAP
Beat
Harmony
36. The quality of a sound - sometimes called 'tone color.'
Timbre
Patsy Cline
George Gershwin
urban folk
37. A style rooted in the venerable southern string band tradition. It combines the banjo - fiddle - mandolin - dobro - guitar - and acoustic bass with a vocal style often dubbed the 'high - lonesome sound.' The pioneer of bluegrass music was Bill Monroe
Refrain
Bluegrass
'The twist'
Boogie Woogie
38. A style rooted in the venerable southern string band tradition. It combines the banjo - fiddle - mandolin - dobro - guitar - and acoustic bass with a vocal style often dubbed the 'high - lonesome sound.' The pioneer of bluegrass music was Bill Monroe
Tempo
Bluegrass
Producer
ASCAP
39. Clarinetist and popular band leader; known as the 'King of Swing.' His popularity and the success of his band helped establish the swing era in the early 1930s. He was the first white bandleader to hire black musicians in his band
Tin Pan Alley
Benny Goodman
Cover version
Paul Whiteman
40. A musical rhythm accenting a normally weak beat
Louis Armstrong
Concept album
Syncopation
Big Band
41. A memorable musical phrase or riff.
Bel canto
Hook
motive
Form
42. African American composer and pianist; the best-known composer of ragtime music. Between 1895 and 1915 - Joplin composed many of the classics of the ragtime repertoire and helped popularize the style through his piano arrangements - published as shee
Elvis Presley
Irving Berlin
Scott Joplin
Verse
43. Popularly known as the 'Mother of the Blues -' was the first of the great women blues singers and had a direct influence on Bessie Smith.
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
44. American popular songs from the Tin Pan Alley style of songwriting that remain an essential part of the repertoire of today's jazz musicians and pop singers.
Boogie Woogie
Bob Dylan
Electric Guitar
Standards
45. Founded in 1914 in an attempt to force all business establishments that featured live music to pay fees ('royalties') for the public use of music.
Race Records
Lyricist
Diana Ross
ASCAP
46. The first form of musical and theatrical entertainment to be regarded by European audiences as distinctively American in character. Featured mainly white performers who artificially blackened their skin and carried out parodies of African American mu
Tempo
Minstrel Show
Payola
AABA form
47. Called the 'Empress of the Blues -' She was born in Chattanooga - Tennessee - and performed in traveling shows and vaudeville before embarking on a recording career with Columbia Records. Her recordings include W. C. Handy's 'St. Louis Blues' and Irv
Bessie Smith
sound
Arranger
Classic blues
48. Teen-oriented rock 'n' roll song using a twelve-bar blues structure; it celebrated a simple - hip-swiveling dance step.
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
49. A guitar whose sound comes chiefly from electro-magnetic amplification The pioneer of electric blues guitar was Aaron T-Bone Walker - whose urban blues recordings just after World War II were extremely popular - Les Paul created
Rhythm
Electric Guitar
12-bar Blues
Boogie Woogie
50. Popularly known as the 'Mother of the Blues -' was the first of the great women blues singers and had a direct influence on Bessie Smith.
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183