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Test your basic knowledge |
CSET Domain 2 Performing Arts Music
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
cset
,
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. Symphonic poem (orchestral work that portrayed a story) and concert overture (e.g. - Rossini's William Tell). Emphasis was on the sonata and symphony - and included the introduction of dissonance to create emotion; featuring virtuoso performers
Musical analysis
Consonance
Romantic Period (1820-1900) music Genres
Pizzicato
2. Music offers a valuable opportunity to build active listening skills - shape the cognitive and mental processes in children - enhance other subject areas - particularly visual art - form of therapy that offers a unique medium for self - expression
Implications for teaching music in the classroom
Strong
Elements of music notation
Percussion
3. Make higher - pitched sounds - small in size
Violin and viola
Tempo
Piano - harpsichord - and organ
Orchestra
4. The structure of a song in which the first section of a simple ternary form is repeated
Song form
Note values
Translative skills
Chord
5. Music played by 1-20 performers
Chamber music
Style of music
Motif
Second rondo
6. Includes any instrument that produces a sound when it is being hit - shaken - rubbed - or scraped - e.g. tambourine - maracas - castanets - claves - xylophone - timpani - cymbals - gong - triangle - bass drum - chimes - celesta - bells - wood block -
Playing instruments
Creative skills
Musical analysis
Percussion
7. A type of German song
A classical symphony
Reed
Lied
Romantic Period (1820-1900) music Genres
8. ABACA
Lied
Brass
Opus
Second rondo
9. Ttwo other string instruments that are not considered part of the string section of the orchestra; they are often plucked rather than bowed
Harp and guitar
120
Third rondo
Rhythm
10. Hearing a note and being able to reproduce it either vocally or with an instrument
Chamber music
Tempo
Romantic Period (1820-1900) Opera
Pitch
11. Several notes sounded together
Chord
Symphony orchestra's string section
Tempo
Music
12. Orchestra gained in importance; increasing use of flutes and oboes; string and wind sections developed; by the 1800s - trombones were introduced; refinement of sonata (instrumental music with a soloist and standard structure for opening movement); de
Classical Era (1750-1820) music
Song form
Implications for teaching music in the classroom
Rhythm
13. System of writing music - came in the 12th century
Oratorio
Song form
Conducting
Notation
14. The combination of tones that produces a quality of tension
changing the harmony
Translative skills
Oboe and bassoon
Dissonance
15. Staff - Clef - Measure and bar lines - Note values - Time signature/meter - Scale
Implications for teaching music in the classroom
Lyre
Elements of music notation
Oratorio
16. Middle Ages/Medieval Music style - named after Pope Gregory I - was a melody set to sacred Latin texts. This monophonic style music (one melodic line and no accompaniment) was the official music of the Roman Catholic church
Gregorian chant
Consonance
Brass
Oratorio
17. A major orchestral piece with solo voices and chorus
A classical symphony
Creative skills
Musical Developments of Baroque Era (1600-1750)
Oratorio
18. The faster the ________ - the higher the pitch
Classical style music elements
Vibration
Lied
Pizzicato
19. A way to measure rhythmic units - It is noted at the beginning of a composition and looks like a mathematical fraction - The top number denotes the number of beats in a measure and the bottom number denotes what type of note will receive the beat
Second rondo
Time signature/meter
Harp and guitar
changing the harmony
20. Moving to music is a learned skill that promotes acuity of perceptions - A wide range of music and modes should be used
Body movement
changing the harmony
Musical Developments of Baroque Era (1600-1750)
Tone
21. If the tempo is fast - the mood of the music changes to reflect more...
Translative skills
Timbre
Energy - aggression - or vitality
Chromatic scale
22. Hearing the sounds of music - Children engage in attentive listening and further develop aural acuity - This means that children must be able to hear and reproduce the tones of music in their minds when no sound is actually being produced
Vibration
Auditory skills
Body movement
Harmony
23. Produce low - rich sounds - large in size
Music
Cello and double bass
Famous classical era musicians
Musical Developments of Baroque Era (1600-1750)
24. A large section of a lengthy composition
Italian terms that define tempo
Singing
Music notation
Movement
25. Even young children can experience elements of music through conducting speech chants - involving changes in tempo - dynamics - pitch - and so forth - Conducting fosters sensitivity to musical expression
Pitch changes
Fugue
Conducting
Third rondo
26. Whether the pitch of a particular note is played in tune - sharp (higher) - or flat (lower)
Syncopation
Music notation
Pitch changes
Intonation
27. Based upon a short theme called a subject - The ____ subject contains both rhythmic and melodic motifs - The opening of the ____ is announced by one voice alone - A second voice then restates the subject - usually on a different scale - A third and t
Modern era music
Middle Ages/Medieval Music styles/elements
A classical symphony
Fugue
28. The organization of sound in time
Pitch
Rondo
Music
Conducting
29. String - woodwind - brass - percussion - keyboard - and electronic
Chamber music
Singing
6 broad categories of musical instruments
Clef
30. Traditionally made of wood - metal - plastic - or some combination thereof - These instruments consist of narrow pipes with an opening at the bottom end and a mouthpiece at the top (and holes throughout the pipe) - The smaller woodwinds play higher p
Woodwinds
Consonance
Metronome
Third rondo
31. Most marches are performed at a rate of ____ beats per minute
Third rondo
Time signature/meter
120
Romantic Period (1820-1900) music
32. Two or more melodic lines - appeared at the end of the 12th century
Polyphonic style
Second rondo
Chord
Chromatic scale
33. When you play several different notes at the same time on a piano - you are using harmony - You can change how music sounds by...
Harmony
Violin and viola
changing the harmony
Rondo
34. A musical form whose main feature is the return of the main theme - which alternates with secondary themes
Consonance
Time signature/meter
Rondo
Classical style music elements
35. The volume or intensity of a tone - Music can be played loudly (forte) or softly (piano)
Dissonance
Musical styles/elements of Baroque Era (1600-1750)
Dynamics
Intonation
36. Puccini (Italian) and his operas Madama Butterfly and La Boh
Notation
Modern era music
Musical intrument categories used by symphony orchestras
Music notation
37. String instruments are usually played with a bow - but they may also be plucked (________)
Pizzicato
Reed
Movement
Lower
38. Some of the mouthpieces are made up of a thin piece of wood - called a...
Symphony
Sonata
Reed
Clarinet - saxophone - oboe - and bassoon
39. An instrumental ensemble composed of strings - woodwinds - brass - and percussion
Orchestra
Musical styles/elements of Baroque Era (1600-1750)
Syncopation
Tone
40. When utilized as part of an orchestra - the ______________ are sometimes included in the percussion family - Often - when used as a solo instrument - they are referred to as the keyboard family
Translative skills
changing the harmony
Dynamics
Piano - harpsichord - and organ
41. Composers Chopin - Liszt - Berlioz - Mendelssohn - and Schumann; style was expressive - melody prominent - and folk music was used to express cultural identity
Romantic Period (1820-1900) music
6 broad categories of musical instruments
Chord
Harmony
42. An ancient harp
Gregorian chant
Syncopation
Pitch
Lyre
43. Homophony (a single melodic line and an accompaniment); simpler textures and melodies; expansion of textures - melodies - and variation. String quartet (two violins viola - and cello); Haydn 'the father' of the string quartet; orchestral symphony (or
Lyre
Singing
Symphony orchestra's string section
Classical style music elements
44. (Staves) - A set of five horizontal lines and four spaces - This is where notes are positioned - The higher the note on a staff - the higher the pitch
Conducting
Chromatic scale
Staff
Style of music
45. Influence of blues (sorrowful black folk music) and jazz (roots in African rhythms and harmonies with modern instrumentation - improvisation - and syncopation) - Rock 'n' roll - R&B (rhythm and blues) - country - folk (cultural link - passed on by wo
Classical style music elements
Symphony orchestra's string section
Syncopation
Modern era - new genres
46. Rebellion; unique sounds; usage of technology; electronic; difficult to quantify; nationalism; folk idiom was prevalent (e.g. - in Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody - Coplan's Appalachian Spring); widening gap between 'art' and popular music (Beatles) - Pol
Note values
Timpani
Modern Era (1900s) Evolution in the musical world
Playing instruments
47. A rhythmic effect produced when the expected rhythmic pattern is deliberately upset
Clarinet and saxophone
Syncopation
Note values
Musical styles/elements of Baroque Era (1600-1750)
48. The sound produced by an individual instrument or singer - Each family of instruments and type of instrument is distinct from all others
Famous classical era musicians
Reed
Tone
Energy - aggression - or vitality
49. The combination of tones that produces a quality of relaxation
Romantic Period (1820-1900) music
Consonance
Clef
Orchestra
50. Use a double reed made of two pieces joined together
Implications for teaching music in the classroom
Oboe and bassoon
Pitch changes
Body movement