Transcript Chapter Six

Chapter Six:
Vocal Melody
Basic Elements of Music
 Rhythm
 Melody
(pitch)
 Harmony
 Sound (timbre)
 Shape (form)
Symbols of written music
When a composer wants to put a piece of music down so others can
“read” it, she needs a system or code which indicates which pitches to
play. This code starts with the Staff--
Staff--5 line, 4 spaces
This is the treble clef
(another word for staff) and
is used to indicate higher
pitched notes. There is also
a bass clef for pitches in the
lower range.
Each line and space of the staff
corresponds with a pitch. The pitches are
named by the letters A-G (notice we start
over at G) so each line and space has a
letter name.
Lines and spaces named
Symbols of written music
When both clefs are used together, such as in piano music, the two
are called the Grand Staff
Grand Staff
The notes on the staff
correspond with the notes
played on instruments.
Scales
Scales are the way we organize music. Scales give the composer
the choice of notes from which to write a song. The scale below is
what we think of as “Do-Re-Mi” etc.
Western European Scales
Major
“Do-Re-Mi” is also
known as the major
scale in Western
music.
Minor
Diatonic Major Scale
The Western major scale (Do-Re-Mi) is also referred to as the
diatonic major scale. Here’s another example--
Melody
 An
organized succession of
pitches that forms a coherent
whole--usually (but not always)
based upon a scale.
Vocal Melody

Conjunct Motion


Moving from note to note without
leaps.
Disjunct Motion

Moving by leaps from note to note.
Minuet in G
Allegro (120mm)
Moderato (100mm)
Original tempo
Slower, for analysis
Parts of a Melody
 Phrase
Regular
 Irregular
 Ornamented

America, the Beautiful
words by Katharine Lee Bates melody by Samuel Ward
Phrase One
Phrase Two
Phrase Three
Phrase Four
O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain, (IC)
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain. (IC)
America! America!
God shed His grace on thee, (IC)
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea. (CC)
(Cadences in Red)
Melody
 Motive--Smallest
Sequence
 Repetition
 Rhythmic Motives

Unit of Melody
Minuet in G
Allegro (120mm)
Moderato (100mm)
Melody

Cadence--Musical punctuation dividing
music into two kinds of phrase endings>
• Incomplete cadence (IC)—makes
us feel the need to go on
• Complete cadence (CC)—makes
us feel as if we could or should stop
America, the Beautiful
words by Katharine Lee Bates melody by Samuel Ward
Phrase One
Phrase Two
Phrase Three
Phrase Four
O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain, (IC)
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain. (IC)
America! America!
God shed His grace on thee, (IC)
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea. (CC)
(Cadences in Red)
My Country Tis of Thee
Gregorian Chant

Monophonic Texture-- One melody sung
either by solo voice or a group (all singing
the same melody)
Haec Dies
Dominum
Hildegard von Bingen
http://www.healingchants.com/index.html
Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179)
Daughter of a noble family
Went to live in a monastic
community at 8 years of age
Took vows to become a
Benedictine Nun at age 18
Became Abbess of Disibode
Abbey in 1136 (age 38)
Hildegard von Bingen
When she was 42, she began dictating her
"visions" of:
-Music
-Art Works (Illuminations)
-Scriptural Commentaries
In her life she composed:
-77 musical settings
-Ordo Vertutum (morality play)
-De Sancta Maria
De sancta Maria
•Monophonic Texture
•Regular/Irregular Phrases
•Syllabic
•Melismatic
•Neumatic