Elements of Music
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Transcript Elements of Music
Elements of
Music
Harmony
Two or more notes together
Chord – three or more notes at one
time
Triad – A three note chord
Form
Binary – AB form; music has two sections
Form – The way music is arranged
Call and Response – Soloist sings, then
congregation repeats or echoes what the
soloist sang. (Originated in Africa)
ABA – Ternary form; music has three
sections – the “A” section is played twice
Rhythm
The way music is arranged in time or
organized into beats
Time signature – (Also known as
meter) 2/4, ¾ , 4/4
4/4 – The top number tells you how
many beats are in each measure. The
bottom number tells you what kind of
note gets the beat.
Rhythm Continued
Duration – How long a note is held or
played
Whole note = 4 beats
Half note = 2 beats
Quarter note = 1 beat
Eighth note = ½ beat
Sixteenth note = ¼ beat
Dot – Adds half of the note’s original value
Melody
One note at a time
The tune of a song
Sharp (#) – Raises a pitch one half step
Flat (b) – Lowers a pitch one half step
Phrase – A musical sentence
Grand Staff – The bass and treble clef on
the two separate staffs, but are connected.
Usually used with piano music.
Tempo
How fast or slow the music is
Allegro- A fast tempo
Moderato – A medium tempo
Largo – A slow tempo
Dynamics
How loud or soft the music is.
Pianissimo (pp) – very soft
Piano (p) – soft
Mezzo piano (mp) – medium soft
Mezzo forte (mf) – medium loud
Forte (f) – Loud
Fortissimo (ff) – Very loud
Dynamics Continued
Crescendo – gradually get louder
Decrescendo – gradually get softer
Timbre
How different instruments and voices
sound different from each other.
Woodwind Family
Clarinet
Piccolo
Flute
Oboe
Bassoon
Saxophone
Brass Family
Trumpet
Tuba
French Horn
Baritone
Trombone
String Family
Violin
Viola
Cello
Bass
(Piano, harp)
Percussion
Snare drum
Xylophone
Cymbals
Triangle
Bass drum
Marimba
Piano
Voice
Soprano – Highest female voice
Alto – Lowest female voice
Tenor – Highest male voice
Bass – Lowest male voice
Open Response Question
List two elements that you think are
the most important
– What does list mean?
Open Response, Part B
Explain why these two elements are
important. Give at least two examples
of each
– What does explain mean?
– How many examples is it asking for?
Open Response, Part C
Compare and Contrast these two
elements. What would music be like if
these two elements did not exist?
– What does compare and contrast mean?
– Describe what music would be like if
these elements did not exist.