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Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form

Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

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Page 1: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Terms cont’d.

Harmony, Texture, and Form

Page 2: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Readings

• pp. 8-10 (harmony)

• pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture)

• pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Page 3: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Harmony

• Two or more pitches played at the same time

Page 4: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Harmony

• Key/Tonality - the idea of building a piece of music around a central or “home sound”

Page 5: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Harmony

• Consonance - stability. Pitch combinations that sound pleasant or stable

• Dissonance - instability. Pitch combinations that sound unpleasant or unstable

Page 6: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Harmony

• Scale - a series of pitches played in order from low to high or high to low.

• Major Scale - do re mi fa sol la ti do.The most common musical "menu" from which to choose pitches.

• Minor Scale - The scale with a darker quality, often times more emotional.

Page 7: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Harmony

• Drone - one repeated pitch among other changing pitches - more of a "folksy" quality.

Page 8: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Texture

• The interweaving of melody and harmony

Page 9: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Texture

• The interweaving of melody and harmony

• Monophonic - one unaccompanied melody • Homophonic - one melody with some type of

accompaniment (most common texture) • Polyphonic - two or more melodies at the same

time.May be with or without accompaniment. This is "the crowning achievement of Western Music".

Page 10: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Form

• Musical structure and design

Page 11: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Form

• Form. = formula; format = recipe.

Page 12: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Form

• Form can be followed by identifying repetition, variation, and contrast.

• Repetition - literal repeats of the same material. • Contrast - completely new material from the first

musical idea • Variation - when the original material is slightly

changed to create interest • The above three methods used in conjunction are

the methods used in achieving musical interest.

Page 13: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Form

• Theme - the tune in classical music.Not just repeated, but expanded and "developed"

Page 14: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Form

• Thematic development - when a theme is fragmented and used in different ways.

• Motive - a fragment of a melody.Very little piece that is recognizable, but not as long as a phrase.

• Sequence - the repetition of a motive at a higher or lower pitch.

• Ostinato - a short musical pattern that is repeated over and over as the basis of a musical composition.

Page 15: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Classic vs. Romantic

• Classic - form, symmetry, balance, emotional detachment.

• Adoration of the Magi by Botticelli• Death of Socrates by Jacques-Louis David

Page 16: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Adoration of the Magi

Page 17: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Death of Socrates

Page 18: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Classic vs. Romantic

• Romantic - freedom, emotion, drama, individual

• Meeting of Abraham and Melchizedek by Peter Paul Rubens

• Traveler Looking Over A Sea of Fog by Caspar David

Page 19: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Meeting of Abraham and Melchizedek

Page 20: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Traveler Looking Over A Sea of Fog

Page 21: Terms cont’d. Harmony, Texture, and Form. Readings pp. 8-10 (harmony) pp. 45; 24, 42, 55, 61, 67, 74, 89 (texture) pp. 56; 33, 45, 56 (form)

Common Practice Period

• 1600-1900

• Composers use the common language of “tonality”

• Music is written using a central key or “home sound”

• Can be both Classic and/or Romantic