Introduction to Music Final Exam
Across
- 4. Returning or refrain played by the full orchestral ensemble.
- 5. A musical composition in multiple movements for solo instrument, usually accompanied by the piano.
- 7. Presents primary themes and keys of the movement.
- 10. Composing music using a series of values assigned to musical elements such as pitch, duration, and dynamics.
- 12. Non-traditional methods of singing or of playing musical instruments employed to obtain unusual sounds or timbre.
- 16. No instruments
- 18. Music that lacked a tonal center.
- 20. Speak singing.
- 21. Instrumental music that represents something extra musical such as the words of a poem.
- 23. Texts that remain the same for every mass.
- 25. The momentary speeding up or slowing down of the tempo within a melody line.
Down
- 1. A famous melody that appears in all five movements of Berlios's Symphonie fantastique to represent the beloved from the program.
- 2. Brings back the primary themes and home key of the movement.
- 3. Musical chord comprising at least three adjacent tones in a scale.
- 6. Used by renaissance composers to represent poetic images musically.
- 8. Fascination with the other.
- 9. A musical piece for several solo voices set to a short poem.
- 11. A continuous slide upward or downward between two notes.
- 13. Develops the primary themes of the movement.
- 14. The practice of directly quoting another work in a new composition.
- 15. Music with one melodic line that may be performed by one or many individuals at the same time.
- 17. Monophonic a cappella music most often sung in worship
- 19. A composition setting a poem to music, generally for one solo voice and piano accompaniment.
- 22. A motif or phrase that persistently repeats in the same musical voice, frequently in the same pitch.
- 24. Sung solo.