S2 Scottish Music Revision
Across
- 2. A singer/ singers do not have instruments playing along with them
- 6. two or more players/ singers performing the same melody together
- 8. Another name for a ceilidh band (8,5,4)
- 10. A long stick with horsehair used by a fiddle
- 14. A Scottish hand held drum played with a double-ended beater
- 15. A Scottish instrument with bellows, a keyboard and buttons for the chords
- 19. A Scottish dance which is fast, with 4 beats in a bar
- 20. A Scottish dance which is a moderate speed, with 4 beats in a bar; may be used to walk to in a parade
- 21. A Scottish dance which is a moderate speed, with 4 beats in a bar, dotted rhythms and Scotch snaps
- 23. An Italian word used in music to mean getting gradually faster
- 24. A Scottish instrument with four strings and a bow
- 26. A plucked string instrument with a round body
- 29. a style of pop music particularly popular in Scotland from the 1980s onwards (5,3)
- 30. A style of music with electric guitars and drumkit which draws on traditional Scottish music (6,4)
- 31. A Scottish instrument with a mouthpipe, a chanter, three drone pipes and a bag
Down
- 1. A singer/ singers have instruments playing along with them
- 3. A group of pipers and drummers performing together (4,4)
- 4. an electronic keyboard with a vast array of sampled sounds
- 5. A musical term meaning to slide from one note to another
- 7. A player/ singer has the main melody by themselves
- 9. An Italian word used in music to mean getting gradually louder
- 11. A Scottish dance which is slow, with 3 beats in a bar
- 12. A Scottish dance which is fast and in 6/8 (compound time)
- 13. Two or more performers in a group performance
- 16. These are what the buttons play on an accordion
- 17. A Scottish instrument which resembles a recorder
- 18. Small, short, decorative notes in a melody
- 22. A band performing traditional Scottish music, which usually features a singer/ singers (8,4,5)
- 25. Two players and/ or singers performing together
- 27. A long held note, or the name given to the long pipes in bagpipes which play fixed pitches
- 28. A Scottish rhythm which features in Strathspeys (6,4)