Across
- 3. reuse of a portion of a sound recording in another recording
- 5. section of a song that contains the main melodic ideas along with lyrical refrains that tend to be the same throughout
- 7. genre of music that originated in its modern form during the 1950s in the US and UK; during the 1950s and 1960s, pop referred to rock and roll and related styles but now is associated with music that is more commercial and accessible; characterized by repeated choruses, hooks, verse-chorus structure, and dance music/beats
- 10. songwriting structure built around two repeating sections: a verse section and a chorus section
Down
- 1. means of compressing a sound sequence into a very small file, to enable digital storage and transmission
- 2. culture and art movement and music genre that was created by African Americans, Latino Americans, and Caribbean Americans in the Bronx, New York City; characterized by beatboxing, percussive, rhythmic, and rhyming vocals, sampling, DJ-ing, rapping, and dance music/beats
- 4. device or facility for tuning something automatically, especially a piece of computer software that enables the correction of an out-of-tune vocal performance
- 6. musical form of vocal delivery that incorporates "rhyme, rhythmic speech, and street vernacular", which is performed or chanted in a variety of ways, usually over a backing beat or musical accompaniment
- 8. section of a song that has similar melodies and chord progressions on each repetition, but their lyrics are different
- 9. method of transmitting or receiving data (especially video and audio material) over a computer network as a steady, continuous flow, allowing playback to start while the rest of the data is still being received
