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Treble Clef
Used for the higher sounding pitches. Also known as the G clef.
Bass Clef
Used for the lower sounding pitches. Also called F clef.
Alto Clef
used for viola and trombone to avoid excessive ledger lines: middle C is the center line
Tenor Clef
used for cello, trombone, bassoon and double bass: middle C is the fourth line from the bottom
Chromatic Scale
Includes all twelve notes of an octave.
Eharmonic Pitches
Different labels used for same pitch (Ex. A# and Cb)
Diatonic Scale
consists of seven whole and half steps whose patterns form 1 major and 3 minor scales
Leading Tone
7th scale degree
Tonic Pitch
first note of a scale
Dominant Pitch
fifth scale degree
Minor Third
3 half steps
Perfect Fourth
5 half steps
Augmented Fourth
6 half steps
Perfect Fifth
7 half steps
Major Sixth
9 half steps
Minor Sixth
8 half steps
Major Seventh
11 half steps
Octave
12 half steps
C Major Scale
C D E F G A B C
G Major Scale
G A B C D E F# G
Diminished Third
2 half steps
A Major Scale
A B C# D E F# G# A
Minor Scale
WHWWHWW
Major Scale
WWHWWWH
Harmonic Minor
The natural minor with a raised 7th scale degree
Relative Major and Minor
Major and minor keys which have the same key signature
Parallel Major and Minor
keys sharing the same tonic note
Blues Inflections
Combining the elements of both major and minor scales
Blues Scale
a major scale in which the 3rd, the 7th, and sometimes the 5th degrees are lowered
Melody
series of successive pitches that add up to a recognizable whole
Harmony/Counterpoint
when two or more tones are sounding simultaneously
Transposed Melody
Starts on a different note but keeps the sequence of intervals constant
Contour
how the melody moves up and down
Conjunct Melody
stepwise melodic movement using mostly whole and half steps
Disjunct Melody
melodic motion by leaps of large intervals
Tessitura
the range within which most notes lie
High tessitura
high pitch
Low tessitura
low pitch
Soprano
highest female voice
Alto
lowest female voice
Tenor
Highest male voice
Bass
lowest male voice
Rhythm
the way music is organized in time
Beat
steady pulse underlining most music
Tempo
speed of the beat
Allegro
fast tempo
Ritardando
slowing tempo
accelerando
increasing tempo
poco a poco
gradual speed up or slowing down of beat
subito
sudden speed up or slowing down of beat
Unmetered Music
When there is no steady or discernible tempo
rubato
tempo that speeds up or slows down for expressive effect
Measures/Bars
metric grouping of beats, notated on the musical staff with bar lines
Bar lines
Vertical lines used to organize the basic beat patterns
Downbeat
first beat of a measure; usually the strongest tone
Duple Meter
two beats per measure
Irregular Meter
asymmetrical groupings with different numbers of beats per measure
Most common meter
Quadruple meter
Pickup/Anacrusis
when the first word falls before the downbeat
Whole note
4 beats
Stem
line that can be added to a whole note
Half note
2 beats
Quarter note
1 beat
Eighth note
1/2 beat
Dot
adds half value to original value of the note
Tie
curved line that ties together notes of the same pitch
Rest note
Meaning silence
time signature
a musical notation indicating the number of beats to a measure and kind of note that takes a beat
6/8 time signature
6 eighth notes per measure
2/4 time signature
2 quarter notes per measure
Common time
4/4 time signature
Cut time
2/2 time signature
Simple subdivision
Division of beat into two equal parts
Compound subdivision
A division of the beat into three equal parts.
Mixed meter
measures with different meters that occur in rapid succession
Accent
indicates a note should receive a greater stress than those around it
Polymeter
two or more meters sounding simultaneously
Syncopated rhythm
when accented or emphasized
notes fall on weak beats, or in between beats.
Polyrhythm/cross-rhythm
when two conflicting rhythmic patterns are present simultaneously
Harmony
when two or more tones are playing simultaneously
common-practice tonality
The system of organizing pitch and harmony that we find intuitive today in Western cultures
Chord
Three or more notes of music played together.
triad
three note chord
Major triad
a major third interval between its two lower pitches and a minor third between the upper two pitches
Minor triad
a minor third on the bottom and a major third above
Diminished triad
two minor thirds
Augmented triad
two major thirds
root
lowest of the three notes
third
The middle note of the triad
fifth
The highest note in a triad
Root position
when the root is on the bottom of the chord
First inversion
Third of the chord is in the bottom.
Second inversion
Fifth of the chord is in the bottom
Inverted triads
The configuration of the top to bottom elements of a chord
Key
the set of seven notes on which a composition is based
Key signatures
Set of flats and sharps placed on the staff to indicate which notes should be performed at higher or lower pitches than their natural pitches on the staff.
Harmonic progression
series of chords that moves from dissonance to consonance
Dissonace
Unpleasant or unharmonious sound, tense
Consonance
pitches sounding agreeable and stable
Accidentals
Sharps, flats and naturals not in the key signature