ELEMENTS OF MUSIC A FURTHER LOOK INTO HOW

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ELEMENTS OF MUSIC A FURTHER LOOK INTO HOW MUSIC WORKS

ELEMENTS OF MUSIC A FURTHER LOOK INTO HOW MUSIC WORKS

BELL RINGER: • Place backpacks under tables and bring class materials to chairs. •

BELL RINGER: • Place backpacks under tables and bring class materials to chairs. • List the 8 elements of music we learned about at the beginning of the year. • Can you define all of them?

VOCABULARY LIST • The first 8 words you should already know. • You are

VOCABULARY LIST • The first 8 words you should already know. • You are responsible for learning the definitions and correct spellings of all the terms listed. • We will have a quiz next Wednesday 11/18 on these.

HEARING DISSONANT AND CONSONANT • These two types of sounds work together to create

HEARING DISSONANT AND CONSONANT • These two types of sounds work together to create a harmonic narrative. • Too many consonant (stable) sounds make a song shallow. • Too many dissonant (unstable) sounds can lose or irritate listeners. • Great music mixes the two together and alternates them back and forth. • Listen to this example- When you hear a dissonant or unpleasant sound raise your hand.

ARTICULATION • This is the diction of music performance. • In order to contrast

ARTICULATION • This is the diction of music performance. • In order to contrast with one another, performers must be creative and have a variety or ways to start and end notes. • If you were acting in a play, how would you create these impressions for the audience in the voice of your character? How would you create these musical illusions using articulations? • Power, grace, momentum, shocking, stable, mysterious • Let’s listen to a range of articulations.

PHRASING • Phrasing is the shaping and grouping of notes into coherent ideas. •

PHRASING • Phrasing is the shaping and grouping of notes into coherent ideas. • Everyone can hear music and recognize great melodies, but fewer listeners can hear detailed phrasing created by the performer. • Classical musicians record the same pieces by Mozart and others and create a unique performance through phrasing.

PHRASING • Music v. writing • Articulation v. word • Phrase v. Sentence or

PHRASING • Music v. writing • Articulation v. word • Phrase v. Sentence or paragraph • Song/movement v. Chapter • Album/symphony/set list v. novel

LISTENING COMPARISON • Compare the articulation and phrasing of these famous cello players all

LISTENING COMPARISON • Compare the articulation and phrasing of these famous cello players all interpreting Bach’s Cello Suite No. 1 • • • Yo-Yo Ma Mstislav Rostapovich Mischa Maisky

HARMONY • When 3 or more notes sound simultaneously, they are called a chord.

HARMONY • When 3 or more notes sound simultaneously, they are called a chord. • There are many types of complex chords, but the 5 primary ones are… • • • Major- bright, happy, resolved, stable, triumphant, peaceful • Let’s listen: Can you hear the chord qualities changing in the example? Minor- dark, sad, emotional, melancholy, defeated Dominant- moving, aggressive, unstable, waiting, urgent Diminished- troubled, dangerous, looming, urgent Augmented- mysterious, spacey, angst, unnatural

CHORD PROGRESSIONS • Think of melodies as characters in our mind and harmony/chord progressions

CHORD PROGRESSIONS • Think of melodies as characters in our mind and harmony/chord progressions as the tools that set the mood and light the stage. • Without harmony, melodies seem alone. • Without melodies, chord progressions can push the listener into a personal or introspective mood driven by the chords. • Listen to this chord progression, does the chord progression, does it change your mood?

GOOD MORNING! • Place all backpacks/bags under tables and bring class materials to your

GOOD MORNING! • Place all backpacks/bags under tables and bring class materials to your chair. • Turn in your written vocabulary homework BEFORE THE BELL RINGS. • Please take a crossword puzzle and begin to work on this for the first 10 minutes of class. You may use your vocab list, but see what you can do on your own! • Please also take a fill-in-the-blank worksheet, we will complete this later in class.

PITCH • Pitch is a very important concept in music to understand. • Listen

PITCH • Pitch is a very important concept in music to understand. • Listen to the reading and fill-in-the-blanks on your pitch worksheet. • Take-Aways… • What does pitch describe? • What is usually the most important pitch or note? • What instrument tunes the orchestra? On what note? • Which instruments have the hardest time tuning?

LISTENING QUIZ Example 1 = Heromobile Example 2 = Cloud Mountain Wave Runner Example

LISTENING QUIZ Example 1 = Heromobile Example 2 = Cloud Mountain Wave Runner Example 3 = Welcome to Aqua Spa Example 4 = Caves of Saturn Each song will be played twice originally, then once more after all have been played. It would be helpful to take notes on all of the songs to help remember their feautres.

ANSWERS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Heromobile Caves of Saturn Cloud Mountain Wave

ANSWERS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Heromobile Caves of Saturn Cloud Mountain Wave Runner Welcome to Aqua Spa Heromobile

GOOD MORNING! • Bring necessary class items to your seat and place backpacks and

GOOD MORNING! • Bring necessary class items to your seat and place backpacks and purses under the tables. • Take out your Current Events assignment. We will share these at the beginning of class.

LISTENING… • Listen to the excerpt and write a short story based on what

LISTENING… • Listen to the excerpt and write a short story based on what you hear, using the following prompt. • “I sat down for dinner with my family, when suddenly…”

RHYTHM • Vocabulary: • Meter – how the beats are grouped together • Tempo

RHYTHM • Vocabulary: • Meter – how the beats are grouped together • Tempo – how fast or slow the music is • Syncopation – accenting an off-beat • Note value – how long to hold out a note

RHYTHM: NOTE VALUES • Whole note = 4 beats • Half note = 2

RHYTHM: NOTE VALUES • Whole note = 4 beats • Half note = 2 beats • Quarter note = 1 beat • Eighth note = ½ beat • Sixteenth note = ¼ beat • Thirty-second note = 1/8 beat

RHYTHM MATH • Quarter note • + quarter note = 2 beats What note

RHYTHM MATH • Quarter note • + quarter note = 2 beats What note value is 2 beats? • Half note + half note = 4 beats • What note value is 4 beats? • Eighth note + eighth note = 1 beat • What note value is 1 beat?

TIME SIGNATURE • Top note always tells you how many beats per measure. •

TIME SIGNATURE • Top note always tells you how many beats per measure. • Bottom note always tells you what note gets the beat. • 4 = quarter note • 2 = half note