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12 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Affective Response
The emotional response to a music piece.
Kinetic Response
The physical response to a music piece. Dancing, clapping, nodding, toe tapping.
Absolute Music
Music without any extra-musical association supplied by the composer. Music that has no words, nor reference to anything other than music. Ex. Symphony #12
Program Music
Any music that is meant to point to something outside itself (extra meaning/story behind it). Ex. Anything with a title behind it.
P’ansori
Popular 19th century genre of Korean traditional music, performance featuring satires and love stories. Has been known to be over eight hours long.
Synergism
When the total effect exceeds the sum of individual parts. Ex: When a rock concert mixes music with strobe lights, stage sets, and fog machines.
Solfege (Solfeggio)
Technique for the teaching of sight-singing in which each note of the score is sung to a special syllable. The seven syllables commonly used for this practice in English-speaking countries are: do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, and ti. Ex. Von Trappe Family Singers.
Abstract notation
Something that can be written down that can be used to symbolize something musical.
Abstract Staff Notation
Symbols used to represent music. Ex. The five-line staff notation of Western classical music
Tablature
Tells the player directly which finger to place + where to pluck
Cipher Notation
Uses numbers to denote which pitch on the scale should be performed
Neumes
General symbols of melodic motion and inflection. These looked more scribbles, or the inflection lines above romanized, tonal languages.