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12 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Affective Response
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The emotional response to a music piece.
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Kinetic Response
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The physical response to a music piece. Dancing, clapping, nodding, toe tapping.
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Absolute Music
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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
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Program Music
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Any music that is meant to point to something outside itself (extra meaning/story behind it). Ex. Anything with a title behind it.
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P’ansori
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Popular 19th century genre of Korean traditional music, performance featuring satires and love stories. Has been known to be over eight hours long.
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Synergism
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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.
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Solfege (Solfeggio)
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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.
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Abstract notation
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Something that can be written down that can be used to symbolize something musical.
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Abstract Staff Notation
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Symbols used to represent music. Ex. The five-line staff notation of Western classical music
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Tablature
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Tells the player directly which finger to place + where to pluck
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Cipher Notation
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Uses numbers to denote which pitch on the scale should be performed
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Neumes
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General symbols of melodic motion and inflection. These looked more scribbles, or the inflection lines above romanized, tonal languages.
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