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UNIT 13 - FORM AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson

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Page 1: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

UNIT 13 - FORMAP Music Theory

Mr. Jackson

Page 2: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Motives

The smallest identifiable musical idea. Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the

same time.

Page 3: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Phrases

Phrase – a relatively independent musical idea terminated by a cadence.

Subphrase – a distinct portion of a phrase. It is not a phrase because it is not terminated by a cadence or because it is too short to be relatively independent.

Page 4: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Period Forms

Phrases are combined to form larger structural units called periods.

Period - Two phrases in an antecedent -consequent relationship.

Antecedent: (Question) – Less conclusive cadenceConsequent: (Answer) – More conclusive cadence

Page 5: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Period Forms (cont.)

Phrase endings in a period MUST be different.

Relationship is established by the second phrase ending in a stronger cadence than the first phrase.

Page 6: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Repeated Phrases.

Both phrases are identical.

The result is a repeated phrase, not a period.

Page 7: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Parallel Period

• Parallel Period- both phrases begin with similar or identical material, even if the material is embellished.

• Phrases are labeled using small letters.

_________Parallel Period_________ _____________ _____________

a a’ HC PAC

Page 8: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Contrasting period

Contrasting period- a period where the phrase beginnings are not similar.

________Contrasting Period_______ _____________ _____________

a b HC PAC

Page 9: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Three Phrase Period

• Has 3 different phrases

(2 antecedent, 1 consequent) or (1 antecedent and 2 consequent)

Page 10: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Double period

4 phrases in 2 pairs. The cadence at end of 2nd pair is stronger than 1st pair.

______Antecedent______ ______Consequent______ (period) (period) _________ _________ _________ _________ phrase phrase phrase phrase

HC PAC, IAC

IAC PAC

Page 11: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Double Periods cont.

A Double Period is either Parallel or Contrasting.

Parallel: If melodic material that begins the two halves of the double period is similar.

Contrasting: If melodic material that begins the 2 halves is not similar.

Page 12: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Double Periods cont.

______________Parallel Double Period_______________ _______Antecedent______ _______Consequent_____ __________ __________ _________ __________ a b a b’

HC HC HC PAC

Page 13: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Double Periods cont.

_____________Contrasting Double Period_____________ _______Antecedent______ _______Consequent_____ __________ __________ _________ __________ a b c b’

HC HC HC PAC

Page 14: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Phrase Extension An extended phrase is one whose length has been increased through the elongation of it. Phrases may be extended by a few beats or up to twice their normal length. The extensions may be near the beginning, middle, or end. In all cases, the phrase would be just fine without these extensions.

Beginning Extension – Phrase extended near the beginning.

Internal Extension – Small melodic group repeated in the middle of the phrase.

Cadential Extension – Elaborating or repeating a cadence, a cadence figure, or individual cadence chords is an effective way to extend a phrase.

Page 15: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Types of Form Strophic Form (AAAA) – The same music is used for each verse or stanza.

“Silent Night” “Piano Man” “Old MacDonald Had a Farm”

Through-Composed Form – Writing new music for each stanza, often written to reflect different moods or changing moods for each stanza.

“Der Erlkönig” “Bohemian Rhapsody” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JS91p-vmSf0

Binary Form (AB) – Two sections, often repeated (AABB). Binary form could also be AA1, two sections comprised of the same or similar melodic material. Often used for dances, keeping the same rhythmic feel but to use different keys for each section. The music often moves to a new key in the B section, returning to tonic at the end of B.

“Piano Sonata in D Major, K. 284 – Mozart”

Ternary Form (ABA) – has three parts generally with a recapitulation of the first (the return of A). Often the first section is repeated giving us AABA, very popular with 18th century operatic arias. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SKBn6LKwXqw

Rounded Binary Form (AB ½ A) – Also ABA, but with one big difference – only a portion of A returns after the B section. It is usually HALF of the original A material. “Menuet – J.S. Bach” http://youtu.be/fu4nLqkqJfE?t=49s

Page 16: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Other Types of FormSonata-Allegro Form – unique form that grew out of binary and ternary; found in the first movement of sonatas.

Exposition: First theme in the tonic key, second theme in the dominant key or the relative major key if the first theme is in minor

Development: Previously presented themes are expanded and developed, often in new keys.

Recapitulation: A restarting of the exposition with the first AND second themes both in the tonic key, often concluding with a coda.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUWPJp5vDMA (Don’t say “SONATA FORM”)

Rondo Form – has a principal theme (sometimes called the motive) that alternates with one or more contrasting themes, generally called EPISODES or DIGRESSSIONS. Most rondos fall into either a five-part (ABACA) or a seven-part (ABACABA) form. Arch form (ABCBA) resembles a symmetrical rondo with the intermediate repetition of the main theme. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JYBpFzeQ2Y

Theme and Variation Form – has only one “section” and is repeated indefinitely (as in strophic form) but is varied each time (AA1A2A3A4A5A6). A theme and variation may be an individual section of any shorter form such as binary or ternary. An importation variation of this is the passacaglia and chaconne that feature a repeating bass theme (or BASSO OSTINATO) over which the rest of the musical structure is written. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9mQri8YFz4

Page 17: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

TEXTURE

Page 18: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

What IS Texture?Texture describes how much is going on in the music at any given moment.

Counterpoint involves the writing of musical lines that are distinct from each other, but sound harmonious when played together.

Good counterpoint requires two qualities:1. Some degree of independence or individuality within the lines

themselves (a “horizontal” consideration – Melody) 2. A meaningful or harmonious relationship between the lines (a

“vertical” consideration – Harmony)

Chords occur when three or more notes are grouped together as a unit; however, counterpoint focuses primarily on melodic interaction and secondarily on the harmonies produced by the interaction of the melodies.

Formal terms to describe texture all describe the relationships of melodies and harmonies.

There are 4 main types of Texture: Monophonic, Homophonic, Polyphonic, & Heterophonic

Page 19: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Monophony

Monophonic – Has only ONE melodic line with no harmony or counterpoint. There may be rhythmic accompaniment, but only one line that has specific pitches. Monophonic music can also be called monophony.

Examples of Monophony: Children singing the melody of a song together without any instruments.A solo trumpet playing a fanfare.A family singing the melody of "Happy Birthday."Boys and girls singing a melody in octaves.Any time several instruments play the same melody together.

Page 20: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Monophony Extensions

Monophony can have octaves

Monophony can also include octaves WITH doubling of other intervals, called parallelism.

Sousa: Washington Post March

Debussy: Sarabande

Page 21: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Homophony Homophonic music can also be called homophony and has one clear melodic line; it’s the line that naturally draws your attention. All other parts provide accompaniment or fill in the chords. These parts are not independent, but serve only to support the melodic line.

Examples of Homophony: Church Hymns (most) & Barbershop Quartet Music

Chordal Homophony (may be referred to as chordal texture) – features every line or voice moving together with exactly the same or nearly the same rhythm.

Holst: Cranham [“In the Bleak Midwinter”]

Page 22: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Homophony Melody with accompaniment is sometimes referred to as a form of homophony because it clearly has only one melodic line, but the melody is not limited to the chords moving together. A singer accompanied by a guitar picking or strumming chords, or a small jazz combo with a bass, a piano, and a drum set providing the “rhythm” background for a saxophone improvising a solo are examples of accopmpanimental texture.

Specific Accompaniment Types: Ostinato – obstinate or unceasing; short melodic,

rhythmic, or harmonic pattern that is repeated. Alberti bass – accompaniment figure played with the

left hand (keyboard). The chords are played as arpeggios, or broken chords, usually Do-Sol-Mi-Sol-Mi-Sol.

Walking bass – creates a feeling of regular quarter-note movement. Common in jazz; mixture of passing tones, scale tones, arpeggios, etc..

Page 23: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

HomophonyRagtime is another style of music that is often categorized as homophonic. Although the first four measures are monophonic – the rest of the music has a melody with supporting accompaniment.

Page 24: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Polyphony Polyphonic music can also be called polyphony, counterpoint, or contrapuntal music. If more than one independent melody is occurring at the same time, the music is polyphonic.

Examples of Polyphony:Rounds, Canons, Fugues

Polyphony is usually divided into two main types: imitative and nonimitative. Polyphony also features an accompanying, yet very important part of the music called the countermelody. It is a secondary melody or line written to be played simultaneously with a more prominent melody.

Counte

rmelo

dy

Page 25: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Polyphony : Fugue A specific type of imitative polyphony music is the fugue. Fugues feature a theme or subject in one voice, and is imitated by other voices in succession. Different voices overlap and weave in and out of each other forming a continuous, tapestry-like texture. Imitative polyphony may feature fugal imitation and not be a fugue.

Page 26: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Heterophony In heterophonic music, there is only one melody, but different variations of it are being sung or played at the same time. Heterophony can be heard in American folk music such as Bluegrass, Cajun, and Zydeco traditions. Listen for the tune to be played by two instruments (say fiddle and banjo) at the same time, with each adding the embellishments, ornaments, and flourishes that are characteristic of the instrument. Some Middle Eastern, South Asian, central Eurasian, and Native American music traditions also include heterophony.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_J2R20X16Jc

Page 27: AP Music Theory Mr. Jackson.  The smallest identifiable musical idea.  Can consist of a pitch pattern, rhythm pattern, or both at the same time

Tempo Markings