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Grade 3 Music Glossary


Beat

The regular repeated pulsation in music.

 

Binary

Designates a form or structure in music that has two distinct sections: part A and part B (AB form).

 

Body percussion

Sounds made by clapping hands, slapping legs and chest, or stomping feet.

 

Chest voice

The chest voice is the lower part of the voice and is used when singing lower notes.

 

Consonance

The property of sounding harmonious.

 

Descant

A melodic voice part pitched higher than and concurrent with the melody.

 

Dissonance

Sound that is a disagreeable auditory experience.

 

Duration

The length of a tone.

 

Dynamics

The degree of loudness of softness at which music is performed.

 

Form

Refers to the organizational structure of the music.

 

Half step

The smallest distance between pitches commonly used in western music. The distance between F and F # is one example, and the distance between B and B b is another example.

 

Head voice

The head voice of the young singer is that light clear voice that is free of tension and used for higher notes.

 

Interval

The distance between two pitches.

 

Intonation

The production of musical tones by voice or instrument (e.g., rise and fall of pitch).

 

Librettist

The author of words to be set to music in an opera or operetta.

 

Major scale

A succession of eight notes within an octave, moving in whole steps except for two half-steps between steps three and four, and seven and eight.

 

Minor scale

A succession of eight notes within an octave, moving in a specified pattern of whole steps and half-steps.

 

Metre

Recurring patterns of accented and unaccented beats that produce a rhythmic grouping.

 

Motif

A small melodic fragment repeated within a melody.

 

Notation, traditional

Common system of writing that is used to convey music ideas.

 

Notation, invented

Original pictures or symbols created to convey sound or music ideas.

 

Non-pitched

sounds

Sounds that have no discernible pitch, such as the sound of tapping on a desk with a pencil.

 

Octave

The distance between notes of the same name and eight letter notes higher or lower; for example, A B C D E F G A.

 

Ostinato

A short melodic or rhythmic pattern that is repeated over and over to form an accompaniment.

 

Patschen

Patting the knees or thighs.

 

Pentatonic scale

A scale consisting of five notes resembling the black keys of the piano.

 

Phrase

A natural division in the melodic line, similar to a sentence or part of sentence.

 

Pitch

A term used to designate sounds as high or low. Pitch is determined by the number of variations per second of a sound.

 

Range

Distance from the lowest to the highest notes in a piece of music.

 

Register

General pitch level of the melody. For example, the sounds in a melody may be mostly high or the sounds in a melody may be mostly low.

 

Rondo

A form having a repeated section (A) alternating with contrasting material (B and C). A B A C A is an example of rondo form.

 

Sequence

A pattern within a melody that is repeated at a higher or lower pitch.

 

Solfa or sofege

A series of names or syllables that can be used to designate the tones of a scale pattern. For example, doh re mi sol lah indicates a pentatonic scale. Doh re mi fah sol lah ti doh indicates a major scale.

 

Sound bank

A selection of sounds compiled by the student or group to be used for sound compositions, imitation, discussion, or reflection.

 

Soundscape

A “picture” of music created by environmental, instrumental, or vocal sounds. The term “soundpiece” is also used.

 

Style

Refers to the way ingredients of music are put together to create a distinctive sound, for example, classical music versus jazz.

 

Tempo

The speed or pace of the music.

 

Ternary

Designates a form or structure in music that has three sections, with the first section repeated after the second section ( ABA form).

 

Texture

The weave of the music: dense or transparent, heavy or light, thin or thick.

 

Timbre

The tone colour of sound, or the characteristics of a sound that help us distinguish that sound from another.

 

Whole step

The equivalent of two half-steps; for example, the distance between G and A is a whole step with G to G # and G # to A being the two half-steps.

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