Area of Study 2: Music of the 20th Century

Description

GCSE Option choices (Music) Note on Area of Study 2: Music of the 20th Century, created by KatieSauce on 06/03/2015.
KatieSauce
Note by KatieSauce, updated more than 1 year ago
KatieSauce
Created by KatieSauce about 9 years ago
16
1

Resource summary

Page 1

Music GCSEArea Of Study 2: Music of the 20th CenturyA. Schoenberg 'Peripetie' From five orchestral pieces, Op. 16.The piece is Expressionist, aiming to express emotions and feelings as intensely as possible. Composed in 1909 - first performed 1912 at the Proms in London. It is the fourth of the five orchestral pieces, and 'Perpetie' means 'a sudden reversal'.InstrumentationA large orchestra of 90 players.Contrasts created with timbre as the instrumentation is constantly changing throughout.Extreme pitch range used.Unusual effects are used (e.g. Cymbals played with cello bow)MelodyShort, Fragmented motifs. Combined in different ways. Disjunct melodies - large angular jumps. Octave displacement (Moving notes of the melody to the next octave.)Rhythm, Metre and TempoThe metre changes from 3/4 to 2/4 to 4/4Sehr rasch (very quick) tempo.Complex and varied rhythms.Rhythmic patterns are layered to create a complex contrapuntal texture. Tonality and HarmonyAtonal (No sense of a key)Dissonant harmony.Hexachords used in melodies.Texture and DynamicsTexture = largely contrapuntal - occasional monophonic moments.Imitation and Inversion used.Canons used.Dynamics are used to the extremes, with sudden changes being common.StructureFree rondo - five sections (A B A C A)Not clearly contrasting sections, hence Free rondo.*********************************************************************** 'Something's coming' L.Berstein Composed in 1957, based on Romeo and Juliet. 2 Rival gangs Jets (American) and Sharks (Puerto Rican). Tony falls in love with Maria.InstrumentationSolo tenor song - Accompanied by Strings/Woodwind/Percussion/Brass.Accompaniment uses: Quiet dynamics, Soft timbres (Muted trumpets and Pizzicato strings) And a homophonic texture - not overpowering the vocal part.Word-Painting - emphasis on certain words, harmonics and tremolos used.Structure and Melody3 Main themes:1. Quiet, syncopated opening2. Loud, strident theme in 2/4 (Bar 21)3. Lyrical, slow moving theme (bar 73) The melody throughout is mainly syllabic. Themes are alternated during the piece, however not exact repeats are used.Rhythm and MetreAlternates between 2/4 and 3/4Changes in metre, fast tempo, syncopation = Excitement and Anticipation.Accompaniment is largely made up of an on-beat bass with off-beat chords.At the beginning cross rhythms are used between these two parts.Harmony and TonalityD major, 2 contrasting sections in C major. Frequent use of Sharpened fourths/flattened sevenths.Sharpened Fourth => Tritone.Ends on a Flattened seventh => Unresolved => Imperfect cadence.TonalJazz influenced.TextureTexture is homophonic.3 Main ideas:1. Opening = Repeated riff2. Short, Syncopated chords (bar 21)3. Fast, Um-Cha Accompaniment (Bar 32)******************************************************************************** 'Electric Counterpoint' Steve ReichMade in America, in 1987. It was written for Pat Methany, who was a jazz guitarist. It uses minimalist techniques. As it is a minimalist piece.InstrumentationIn total there are 10 guitars. 7 Electric Guitars (Pre-recorded)2 Bass Guitars (Pre-recorded)1 Live amplified guitar (To blend with others)StructureBuilds in 3 layers.1. A syncopated, quaver motif for live guitar and top 4 guitar parts.2. A second quaver motif in the 2 bass guitars.3. Sustained motif based around 3 chords. All layers are built up before layers 2 and 3 fade out leaving layer 1.Melody and TextureMelody = One bar ostinatoIntroduced in live guitar before the top 4 pre-recorded guitars- creating a canon. Melody is gradually added to by note addition.At one point the Live guitar uses notes from all other guitar parts = Resultant Melody.Contrapuntal. Rhythm, Metre and Tempo3/2 = Metre (3 dotted minims in a bar)Fast tempo (192 crotchets a minute)Little rhythmic variety.Frequent syncopation.Metrical displacement used. (Same motif played by different parts/ times so they sound out of synch)Polymetre (Some parts go into 12/8 whilst others stay in 3/2)Harmony and TonalityHexatonic Scales = 6 notesCadences and conventional harmonic progressions aren't used.DynamicsFairly constantParts gradually fade out in places.

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Music symbols
Sarah Egan
STEM AND LEAF DIAGRAMS
Elliot O'Leary
Forces and their effects
kate.siena
GCSE Biology - Homeostasis and Classification Flashcards
Beth Coiley
Weimar Revision
Tom Mitchell
Biology Revision - Y10 Mock
Tom Mitchell
Hitler and the Nazi Party (1919-23)
Adam Collinge
FREQUENCY TABLES: MODE, MEDIAN AND MEAN
Elliot O'Leary
CUMULATIVE FREQUENCY DIAGRAMS
Elliot O'Leary
Physics Revision
Tom Mitchell
GCSE Biology B2 (OCR)
Usman Rauf