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willoughby7_tb_ch02

True/False

1. All music includes the elements of sound and time.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 2

2. All music must be pretty or beautiful.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

3. Music can have a larger purpose than to sound pleasing.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

4. A good definition for music includes subjective factors.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 2

5. The physical characteristics of music involve physics, mathematics, and engineering.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 2

6. The science of acoustics is typically not used with musical instrument construction.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

7. Porous materials will bounce sound waves around a room.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 2

8. Dense materials will absorb sound waves.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

9. Music that lacks forward energy may seem static.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

10. As opposed to highly structured art music, children’s songs rarely communicate a wide range of feelings.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

11. Music should never be used as purely functional.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

12. Music can have attributes of both folk and classical music.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

13. Generally, Western European music is the only style we consider art music.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

14. Music from any culture is a reflection of the society that created it.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

15. The existence of music among all peoples is a fairly recent event in history.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

16. Musical languages, styles, and functions really differ very little among various cultures.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

17. All cultures have music because of its power to stimulate emotional responses.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 2

18. Aesthetic responses can be universal or culture-specific.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

19. Music can evoke unpleasant associations.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

20. Music therapists use music to alter people’s feelings.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

21. Background music promotes passive listening.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

22. Public performers rarely need a motivating force.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

23. Performing has its own creative element.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

24. A performer’s interpretation should not add anything to a composer’s notation.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

25. Performing can be intended only for the performers themselves.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

26. Many people will learn to read music notation.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

27. The elements of music are pitch, duration, loudness, and melody.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

28. Small, thin instruments are higher in pitch than big, wide instruments.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

29. Placing accents on weak beats or parts of beats produces syncopation.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

30. The loudness or softness of music is referred to as timbre.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 1

31. Variety creates a sense of contrast.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 2

32. Repetition creates a sense of contrast.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

33. An unstable feeling will drive the music forward to a point of relative stability.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

34. Many American popular and religious songs are written in verse-chorus form.

Ans: True

Difficulty Level: 1

35. Twelve-bar blues is a form derived from a style of American folk song called jazz.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

36. Much 20th century classical music emphasizes melody over rhythm and timbre.

Ans: False

Difficulty Level: 2

Multiple Choice

37. Music is:

A. sound that is pleasing to the ear

B. sound and silence organized in time

C. sound you want to hear as music

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

38. ______can be used to create music.

A. Noise

B. Non-singable melodies

C. Silence

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

39. The principles of acoustics can involve such terms as:

A. frequency range

B. echo

C. graphic equalizers

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 2

40. An audio enthusiast will want a speaker system with the ______frequency response.

A. narrowest

B. smallest

C. widest

D. none of these

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 2

41. Acoustical engineers design auditoriums according to principles like:

A. resonance and reverberation

B. graphic equalization

C. signal to noise ratio

D. none of these

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 3

42. The acoustics of a room are considered ______when sound waves are absorbed.

A. excellent

B. dead

C. damaged

D. live

Ans: B

Difficulty Level: 3

43. To appreciate music it is important to ______what happened before, and ______what is about to happen.

A. forget/notice

B. anticipate/remember

C. remember/anticipate

D. judge/evaluate

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 2

44. Music is an art and:

A. a science

B. not a science

C. a pseudoscience

D. none of these

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 1

45. Regardless of its style, good music:

A. is short-lived

B. lasts

C. has universal appeal

D. both b and c

Ans: B

Difficulty Level: 2

46. A great piece of music encourages repeated:

A. listening

B. study

C. performance

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

47. Musical stylistic differences among cultures come from:

A. reasons for the use of music

B. different instruments

C. different ways of creating music

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

48. Music can stimulate:

A. physical reactions

B. physiological reactions

C. both a and b

D. neither a nor b

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 2

49. Music therapists can help people:

A. find a job

B. improve their self esteem

C. find a spouse

D. become better musicians

Ans: B

Difficulty Level: 1

50. ______in music is the use of written symbols to represent musical sounds.

A. Symbolology

B. Timbre

C. Frequency

D. Notation

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 2

51. Most creators usually create music that is:

A. good music

B. culturally-detached

C. culture-specific

D. abstract

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 1

52. Which of the following makes more use of improvisation?

A. jazz music

B. orchestral music

C. band music

D. none make use of it

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 2

53. When people perceive a single tone we call it:

A. melody

B. timbre

C. pitch

D. harmony

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 2

54. The ______the frequency, the higher the pitch; the ______the frequency, the lower the pitch.

A. faster/slower

B. calmer/higher

C. sharper/smoother

D. none of these

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 1

55. A sequence of pitches occurring one after another is perceived:

A. horizontally

B. vertically

C. texturally

D. mechanically

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 2

56. Instrumental melodies usually can have ______than vocal melodies.

A. wider ranges

B. wider skips

C. greater complexity

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

57. Tonality refers to:

A. the tonal center of a key

B. the melodic contour

C. the harmonic texture

D. none of these

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 1

58. Harmony is perceived:

A. horizontally

B. vertically

C. texturally

D. none of these

Ans: B

Difficulty Level: 2

59. The system of using chords in American music is known as:

A. notation

B. contrast

C. melody

D. harmony

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

60. We usually hear three or more simultaneous sounds as a:

A. chord

B. rhythm

C. timbre

D. all of these

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 2

61. Music moves through:

A. space

B. dimensions

C. time

D. all of these

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 1

62. The variety of changes in the duration of pitches creates:

A. chaos

B. rhythm

C. the beat

D. tempo

Ans: B

Difficulty Level: 3

63. Pulse refers to the ______of the music.

A. beat

B. tempo

C. loudness

D. meter

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 3

64. Strong, weak, strong, weak is an example of:

A. bad timing

B. triple meter

C. duple meter

D. mixed meter

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 2

65. Strong, weak, weak, strong, weak, weak is an example of:

A. bad timing

B. mixed meter

C. duple meter

D. triple meter

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 2

66. ______music has no pulse, a weak pulse, or an irregular pulse.

A. Bluegrass

B. Orchestral

C. Metric

D. Nonmetric

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 2

67. ______has a clear pulse, with strong beats occurring in different patterns.

A. Mixed meter

B. Duple meter

C. Triple meter

D. none of these

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 2

68. ______intensity generates a louder sound.

A. Lesser

B. Fluctuating

C. Greater

D. Consistent

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 1

69. In Western classical music instruments are classified according to their:

A. range

B. color

C. size

D. timbre

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 2

70. Tension followed by a release of tension produces:

A. chaos

B. static motion

C. forward energy

D. both a and c

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 2

71. Texture in Western music can refer to:

A. thick and full

B. thin and transparent

C. both a and b

D. neither a or b

Ans: C

Difficulty Level: 1

72. Form is frequently depicted by:

A. letter names (AB, ABACA)

B. shapes of instruments

C. repeat signs

D. periods in history

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 2

73. 32-bar song form is found in:

A. art songs

B. religious music

C. folk songs

D. all of these

Ans: D

Difficulty Level: 1

74. ______give a feeling of temporarily stopping with the sense that the music will continue.

A. Closed cadences

B. Open cadences

C. Tensions

D. Dynamics

Ans: B

Difficulty Level: 2

75. ______convey a strong feeling of finality.

A. Closed cadences

B. Open cadences

C. Tensions

D. Dynamics

Ans: A

Difficulty Level: 1

Short Answer

76. Name some non-traditional sounds that have been used in organized music.

Ans: rain, waterfall, birds, whales

Difficulty Level: 2

77. Name an area where one sees the use of acoustics.

Ans: room design, concert hall design, stereo specs, sound reinforcement, computer music performance, medical technology, instrument construction

Difficulty Level: 1

78. Name an area where medical technology uses the science of acoustics.

Ans: sonar diagnostics and treatment

Difficulty Level: 3

79. Why is music considered an aural phenomenon?

Ans: we listen and respond to it as sound

Difficulty Level: 2

80. Which is more common today, creating music that will last for generations, or creating music for immediate consumption?

Ans: immediate consumption

Difficulty Level: 1

81. Name an area or placein which someone with a degree in music therapy may work.

Ans: mental health clinics, hospitals, public schools, private practice

Difficulty Level: 2

82. List three contributing factors as to why music changes.

Ans: society changes, people’s needs and tastes change, new or refined instruments, new ways of creating, artists’ innate need to grow

Difficulty Level: 2

83. The creative process has two general steps, regardless of style. What are they?

Ans: choosing elements of sound, and organizing them to achieve a result

Difficulty Level: 2

84. What is the most important part of developing an appreciation for any type of music?

Ans: active listening

Difficulty Level: 2

85. Where do we hear examples of white noise?

Ans: possible answers include static on a radio, roar of a waterfall

Difficulty Level: 2

86. List three levels of duration by which we perceive music.

Ans: possible answers include length of an entire piece, a section of a piece, a phrase, an individual tone

Difficulty Level: 3

87. What are the four classifications of the instruments of the orchestra?

Ans: strings, brass, woodwinds, percussion

Difficulty Level: 2

88. Name three ways musical tension is created.

Ans: possible answers include increase in harmonic or rhythmic complexity, increase in dynamic level, a rise in the pitch of a melody, a key change, increase in thickness or density of the sound

Difficulty Level: 3

89. Name three ways a release of tension is accomplished.

Ans: possible answers include returning from complex to simple, from high to low, from loud to soft, from less comfortable to more comfortable sounds

Difficulty Level: 3

90. What is the smallest group of notes having an identifiable character?

Ans: a motive

Difficulty Level: 1

Matching 1

Match the musical term with the corresponding phrase.

91. acoustics::the science of sound and the physical basis of music

92. frequency::the rate of speed of sound waves

93. momentum::helps music move forward

94. folk music::music for the masses

95. classical music::music for the elite

96. aesthetics::the study of the emotional and expressive aspects of music

97. background music::can improve our feelings when we’re alone

98. score::when music is notated

99. improvised::simultaneously created and performed

100. perceptive listening::listening to music attentively

Matching 2

Match the musical term with the corresponding phrase.

101. pitch::the relative highness or lowness of sound

102. duration::how long a pitch lasts

103. loudness::determined by intensity or energy

104. tone quality::determined by the shape of sound waves

105. register::an area of the sound spectrum (high, middle, low)

106. white noise::the entire range of frequencies sounding at once

107. silence::the absence of frequencies

108. contour::the shape of a melody

109. scales::a system of organizing pitches

110. theme::a complete musical thought

111. tempo::the rate of speed

112. meter::the organizing of beats

113. bar::one group of beats

114. downbeat::the first beat of each bar

115. accent::increased stress

116. timbre::the distinctive tonal quality of an instrument or voice

117. resolution::the release of tension

118. dissonance::a form of tension

119. consonance::a form of resolution

120. modulation::change of key

121. genre::a type or category of music

122. a capella::vocal only

123. vibrato::the oscillating of a pitch