Chapter 4 review
Don’t forget to review the Boldfaced words
Don’t forget to review the slides too!
1. The specific religious tradition that had the greatest effect on folk tradition was:
2. People who could not read music were found mostly in:
3. Singing schools were established to:
4. With the shape note system each differently shaped note represented a different:
5. Initially, gospel music was composed to:
6. Music is used in television’s revival meetings to:
7. Lining out accommodated the:
8. Singing schools began around:
9. ______was/were the main vehicle for disseminating shape-note music.
10. Modern, black gospel music was the result of:
11. Black gospel music is:
12. Itinerant preachers first made gospel music popular in the:
13. Realizing the influential nature of gospel music, evangelist Dwight Moody sought out song leader:
27. Why did English Pilgrims and Puritans Settle in Massachusetts?
28. What was the first published Psalter in this country called?
29. Which was the more prevalent method of psalm singing, notated or oral tradition?
30. Name one benefit of the singing school movement.
31. Name a shape-note hymnbook.
32. What is a fuging tune?
33. List three possible root sources for traditional black gospel music.
34. According to the text, who was the father of modern black gospel music?
35. Why is this particular type of music referred to as gospel music?
36. Generally, what is the only difference between a contemporary white or black gospel tune, and a pop or rock style song?
37. What does CCM stand for?
38. How is CCM promoted?
39. What organization sponsors the Dove Awards?
40. In the performance of modern, black gospel music who frequently responds to the leader?
41. Who performed the gospel-pop crossover hit “Oh Happy Day”?
42. Name an artist listed in the text that successfully moved from gospel to pop.
Matching
Please match the musical term with the corresponding phrase.
43. psalm singing::
44. Psalters::
45. lining out::
46. fasola::
47. rubato::
48. melisma::
49. tabernacles::
50. vamp::
51. Thomas Hastings::
52. Lowell Mason::
- sold a half million copies of Carmina Sacra
- a short repetitive musical pattern
- several notes for one syllable of a word
- learning to sing using nonsense syllables or syllables that convey pitches in a scale
- hymnbooks that contained the psalms
- rhymed, metrical settings of hymn tunes
- a technique of psalm singing similar to call and response
- flexible rhythm
- composed more than 1000 hymn tunes
- housed revival meetings