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MUSIC VOCABULARY

Music 1030   James Rhoten
Music Appreciation
Chapter 1 thru 6
Across
The repeat of a melodic figure in unifying a musical composition.
A simple, early Christian liturgical song in monophonic style.
An orderly arrangement of elements in which parts of a whole are organized in music.
The characteristic quality of sound that distinguishes one voice or instrument from another.
The effect of varying degrees of loudness and softness in a musical composition.
The division of music into groupings of regularly recurring emphasized beats.
The religious movement of the 16th century that established a number of Protestant denominations.
The service of the celebration of the sacrament of the communion in the early Christian Church and current Catholic Church.
Added parallel or contrasting lines to plainchant to amplify or enhance the sound.
The materials that an artist or musician work with to create a work.
The arrangement of steps and half steps in a scale to achieve a tonality.
A special skill, art, or dexterity.
The art of instrument selection in music.
The Italian word for song.
Serving to join together, connected and smooth.
Period of time, pre 500 B.C.
A large scale stage work for chorus, orchestra, and soloists.
Music that consists of multiple lines.
A composition to be sung.
In music and art, the structural quality of a work.
A kind or type of music, art, or literature.
The ancient amphitheater in Ancient Rome.
An original worship service of the Christian Church.
The simultaneous sounding of two or more musical tones.
The last era of the medieval period.
Down
A large work for an orchestra.
A simple melody of various origins used to create the basic theme of cantata.
Received through the ear or human hearing.
A work for orchestra and soloist.
Period of music from 500 AD-1400.
Musical drama.
The form of the third movement of a symphony or a string quartet.
Separated or causing to separate, disconnected and angular.
An advanced contrapuntal form of the baroque.
Time period 1400-1600.
The lack of tonality or a center of pitch in a musical work.
A texture in music that is created by having a main melody that is supported by additional accompanying music.
Music that consists of only one line.
The early era in the medieval period.
The study of the philosophy of beauty.
Used to describe a large Christian church.
Period of music from 1600-1750.
Frequency of sound.
Eight full tones above a given tone, this interval is twice the frequency of the given tone.
The tonal character of a work as determined by the relationship of the tones to the key.
A series of tones arranged in a sequence of rising or falling pitches in accordance with a set group of intervals.
An organized succession of musical tones.
The rate of speed.