3. Listening Gallery: How Music Makes Sense

The following short works or excerpts are each based on a single pattern that is repeated throughout the work.

These terms will help you answer the questions about how the basic patterns are varied.

 

Accompaniment
The support underlying a melody. For instance, in a typical show tune, the singer performs the melody, while the band provides the accompaniment.
Contour
Whether the basic pattern is played right side up or upside down.
Density
How many notes are played at the same time. For instance, if a pianist plays a chord with all ten fingers, that sound is of higher density that if she or he were to just play with a single finger.
Dynamics
The loudness of the music.
Fragmentation
Smaller segments of the basic pattern are repeated, rather than the whole.
Orchestration
The instruments that are playing the pattern.
Register
How “high” or “low” the pattern is played. Men sing in the low register, women in the upper. The pianist’s left hand generally plays in the low register, the right hand in the upper.
Speed
How fast the pattern is played.
Grouping
The number of notes in a pattern. For instance, the pattern “da-da-dum, da-da-dum, da-da-dum ” consists of a series of three note groupings, whereas “da-da-da-dum, da-da-da-dum, da-da-da-dum” is made up of four note groupings. “Da-dum, da-da-da-dum, da-da-dum” consists of mixed groupings.

Listen to Bach’s Invention no. 14 in B-flat Major.

In the following list, mark all of the ways that Bach uses to vary the repetition of his basic pattern:

CHOICES
 Register
 Contour
 Density
 Speed
 Fragmentation
Click the word “answers” below to see the correct answers.
ANSWERS
Register, Contour, Density, and Fragmentation

The pattern always occurs at the same speed. Otherwise, Bach uses all of the other means of varying the repetition: The melody is played high and low. It is turned right side up and upside down. It is sometimes in one hand alone, sometimes in both together. It is fragmented, creating passages of greater momentum.

Click “choices” above to review your options and try again!

From the following list, what most contributes to varying the repetition in Chopin’s Prelude No. 23 in F-Major?

CHOICES
 Speed
 Dynamics
 Register
ANSWER
Register

The pattern constantly shifts register, getting higher and higher until finally sinking at the ending.

In the following excerpt from Gustav Holst’s The Planets, the short melody is repeated fifteen times.

How many times is the melody repeated exactly the same way?

CHOICES
 0
 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
ANSWER
0

It is never repeated the same way twice.

From the following list, mark all of the ways that Holst uses to vary the repetitions of the melody.

CHOICES
 Accompaniment
 Contour
 Dynamics
 Orchestration
 Speed
 Register
ANSWERS
Accompaniment, Dynamics, Orchestration and Register

The melody is always played with the same contour and at the same speed. Holst uses all of the other means to create variety: The accompaniment to the melody changes from a gentle pulse to a more passionate underpinning. The dynamics get gradually louder, then softer. The orchestration changes with almost every appearance of the melody: It begins in the violin, then it is played by the oboe, flute and glockenspiel. Register is also used to vary the melody: The glockenspiel plays it very high; later in the excerpt, the lower strings take over the melody.

In Charles Ives’ song The Cage, the piano accompaniment is extremely unified. Except for the unexpected chord at the word “Wonder,” the accompaniment consists only of varied repetitions a single, complex chord-as a way of showing a leopard confined in its cage.

In the following list, mark all of the ways that Ives uses to vary the repetition of the chord:

CHOICES
Speed
Density
 Dynamics
Groupings
 Register
ANSWERS
All of the above! Speed, Density, Dynamics, Groupings and Register 

Ives uses speed, register and dynamics to vary how the chord is played. In the middle section of the song, for instance, the chords become quite spaced apart (speed). At the opening, the chords are low and loud; when the voice enters, they get higher and softer.

Ligeti’s Musica ricercata No. 1 is based on just a single note: Only the very last note is different!

In the following list, mark all of the ways that Ligeti uses to vary the repetition of the single note.

 

CHOICES
Speed
Density
 Dynamics
Groupings
 Register
ANSWERS
All of the above! Speed, Density, Dynamics, Groupings and Register 

Thanks to all of these means, Ligeti is able to create a very vibrant and dramatic piece using only one note!