This person leads the choir during rehearsals and performances.
Who is the conductor?
The Italian word for gradually getting louder.
What is crescendo?
"Let it go, let it go..."
Can’t hold it back anymore
The arrangement of lines and spaces on which music notation is written.
What is the staff?
The solfege syllable for the first scale degree.
What is "do"?
The section of the choir that typically sings the highest notes.
What is soprano?
The speed of the music is called this.
What is tempo?
"You are my sunshine, my only sunshine..."
You make me happy when skies are gray
This symbol raises a note by a half step.
What is a sharp (#)?
The name for the distance between notes or solfege syllables.
Intervals
The Italian term that means to sing without instrumental accompaniment.
What is a cappella?
A symbol that tells you to hold a note for as long as the conductor wants.
What is a fermata?
"Country roads, take me home..."
To the place I belong...
A grouping of beats, divided by barlines, is called this.
What is a measure?
These three solfege syllables make up a major triad.
What is "do - mi - sol"?
Singing the same notes at the same time is called this.
What is unison?
A soft dynamic marking.
What is piano (p)?
"Just a small town girl..."
Living in a lonely world.
This symbol cancels a sharp or flat.
What is a natural (♮)?
he syllable that completes the pattern: do, re, mi, ____, sol.
What is "fa"?
This voice part sings lower than soprano but higher than tenor.
What is alto?
This is a common syllable-based system used for reading music.
What is Solfege?
"This little light of mine..."
I'm gonna let it shine.
A pattern of whole and half steps make up this musical unit.
What is a scale?
Sing the entire solfege major scale up and down.
"Do-Re-Mi-Fa-Sol-La-Ti-Do"