Words
Singing in the Rain
Space and Place
Fun and Games
Textures
100

The technique in which the music illustrates or imitates the words being sung

Word painting

100

Many pitches sung over one long, held-out syllable

Melisma

100

Johann Sebastian Bach's large-scale compositions, incorporating the Lutheran chorale, opera, and the baroque concertato medium, were performed in this setting

church

100

Italian poems set to music, to be sung as entertainment among friends

Madrigals

100

The texture of Gregorian chant

Monophonic

200

In this medieval genre, second and third texts elaborate on the meaning implied by an existing segment of a chant

Motet

200

Now extinct, this was a male singer with a soprano or mezzo-soprano range and unusual lung capacity (achieved through surgical means), usually cast in leading roles during the baroque era

Castrato

200

Joseph Haydn’s use of cymbals and bells to evoke the idea of “Turkish music” in his “Military symphony” is an example of this musical practice

Musical exoticism 

200

This genre, also called “divertimento,” “scherzando,” and “notturno" in its early days, originally functioned as entertainment music for evening parties. 

Symphony

200

In opera, a section of relatively unmetered and dialogue-like singing, over static instrumental accompaniment

Recitative

300

This 15th-century invention contributed to a new market for sheet music for amateur performance

Movable-type printing press

300

This baroque genre, whose name translates to “to be sung,” was a secular composition for solo voice and continuo, with sections of recitative, aria, and arioso

Cantata

300

This sound, pictured above, represented aristocracy, or the outdoors in 18th-century music

Horn fifths

300

This new 18th-century theatrical genre typically revolved around themes of social class, marriage, and deceit

Comic opera (or opera buffa)

300

Musical tastes during this time period rejected polyphony and ornamentation, instead favoring a clear melody and accompaniment texture

Enlightenment/Classical
400

This word comes from the Latin word for "to hold," and describes a vocal part in church organum

Tenor

400

This popular Renaissance technique means the successive entry of multiple voices singing the same (or very similar) melody

Imitation

400

The polyphony composed in this cathedral has been compared to its ornate, Gothic-style architecture

Notre Dame

400

Collections of stylized baroque pieces in binary form, arranged for keyboard or lute

Dance suites 

400

In baroque music, this word means BOTH the bass section and the improvised part they play

basso continuo

500

18th-century musical device in which styles and genres are used as “signs” to represent ideas through association

Topics

500

In this kind of mass, each section is constructed around the same melody, usually placed in the tenor part, and often borrowed from an existing song

cantus firmus mass

500

This region was relatively isolated until the fifteenth century, when it came to have a tremendous impact on continental European music

England

500

This composer is known for playing with conventions of musical form and phrasing, to fulfill or deny listeners' expectations.

Joseph Haydn

500

A concerto contains sections of ritornello and solo episodes, similar to the expositions and episodes in this keyboard genre

Fugue

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