Part 6
Part 7
Part 8
Part 9
Part 10
100

How the harmonic language of prelude to Tristan und Isolde relate to the opera's plot

The yearning created by the Tristan chord relates to Tristan and Isolde's yearning for one another. They are madly in love due to a love potion but can never be together since Isolde is to marry another man.

100

What are the musical characteristics of a nocturne?

They are short mood pieces that include embellished melodies and expansive/arpeggiated accompaniments.

100

What trends and forces shaped classical music culture in the 19th-century United States?

Many German musicians immigrated to the US and would play and teach in American orchestras and conservatories. Shaping the way the classical music culture looked and sounded.

100

Who were the "first Viennese school"?

Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Ludwig van Beethoven.

100

How are Messiaen's religious beliefs reflected in his music?

All of Messiaen's music is deeply rooted in his Roman Catholic faith.

200

What are Wagner's dramatic and musical goals?

To create a unified experience that transcended the boundaries of music, poetry, drama, and visual arts.

200

Who was Niccolò Paganini, and what influence did he have on Liszt?

A violin virtuoso who was so good that Liszt wanted to become a piano virtuoso.

200

What advantages did Amy Beach have that enabled her to devote her time to composition? What social factors hindered her?

Was naturally talented, received extensive musical education, and had financial support from her husband that allowed her to focus on composition.

200

Name the three style periods of Schoenberg's career.

Expressionist period, atonal period, serial and tonal period.

200

How are Benjamin Britten's humanitarian concerns reflected in his music?

Through his themes of Pacifism and Anti-War themes.

300

How many symphonies did Brahms write?

4

300

What cultural shifts took place in the second half of the 19th century?

Institutionalization of concert and operatic life. Passing of the early romantic generations gives way to less idealistic and more complex movements. Anti romanticism and pessimism ideas arrive.

300

What other composer's music influenced Amy Beach's Piano Quintet?

She was largely influenced by Brahms and his Piano quintet in F. minor, op. 67 which she had performed.

300

What is expressionism in music and the other arts?

An artistic movement that emphasizes the expression of emotional experience rather than physical reality.

300

What is a prepared piano, and what is done to "prepare" it?

A prepared piano is a piano that has been temporarily altered by placing small objects between or on its strings to change its sound. This transformation turns the piano into a percussion-like instrument, producing a wide range of percussive, muffled, and otherworldly timbres

400

Who was the leading composer of band music in late 19th-century America?

John Phillip Sousa

400

Absolute vs. program music

Music is for its own sake V.S. music that is put together to tell a story.

400

What movements or ideas in the other arts (e.g. painting, poetry) were stylistically related to Debussy's music?

Impressionism and symbolism.

400

What are some of the "trademark" musical characteristics of Igor Stravinsky's Russian period?

Defined by a bold fusion of Russian folk traditions, ballet spectacle, and modernist innovation.

400

For what purpose was Varèse’s Poème électronique commissioned?

It was commissioned as the centerpiece of the Philips Pavilion at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair.

500

What is the Ring cycle and what were Wagner's sources for its plot?

Four dramas, titled Der Ring des Nibelungen: These were based off of the Nibelung Saga. This is a collection of German heroics and epics.

500

Old music vs. new music

Rise of repertoire of musical classics, new interest in in music of the past.

500

Which musical elements were most important in Debussy's music? (e.g. melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre)

Chords were used for color, circular/chromatic melodies, use of pentatonic scales, chords move in parallel motion.

500

What is the plot of The Rite of Spring?

A ballet that depicts ancient pagan rituals celebrating the arrival of spring, culminating in the sacrificial dance of a young girl chosen to appease the earth's spirits.

500

What is innovative about Penderecki’s Threnody? What is unusual about its notation?

It is innovative in its avant-garde sonorism and extended string techniques, which together create a dense, dissonant, and emotionally intense soundscape rather than traditional melody or harmony.

600

Where and in what venue was Wagner's Ring cycle performed? 

The Bayreuth festival theater (built 1872-86).

600

Classical vs. popular music

One is characterized by its complexity and historical significance, while the other is music known for its catchy melodies and mass appeal.

600

What image or atmosphere is being depicted in Nuages? How does the music convey this?

The calm, shifting nature of clouds.

600

Which elements were shocking at The Rite of Spring's premiere?

Was shocking due to its radical music, unconventional choreography, and the intense reaction it provoked from the audience, leading to a near-riot.

600

What is minimalism? When and where did it originate?

Minimalism in music is a style that emphasizes repetition, gradual change, and simplicity, often using limited musical materials to create immersive, hypnotic soundscapes. It originated in the United States during the late 1950s and 1960s.

700

How did Verdi use the voice and the orchestra?

Rich orchestral arrangements complemented the emotional expressions of the singers, elevating the operatic experience.

700

How did "light" or "popular" genres such as the parlor song, march, and waltz differ from "serious" genres such as the symphony and Lied?

Light and popular songs were presented in a way that was easier to understand and access. Often included easier melodies and catchy melodies. Whereas more serious genres have music that often has to be intentionally digested and is not as widely accessible.

700

What attitude did Erik Satie take toward the masterpieces of composers like Chopin, Wagner, and Beethoven?

He took a satirical, irrelevant, and mocking attitude towards them. Openly ridiculed their seriousness and grandiosity.

700

What are some innovative techniques in Ives's music?

Polytonality and polyphony, dissonance and thematic contrast, and unconventional rhythms and meter.

700

What is post-minimalism?

Post-minimalism music is a style that evolves from minimalism, retaining repetitive patterns and tonal simplicity while incorporating greater emotional depth, diverse influences, and experimental structures.

800

How did Wagner use the voice and the orchestra?

Used large and powerful orchestras with a focus on grandeur and drama. For the voice he used a combination of leitmotifs, sprechgesang, and other things to create dramatic expression and emotional depth.

800

What is the form of the finale (fourth movement) of Brahms's Fourth Symphony?

Chaconne/Passacaglia. A Baroque form, consisting of variations over a ground bass in triple meter.

800

What is vernacular music, and what distinguishes vernacular music from classical or art music?

Vernacular music is easily accessible music for the everyday person. This is different from classical and art music which is centered around the composer/notated score and more intended for those with musical training.

800

What did Ives do for a living outside of music?

Charles Ives worked as an actuary, businessman, and insurance executive.

800

What elements of minimalism have earned composers like Philip Glass a large following?

The innovative use of repetitive structures and hypnotic musical patterns.

900

What are Verdi's dramatic and musical goals?

To create entertaining, deeply emotional, and intellectually stimulating operas.

900

What are Tchaikovsky's major works and genres of composition?

symphonies, ballets, operas, concertos, and tone poems (fantasy overtures)

900

What was ragtime music?

Syncopated musical style that originated in African - American communities in the late 19th century and became a precursor to jazz

900

Who was the French composition teacher who taught Aaron Copland and a generation of other Americans?

Nadia Boulanger

900

What elements of minimalism have been less successful with audiences?

Loss of uniqueness, emotional disconnection, aesthetic fatigue from extreme minimalism.

1000

What sources did Verdi draw on for plots and librettos?

Spanish romantic dramas

1000

What are the titles of Tchaikovsky's ballets?

The Queen of Spades, Nutcracker, Swan Lake, and Sleeping Beauty.

1000

What was distinctive about ragtime, and who was the leading composer of ragtime?

It was led by Scott Joplin and was distinctive for its syncopated rhythms and structured multi-strain compositions.

1000

How did Aaron Copland create a uniquely American musical sound?

Aaron Copland's distinctive "American" sound emerged from a deliberate fusion of folk traditions, jazz rhythms, and the vastness of the American landscape, all filtered through his own modernist compositional style.

1000

What are elements of postmodernism in music?

Postmodernism in music is characterized by eclecticism, a rejection of strict rules, and an emphasis on creativity and irony, reflecting a departure from modernist ideals.

1100

What sources did Wagner draw on for plots and librettos?

Wrote his own librettos based on medieval German and Nordic epic poems and legends.

1100

What styles and ideas influenced Dvořák's Ninth Symphony?

A mix of American musical traditions and his Czech musical heritage. A collaboration and cultural exchange of his born roots and his roots he placed in America.

1100

What is the poetic and harmonic structure of a 12-bar blues form?

Three 4-bar phrases that have a chord progression of Tonic (I), Subdominant (IV), and Dominant (V).

1100

What about William Grant Still’s Afro-American Symphony is uniquely African-American?

It integrates African American musical elements into classical music, symbolizing black cultural identity and achievement.

1100

Bonus: What is the time period for all of our listenings.

1898-1988

1200

What were the main styles and genres of Chopin's piano compositions?

Etudes, preludes, and nocturnes.

1200

In what ways do Dvořák's compositions follow in the tradition of Beethoven and Brahms?

In Viennese tradition, his music often emulated them in musical structure, orchestrations, and melodic intervention.

1200

What group of three composers are called the Second Viennese School?

Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, and Anton Webern.

1200

Which elements of William Grant Still's Afro-American Symphony are European or classical?

His classical structural framework and European tonal and harmonic language.

1200

Bonus: What was the piece that Thorburn had us play?

Terry Riley's In C

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