Embed
Email

Overview of Music History

Document Sample

Shared by: qinmei liao
Categories
Tags
Stats
views:
2
posted:
10/27/2011
language:
English
pages:
79
8th Grade Do Now: Sept. 14

Answer in your journal using sentences.

You might have to guess – that’s okay!



Where do you think music came from?

When do you think it was started? What

type (s) of music do you think were first

performed and notated?

Overview of

Music History

Middle Ages / Medieval

450 – 1450

Sacred Music

 Mostly vocal music until 1100

 After 1100, the church allowed instruments to be played.

 The organ was the most popular then.

 Most notated music was sacred

 Why? The church had control over learning.

 Most composers were anonymous because they were

taught that it was wrong to take credit and brag about

their works. They were taught that God would be

unhappy with them.

Middle Ages / Medieval

450 – 1450

 Secular music – non-religious

 Troubadours traveled the country, singing

their love songs.

 They used drums, bagpipes, harps, and

recorders.

 Why do you think they didn’t notate their

music?

Quick Question…

 Whatmakes Sacred music different from

Secular music?



 Which was more likely to be notated?

Middle Ages / Medieval

 Gregorian Chant: The earliest music of the

Middle Ages was sung slowly and without

rhythm or harmony. Everyone sang the

same thing.

 These tunes are also called Gregorian

Chant, which were named after Pope

Gregory I.

Middle Ages / Medieval

 Polyphony: Later on other musical lines

were added, creating harmony. This is

also called polyphonic music.

 This is music for more than one voice and

it appeared during the later Medieval

period. This marked the beginning of

harmony.

 Whatwas the earliest music of the Middle

Ages?



 What kind of music appeared later in the

Middle Ages? What did it have that made

it different?

Ballad

 Ballads were sung outside of churches

and told stories.

 Topics included love, war, and heroes.

 Every other line rhymes within a verse–

ABAB

 Verse One: Verse Two:

 ….. A ….C

 ….. B ….D

 …. A ….C

 …. B ….D

Medieval Listening Example

 “Graduale”

 By – Anonymous



 Include title, composer, and three musical

ideas using sentences in your journal. Don’t

forget your introduction and conclusion.

 Just fyi – the gradual is a responsorial chant

and is the only type, other than the Alleluia,

that is sung without an any action, such as a

processional. It comes in between readings.

“Graduale”

 “Graduale” is a peaceful song. It was a

Gregorian Chant. It doesn’t have any

instruments playing with it. This song is

religious. The color of this song is orange,

because it is mellow.

Creating Music:

Compose your own Ballad!

Creating Music

 At a keyboard, create a short song, around

30 seconds.

 Notate the song as they might have during

the Medieval Period.

 Remember, they did not use rhythms and

staff notation like we do today.

 They also did not have a piano then.

May 3 Do Now

 Answer these questions in your journals. Try to

do this without using your notes if you can.

1. In the Medieval Period, where did you go to

learn?

2. What was a popular church instrument near the

end of this period?

3. Who traveled singing love songs?

4. What type of songs are slow, without rhythm or

harmony?

Jan. 13 Do Now

 Answer these questions in your journals.

Try to do this without using your notes if

you can.

1. What is the form / rhyme scheme of a

ballad?

2. What does anonymous mean?

3. What was the topic of your ballad?

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 15

 Take out you Ballad from yesterday and

quietly practice it. I will come around and

listen to you.

 When I have listened to you, take one of

the Renaissance papers on your table and

work on it.

Name___________________________________________________ Period ________

Essential Question of the Lesson: What are the characteristics of music from the Renaissance time period?

Directions: Determine whether each statement is true or false and mark your answer in the column marked Before.







Before After

_____ _____ 1. During the Renaissance, the middle and upper class hired

tutors to educate their children.

_____ _____ 2. Polyphonic music is when everyone performs the same

melody and rhythms at the same time.

_____ _____ 3. Chordal music is when the harmony and voice parts move

at the same time in chords.

_____ _____ 4. A madrigal is a non-religious (secular) song that people

sing and is often a love song.

_____ _____ 5. A motet is a non-religious song that people sing.

_____ _____ 6. A mass is a religious (sacred) song that people sing.

_____ _____ 7. The lute is a popular instrument during the Renaissance.

_____ _____ 8. Instrumental music was mostly for singing and dancing

during the Renaissance.

_____ _____ 9. Palestrina was the worst composer from the Renaissance.

Renaissance

 Renaissance means “rebirth”- in this case,

it was a rebirth of Greek and Roman

culture.

 It lasted from 1450-1600.

 The middle and upper classes hired

people to educate their children.

 The printing press was invented and

popularized the music of great composers.

Renaissance Music

 Most Renaissance music is polyphonic –

two or more voices being heard with

different rhythms.

 Near the end of the Renaissance, chordal

music appeared. The voices moved

together in chords.

Here are some questions

 What does Renaissance mean?



 Whatwas invented that popularized the

music of great composers?



 What does it mean for music to be

polyphonic in the Renaissance time

period?

Vocal A Capella Music

 Madrigals - These song forms were performed in

groups of four, five, or six singers. A madrigal is

secular music and were usually love songs.

 Motets - a polyphonic work with four or five voice

parts singing one religious Latin text.

 Mass - follows the religious service of the

Catholic Church and is sung in a very specific

order: Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus,

Benedictus, and Agnus Dei. It is performed in

Latin.

Instrumental Music

 There was a growth in instrumental music,

especially the lute and keyboard. The

most popular instrument of the

Renaissance was the lute.

 Most instrumental music was written for

singing and dancing.

Let’s answer these.

 What were the three kinds of a capella

music? Which one follows the religious

service of the Catholic Church?



 Whatwas the most popular instrument in

the Renaissance time period?

 Palestrina’s music

shows pitch and

rhythm.

 He was Italian and

wrote mostly religious

works.

 He is considered one

of the great masters

of Renaissance

music.

 He wrote motets,

madrigals, and

masses.

Renaissance Listening Example

 “Kyrie”

 By Palestrina

 P. 174 in 8th grade text

Let’s Create Some Music!

a group composition in the

 Creating

Renaissance Polyphonic style.

 Each table will be a group. The bigger tables

may split up into two and three if they would

like.

 Each person in the group will compose two

measures of rhythms in four.

 Practice it quietly all together and then we will

perform them for the class.

8th Grade Do Now, May 5

 Answer these questions in your journals. Use

sentences! Try to do this without using your

notes if you can. Then, finish the true/false paper

in the “After” column from yesterday.

1. What does Renaissance mean?

2. When two or more voices are singing different

rhythms, what is that called? Kyrie was an

example of this.

3. Out of madrigals, motets, and masses, which is

NOT religious?

4. What two things was instrumental music used

for in the Renaissance?

5. Who was a great Renaissance composer?

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 16

 IfI did not hear your Ballad yesterday I will

come around to hear you perform it.

 Quietly finish your group polyphony

projects from yesterday.

 When I have heard your group, get out the

Renaissance True or False half sheet from

yesterday. Fill in the column that says

“After”. Try not to use your notes.

Baroque Activitation

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTVraV

gzC9U

 Organ – Bach

Name___________________________________________________ Period ________

Essential Question of the Lesson: What are the characteristics of music from the Renaissance time period?

Directions: Determine whether each statement is true or false and mark your answer in the column marked Before.







Before After

_____ _____ 1. During the Renaissance, the middle and upper class hired

tutors to educate their children.

_____ _____ 2. Polyphonic music is when everyone performs the same

melody and rhythms at the same time.

_____ _____ 3. Chordal music is when the harmony and voice parts move

at the same time in chords.

_____ _____ 4. A madrigal is a non-religious (secular) song that people

sing and is often a love song.

_____ _____ 5. A motet is a non-religious song that people sing.

_____ _____ 6. A mass is a religious (sacred) song that people sing.

_____ _____ 7. The lute is a popular instrument during the Renaissance.

_____ _____ 8. Instrumental music was mostly for singing and dancing

during the Renaissance.

_____ _____ 9. Palestrina was the worst composer from the Renaissance.

Baroque

 1600-1750

 Baroque refers to highly decorated music

and art.

 Unity – repeating rhythms and melodic

patterns

 Sudden dynamic and tempo changes

 Music was ornamented and improvised.

Baroque Music

 Orchestras begin to form

 Opera develops

 Was written for and heard only by kings

and nobility and the Church

 Venice, Italy was the center of Baroque

music

 Harpsichord was more popular than the

piano.

Some Questions

 Whattwo things could drastically change

in music from the Baroque period?



 What musical group began to form?



 Where was the center of Baroque music?

Fugue

 The subject is stated by the first voice.

 The other voices then enter imitating the

same subject, one at a time.

 The voices alternate subject and answer.

What about this?

 What form of music had a theme or

subject that was repeated by different

voices at different times?



 How is this different from a round?

Baroque Listening Example

“Fugue in G Minor”

By J. S. Bach

Create Some Music!

 Createa fugue with a partner, there can

be three people.

 Start out with the same phrase, starting one

after the other finishes.

 There must be other phrases that are not the

same between the two, or three voices.

 All of the parts must end at the same time.

May 5 Do Now

 Answer these questions in your journals. Try to

do this without using your notes if you can. Use

sentences!

1. In the Baroque period, there were extreme

changes in what two musical elements?

2. What musical group began to form during the

Baroque period?

3. What type of vocal music was being

developed during this period?

4. What was the popular keyboard instrument

during the Baroque period?

May 6 Do Now

Complete the orange vocabulary half-sheet

that is on your tables. You may not use

your notes. You may not ask any one for

the answers.

May 7 Do Now

Pick two time periods that we have done so

far. Compare and contrast them. You

may use your notes. Make sure you have

at least 2 ways they are similar and 2

ways that they are different. Use

sentences!!!!!!!!!!

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 19

 Please get rid of gum or candy.

 Answer in your notebooks using

sentences.

 What are at least two differences between a

round and a fugue?

 Describe the subject of a fugue.

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 19

 Get out your Fugue outline, and grading

rubric from last class. Begin working with

your table.

 There will be a short review of the Fugue

to refresh everyone’s memories.

 Make sure that everyone’s name is on

your grading rubric when I come around to

listen to your work.

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 20

Pick two time periods that we have done so

far. Compare and contrast them. You

may use your notes. Make sure you have

at least 2 ways they are similar and 2

ways that they are different. Use complete

sentences!!!!!

Classical Activation

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKhH2

hRa-WQ

 Mozart Clip

Classical Period

 The Classical period began around 1750

and lasted until 1830.

 This was when Benjamin Franklin was

discovering electricity.

 This was also when the United States was

being founded.

Music of the Classical Period

 Music was simpler to play than Baroque

music.

 Music was written for everyone.

 Common people began attending

concerts.

 Emotions were controlled in the music.

 There were not extremes in tempo,

dynamics, etc. like in the Baroque period.

Some Questions

 Was the music simpler or more complex in

the Classical time period than the music in

the Baroque time period?



 What were the emotions in the music like?

Classical Music

A symphony usually has 3 or 4

movements and uses the entire orchestra.

 Orchestras were small, around 40 people,

at the beginning of this period. They grew

larger near the end.

 Rondo form, ABACA, was commonly

used. It alternates between one main

themes and contrasting themes.

Can you answer this?

 Howmany movements did symphonies

normally have?



the orchestras grow in size or shrink

 Did

towards the end of the time period?



 Whatform was commonly used in the

Classical time period?

Classical Listening Example

 “Rondoalla turka”

 By Mozart

Creating Music!

 Ingroups of four or five, you will be

composing a piece in the Rondo Form.

(ABACA)

 Use the handout to help you write your

rhythms. Each section should be two

measures long. (Write in the counts)

 The time signature must stay the same

throughout the piece.

 Each person will only clap one section. (For

the smaller groups, figure out who will clap

two sections.)

8th Grade, Sept. 21

 Quickly and quietly get out your Rondo

outline from last class. Sit with your group

where you sat yesterday.

 Finish it and quietly practice it. I will come

around and hear you perform it.

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 21

 Answer these questions in your journals. Try to

do this without using your notes if you can. Use

sentences!

1. In the Classical period, music was for whom?

2. In Classical music, were there large contrasts in

tempo and dynamics?

3. What has a few movements and is for an entire

orchestra?

4. What is the type of song with a form that is

ABACA?

Romantic Activation

 Fantasia/Fantasia 2000 Clip – Sorcerer’s

Apprentice

 Think – Pair – Share – what do you think

are characteristics of Romantic period

music?

Romantic Period

 The Romantic period began around 1830

and ended around 1900.

 Yes, there was some overlap between the

classical period and romantic period.

 In fact, Beethoven bridged the two periods

during his lifetime.

Romantic Music

 Program music tells a story or describes

something.

 Music is filled with passion and drama.

 Composers used music to overwhelm listeners

with emotion, writing sad, sweeping pieces

about love and heartbreak and magical fantasies

about goblins, witches, and swans.

 The orchestra is arranged as we know it and

was led by a conductor with a baton.

 The most popular instrument was the piano.

Can you answer these?

 Who bridged the Classical and Romantic

time periods?







 What is program music?







 What was the most popular instrument?

Romantic Listening Example

 “March,”from The Nutcracker

 By Tchaikovsky

Creating Music!!!

 Programmusic! Each student will work by

themselves.

 Make up a character and write a short

paragraph about them.

 Write a description of how the theme music

you are thinking of relates to your character.

 Go to the piano and quickly play the theme by

ear.

 You will be playing it for the class.

8th Grade Do Now, Sept. 22

 Answer these questions in your journals.

Try to do this without using your notes if

you can.

1. Who bridged the gap between Classical

and Romantic music?

2. In the Romantic period, music is filled

with what and what?

3. What is program music?

Modern Activiation

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ce4TCt

h0gGM&feature=PlayList&p=0C7DE39351

91D7D6&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&i

ndex=1

 John Cage Piano Sonata X for prepared

piano

Modern Period

1900 – Present

Neoclassical

 Composer: Aaron Copland

 Uses techniques used in Baroque and

Classical periods

 Opposition to current musical trends

Serialism

 Composer: Arnold Schoenberg

 Music has no tonal center

 Randomly uses all 12 notes of the scale in a

tone row

 Aleatoric: created by chance.

Answer these!

 Whattype of music used techniques from

the Baroque and Classical time periods?







 What type of music used all 12 notes of

the scale in a tone row?

Minimalism

 Composer: Phillip Glass

 Uses small patterns to create

effects

 Extended Ostinati

 Drones in the background

Electronic

 Composer: Karlheinz Stockhausen

 Uses tape loops

 Found sounds, recorded then modified

with computer.

 Synthesized sounds: original sounds are

artificially created.

What about this?

 What type of music used tape loops?









 What type of music used small patterns to

create effects?

Modern Review

 A time of musical experimentation

 Electronic music becomes a main focus

 Atonality – Music without a tonal center

 Broken into Currents

1. Neoclassical

2. Serialism

3. Minimalism

4. Electronic

Modern Listening Example

 “Gentleman’s Honor”

 By Phillip Glass

Modern Music Categorize

Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire, “Nacht”

Stravinsky’s Symphony in Three Movements

or Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring

Stockhausen’s Gesang der Jünglinge

(literally "Song of the Youths")

John Adam’s Shaker Loops

Creating Music!!!

 We are going to experiment with

Serialism!

 Each student will create a tone row

melody using all 12 notes of the scale.

 Remember to only use each note once. You

are organizing them in any order that you

want.

 When you are finished you can play it for the

class on a keyboard.

May 12 Do Now

 Answer these questions in your journals.

Try to do this without using your notes if

you can.

1. Define a tone row.

2. What repeats small patterns and uses

drones in the background?

3. Who is a composer of Minimalism

music?

4. List the types of modern music.

The End

 This ends our journey through the

different time periods of music history.

 This does not include current musical

styles from across the world, including

popular music of our own country.

Music History Word Splash

 Using as many words here as possible,

write a letter to the students in the next

rotation about what you learned about

music history.

Medieval

Baroque Minimalism

Madrigal Renaissance

Sacred Secular Unison

Program music Beethoven Modern Romantic

Gregorian Chant Chordal

Polyphonic

Rondo Motet

Tone Row Serialism

Mass Classical

Fugue



Related docs
Other docs by qinmei liao
Q CMA ExperienceRequirement
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Lipid Learning Activity
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
MATERIAL SAFETY AND DATA SHEETS
Views: 2  |  Downloads: 0
Financial Planning The Ties That Bind
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Inflammatory Pain
Views: 4  |  Downloads: 0
Group goal setting workshop
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
MEETINGS REPORT ACTION SHEET
Views: 1  |  Downloads: 0
LYMPHOMA RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
By registering with docstoc.com you agree to our
privacy policy

You are almost ready to download!

You are almost ready to download!