AQA GCSE Music Keywords

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Compositional devices

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Compositional devices

Music techniques & ideas used to manipulate music to give a certain feel or to sound like music from a specific period of time.

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12 or 16 bar blues (& example genres)

3 or 4 four-bar phrases with chords are based on I, IV and V (eg jazz, rock, R&B etc).

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A cappella

The performance by a singer or a singing group without instrumental accompaniment. In DJing, this refers to vocal-only tracks.

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Accompaniment

Pieces written with an instrumental or vocal part designed to support or complement the melody.

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Anacrusis

A note or sequence of notes which precede the first strong beat of a musical phrase, particularly at the start of a piece.

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Anthem

A vocal piece that has special importance for a particular group of people or a country; often performed on a special occasion (eg Coronation anthems).

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Antiphony

A musical texture in which the musical ideas are passed between different groups of instruments or voices.

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Annotation

Diagrams, screenshots and written notes showing how the piece was composed, including aspects such as the use of instruments, harmonies, key etc.

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Arch-shape

A structure of contrasting sections in the form A-B-C-B-A.

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Arco

An instruction given to string players to use the bow.

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Areas of study

Specified genres, styles and traditions of music that must be studied.

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Aria

A composition for solo voice, usually contained within a larger musical work and which may be accompanied by instruments or a full orchestra (eg oratorios, operas). An aria is usually sung after a recitative.

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Arpeggio

A type of broken chord in which the notes that compose a chord are played or sung in an ascending or descending order (eg an ascending arpeggio of a C major chord is C, E and G).

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Articulation

The effect on how the note is played (eg phrase mark, staccato, slur, accent and legato etc).

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Atonal

Music composed without a key or tonal centre.

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Augmentation

A compositional device where the time values of the notes of a melody can be lengthened, or the interval between two notes can be widened (eg augmented 4th).

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Automated double tracking (ADT)

ADT imitates the effect of doubling voices or instruments using double tracking, without the need for a musician to overdub their part (they perform their part only once).

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Balance

The relative volume levels between voices and/or instruments to achieve clarity of recording, as used in music production.

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Backbeat

A strong rhythmic accent on the second and fourth beats of a bar of a piece in 4/4 time, used especially in jazz and popular music.

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Baritone

A male voice with a range midway between tenor and bass.

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Beat boxing

Using your voice to produce musical and rhythmic sounds (eg drum beats, hi-hat or cymbal noises, brass effects etc).

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Binary

Word to describe the structure of a piece of music which is divided into two different sections. It is usually written as an AABB or AB form.

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Blues scale (& example in C minor)

A minor pentatonic scale that has had the 4th flattened to create a six-note scale (e.g. in C minor: C, Eb, F, Gb, G, Bb)

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Blues note

A flattened note, usually the third or seventh, used especially in blues music.

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BPM

Beats per minute - used for measuring the tempo of a piece of music.

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Break

A short instrumental solo, often improvised and used in pop and jazz.

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Cadence

A pair of chords in which the harmony marks the end of a musical statement (eg perfect, plagal, interrupted and imperfect).

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Cadenza

A passage usually towards end of a solo piece, where a soloist plays an elaborate flourish or showy solo passage in a skilled way.

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Call and response

A feature of instrumental and vocal music where the leader plays or sings a melody and the rest of the group plays or sings in response.

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Canon

A musical texture in which a melody is played and then imitated (one or more times) after a short delay in another part. It is a contrapuntal technique as the melodic lines move independently of one another (eg Pachelbel's Canon).

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Ceilidh

A social gathering with music and dancing that is associated with Celtic folk music.

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Choir

A musical ensemble of people who sing together.

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Chord

The simultaneous sounding of two or more notes.

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Chord symbols

Specific symbols used to represent chords on musical notation (eg C7).

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Chorus

In Pop music, this is a repeated refrain in a verse-chorus structure. In Classical music, it refers to a large group of singers in a choral work or opera.

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Chromatic

Chromatic notes do not belong to the key of the music (ie they are not in the key signature) and are usually evident in the melody and/or harmony parts.

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Clave

A rhythm used in Cuban popular music consisting of a repeating two-bar pattern:

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  • the first bar has three accented beats

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  • the second bar has two accented beats.

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Son clave

A name of an instrument used in Cuban popular music.

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Compatible tracks

Tracks of music that work well together in DJing (eg harmony, key, tempo etc).

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Compound time

A metre in which the main beat can be subdivided into three. The opposite is simple time.

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Composing

Forming a piece of music by combining elements of music such as notation, instrumentation, orchestration, musical montage and sound production.

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Composing log

Record of how a composition has been developed.

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Composition to a brief

Composition produced in response to an AQA externally set brief.

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Conjunct

A melody that moves by step.

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Con sordino

Played with a mute on the instrument.

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Contextual understanding

Making critical judgments about a piece of music by analysing, evaluating and comparing musical styles and genres in relation to the period in which it was written.

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Contrapuntal

A musical style which involves intertwining two or more independent melodies, similar to polyphony.

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Consonant

Notes that sound 'pleasing' when played together at the same time (eg 3rds and 6ths).

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Continuo

Continuo, sometimes called 'basso continuo', is found in baroque music and is an accompanying part that includes a bassline and harmonies. The harmonies are typically played on a keyboard instrument (eg organ or harpsichord) and are supported by a bass instrument (eg cello, double bass, bassoon etc).

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Conventions

Musical terms and concepts (eg melody, accompaniment, tonality).

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Countermelody

A secondary melody that is sung or played in counterpoint with the original melody.

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Cross rhythm

The effect produced when two or more conflicting rhythms are heard together (eg two eighth notes played against triplet eighth notes).

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Cyclic

A type of structure in which a musical theme is heard, sometimes in a varied form, in more than one movement.

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Delay

A time effect that postpones the sound from playing for a number of milliseconds.

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Devices

A technique used for achieving a particular artistic effect. They can be wide ranging and include harmonic, rhythmic and melodic devices (eg ostinato, melisma, syncopation, pedal notes etc).

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Diatonic

Refers to chords or notes which exist within a given key in Western music.

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Diminution

A compositional device where the time values of the notes of a melody can be shortened, or the interval between two notes can be reduced (eg diminished 5th).

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Direct Input (DI)

Recording or playing directly into a mixing desk or computer without the use of an amplifier.

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Disjunct

A melody that moves in leaps using larger intervals than a 2nd.

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Dissonant

Notes that sound harsh or unpleasant when played together at the same time (eg augmented 4th).

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Distortion

Distortion and overdrive are sounds created to alter the sound of amplified electric musical instruments (eg electric guitars).

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DJ

Using turntables to manipulate tracks and demonstrate an understanding and a range of techniques specific to DJing.

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Dominant

A term used to describe the fifth note of any diatonic major or minor scale (eg G in C major) or the fifth triad, the chord built in thirds from the fifth note (eg G-B-D in C major).

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Dominant 7th

A term used to describe a chord built on the fifth note of any major or minor diatonic scale and including the root, major third, perfect fifth, and minor seventh (eg G-B-D-F in C major). In roman numerals it is written as V7.

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Double tracking

The process of recording two different performances of the same material to thicken a musical line.

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Double and triple stopping

Two or three notes played together at the same time on a string instrument.

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Drone

A harmonic effect or accompaniment where two notes are continuously sounded throughout most or all of a piece.

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Dynamics

Used to describe the volume or changes in volume in a piece of music (eg such as loud (f) or soft (p), in a piece of music).

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Echo

Echo is a type of reverb in which a sound is repeated.

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Effects

Ways of changing the sound/length of notes (eg amplification, distortion, reverb, delay, echo and equalisation etc). Reverb and delay are the most common time-based effects in music production.

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Enharmonic

Two notes which sound the same but are written differently (eg C# and Db).

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Ensemble

A group performance of two or more musicians (including DJing).

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Excerpt

Short extract from a piece of music.

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Expression

Representing in music a feeling, idea or situation using, for example, dynamics, tonality, articulation.

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EQ

EQ is short for equalisation. It is the lessening or boosting of different frequencies to add more bass or treble to a musical track.

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Falsetto

Male singing in a high register, the same range as an alto or soprano voice.

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Fusion

Music that combines two or more styles.

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Free composition

Composition composed freely from a student's own idea.

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Fugue

A contrapuntal composition in two or more voices. It is built on a theme that is introduced at the beginning and which is frequently used in imitation throughout the course of the composition.

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Genre

A category that identifies some pieces of music as belonging to a shared tradition or set of conventions (eg jazz, hip hop, folk, rock, etc).

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Glissando

A pitch sliding from one note to another, including all the chromatic notes in between. In music notation, a line between the two notes will be added.

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Ground Bass

A short theme played in the bass which constantly repeats with changing harmonies.

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Grove

Refers to a rhythm that deviates from the straight beat of the music (eg funk, rock, swing, fusion etc).

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Guide recording

A recognised recording submitted in place of a score.

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Hammer-on

A technique guitarists use where the finger is 'hammered' on a fretboard, causing a note to sound.

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Harmony

A combination of simultaneous sounds including chords, accompaniment and counterpoint that can support a melody.

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Hemiola

A musical figure in which two groups of three beats are replaced by three groups of two beats, giving the effect of a shift between triple and duple metre.

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Heterophonic/heterophony

A musical texture in which two identical melodies are played simultaneously, but one is a decoration of the other.

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Hook

A short melodic phrase used to catch the listener's attention and make a song memorable (eg 'Call Me Maybe' by Carly Rae Jepsen).

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Homophonic/homophony

A musical texture that is chordal.

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Improvisation

The spontaneous and creative performance of musical ideas.

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Imitation/imitative

A compositional device where a melody is played or sung and then repeated/copied in a different instrument/voice.

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Instrumental

Music composed for or performed by instrumentalists.

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Interpretation

The mood and style of music using musical elements and techniques eg phrasing, dynamics.

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Interval

The distance between two notes sounded simultaneously together or one after another.

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Intonation

The accuracy of pitch in playing or singing.

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Intro

The introductory section before the main section, often used in pop music.

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Inverted chord

A chord which has a note other than its root note in the bass note.

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