Test Bank For A History of Western Music, 10th Edition
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TEST BANK
A History of Western
Music
TENTH EDITION
By
Anthony Barone
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS
Melissa Lesbines
APPALACHIAN STATE UNIVERSITY
Stephanie P. Schlagel
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI, COLLEGE CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
Laurel Zeiss
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY
With
Joanie Brittingham, Anne-Marie Houy, and
Ariana Phillips
W โข W โข NORTON & COMPANY โข NEW YORK
โข LONDON
W. W. Norton & Company has been independent since its founding in 1923, when William Warder
Norton and Mary D. Herter Norton first published lectures delivered at the Peopleโs Institute, the adult
education division of New York Cityโs Cooper Union. The firm soon expanded its program beyond the
Institute, publishing books by celebrated academics from America and abroad. By midcentury, the two
major pillars of Nortonโs publishing programโtrade books and college textsโwere firmly established.
In the 1950s, the Norton family transferred control of the company to its employees, and todayโwith a
staff of four hundred and a comparable number of trade, college, and professional titles published each
yearโW. W. Norton & Company stands as the largest and oldest publishing house owned wholly by its
employees.
Copyright ยฉ 2019 by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
All rights reserved.
W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10110โ0017
wwnorton.com
W. W. Norton & Company Ltd., Castle House, 75/76 Wells Street, London W1T 3QT
CONTENTS
Part One: The Ancient and Medieval Worlds
1 | Music in Antiquity
3
2 | The Christian Church in the First Millennium 15
3 | Roman Liturgy and Chant
27
4 | Song and Dance Music to 1300
38
5 | Polyphony through the Thirteenth Century
49
6 | New Developments in the Fourteenth Century62
Part Two: The Renaissance
7 | Music and the Renaissance
77
8 | England and Burgundy in the Fifteenth Century89
9 | Franco-Flemish Composers, 1450โ1520
102
10 | Madrigal and Secular Song in the Sixteenth Century
115
11 | Sacred Music in the Era of the Reformation 127
12 | The Rise of Instrumental Music
138
Part Three: The Seventeenth Century
13 | New Styles in the Seventeenth Century
151
14 | The Invention of Opera
164
15 | Music for Chamber and Church in the Early Seventeenth Century 175
16 | France, England, Spain, and the New World in the Seventeenth Century
17 | Italy and Germany in the Late Seventh Century199
Part Four: The Eighteenth Century
18 | The Early Eighteenth Century in Italy and France 213
19 | German Composers of the Late Baroque
223
20 | Musical Taste and Style in the Enlightenment233
21 | Opera and Vocal Music in the Early Classic Period 243
22 | Instrumental Music: Sonata, Symphony, and Concerto
23 | Classical Music in the Late Eighteenth Century266
256
186
Part Five: The Nineteenth Century
24 | Revolution and Change
279
25 | The Romantic Generation: Song and Piano Music 290
26 | Romanticism in Classic Forms: Choral, Chamber, and Orchestral Music
27 | Romantic Opera and Musical Theater to Midcentury
313
28 | Opera and Musical Theater in the Later Nineteenth Century
325
29 | Late Romanticism in German Musical Culture336
30 | Diverging Traditions in the Later Nineteenth Century
348
Part Six: The Twentieth Century and After
31 | The Early Twentieth Century: Vernacular Music361
32 | The Early Twentieth Century: The Classical Tradition
33 | Radical Modernists
383
34 | Between the World Wars: Jazz and Popular Music 395
35 | Between the World Wars: The Classical Tradition 407
36 | Postwar Crosscurrents
418
37 | Postwar Heirs to the Classical Tradition
428
38 | The Late Twentieth Century
440
39 | The Twenty-First Century
451
372
302
PART ONE: THE ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL
WORLDS
chapter 1
Music in Antiquity
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. The earliest surviving musical instruments were made from
a. bone.
d. stone.
b. clay.
e. wood.
c. metal.
ANS: A
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
5
TOP:
The Earliest Music
2. All of the following types of evidence about musical culture from ancient civilizations survive
today EXCEPT
a. musical instruments.
d. visual images of music-making.
b. notated music.
e. writings about music.
c. recorded sound.
ANS: C
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
5
TOP:
Music in Antiquity
3. Historians mark the end of the prehistoric era at the time when people
a. created the first cave paintings.
d. learned how to carve stone.
b. invented printing.
e. learned how to work with metal.
c. invented writing.
ANS: C
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
5
TOP:
The Earliest Music
4. The origins of Western music can be traced to civilizations from
a. Arabia.
d. Greece and Turkey.
b. China and India.
e. Iraq and Syria.
c. Egypt and Israel.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
REF: 5
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia; Other Civilizations
MSC: Analyzing
5. Why, throughout history, do scholars know more about the music-making activities of elite
members of any given society than of others in that society?
a. The elite suppressed information about music-making in lower socioeconomic groups.
b. Music-making activities of the elite are probably representative of the society as a whole.
c. Only the elite could afford to pay composers to write music and artisans to make instruments.
d. People of lower social status did not make music.
e. The music of lower socioeconomic groups is not interesting.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 7
MSC: Analyzing
6. All of the following instruments existed in ancient Mesopotamia EXCEPT
a. harps.
d. percussion instruments.
b. bowed instruments.
e. pipes.
c. lyres.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 6
MSC: Remembering
7. The instrument shown in this image was used in which region?
a.
b.
c.
Arabia
Babylonia
Egypt
ANS: B
MSC: Applying
d.
e.
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
Greece
the Roman Empire
6โ7
TOP:
The Earliest Music
8. ________ is a type of music found in ancient Mesopotamia, but no longer used in Western
cultures today.
a. Dance music
d. Music to accompany epic poetry
b. The funeral lament
e. The nursery song
c. Military music
ANS: D
DIF: Easy
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 7
MSC: Remembering
9. Enheduanna, the first composer known by name, was an Akkadian
a. king.
d. queen.
b. priest.
e. servant.
c. priestess.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 7
MSC: Remembering
10. The earliest surviving complete piece of music is written on
a. a clay tablet.
d. paper.
b. papyrus.
e. a stone tablet.
c. parchment.
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 8
MSC: Remembering
11. In ancient Greek mythology, the lyre was associated with
a. Apollo.
d. Homer.
b. Aristotle.
e. Plato.
c. Dionysus.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
REF: 10
TOP: Music in Ancient Greek Life and Thought: Instruments and Their Uses
MSC: Remembering
12. Scholars think that memory and improvisation played an important role in Greek
music-making because
a. ancient Greek writings explain techniques for playing by ear.
b. ancient Greek writings praise musicians for their excellent memories.
c. images of music-making from ancient Greece rarely show performers reading music.
d. no musical notation from ancient Greece survives.
e. the musical notation from ancient Greece provides chord progressions on which to improvise.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
REF: 10
TOP: Music in Ancient Greek Life and Thought: Instruments and Their Uses
MSC: Analyzing
13. In this image a woman is playing the
a.
b.
c.
aulos.
bone flute.
kithara.
d.
e.
lyre.
panpipes.
ANS: A
DIF: Moderate
REF: 9, 11
TOP: Music in Ancient Greek Life and Thought: Instruments and Their Uses
MSC: Applying
14. The ancient Greek civilization lasted for approximately how many years?
a. 300
d. 1,500
b. 500
e. 2,000
c. 1,000
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
REF:
TOP: Music in Ancient Greek Life and Thought
9 (timeline); 10 (map and caption); 17
MSC: Remembering
15. All of the following wrote about Greek music EXCEPT
a. Aristides Quintilianus.
d. Plato.
b. Aristotle.
e. Pythagoras.
c. Orpheus.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
REF:
TOP: Greek Musical Thought; Ancient Rome
11โ13
MSC:
Remembering
16. ________ discovered the relationship between consonant intervals and mathematical ratios.
a. Aristotle
d. Ptolmey
b.
c.
Aristoxenus
Plato
e.
ANS: E
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
Pythagoras
13
TOP:
Greek Musical Thought
17. Plato asserted that music was an essential component of education because
a. music and poetry are inseparable.
b. music is enjoyable to listen to.
c. musicians were valued in society.
d. studying music helps to balance mental and physical activity.
e. studying music helps to understand mathematics.
ANS: D
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
13โ14
TOP:
Music and Ethos
18. According to Aristotle, different kinds of melodies could cause the listener to experience
a. emotions.
d. physical health.
b. hallucinations.
e. religious epiphanies.
c. philosophical thoughts.
ANS: A
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
14
TOP:
Music and Ethos
19. Who is likely to have written this: โIt is . . . plain that music has the power of producing
certain effect on the ethos of the soul, and if it has the power to do this, it is clear that the
young must be directed to music and must be educated in itโ?
a. Aristides Quintilianus
d. Homer
b. Aristotle
e. Pythagoras
c. Aristoxenus
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
REF: 14
TOP: Music and Ethos; Source Reading: Aristotle on the Doctrine of Imitation, Ethos, and Music in Education
MSC:
Applying
20. According to Aristoxenus, rhythm in music closely aligns with
a. astronomical movements.
d. mythology.
b. the doctrine of imitation.
e. poetry.
c. the Greater Perfect System.
ANS: E
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Easy
REF:
15
TOP:
Greek Music Theory
21. In Greek musical theory, the various tonoi were associated with different
a. dynamics.
d. regional styles.
b. emotional states.
e. rhythmic patterns.
c. instrument groupings.
ANS: B
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Difficult
REF:
17
TOP:
Greek Music Theory
22. The names Cleonides used for octave species (Dorian, Phrygian, and Lydian) were
derived from
a. ethnic names originally associated with styles of music practiced in different regions
of Greece.
b. the Greek names of the pitches on which each scale began.
c. the Greek names of the planets.
d. the Greek words for the emotional states evoked by each scale.
e. revered Greek theorists, writers, and philosophers.
ANS: A
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
16
TOP:
Greek Music Theory
23. The Epitaph of Seikilos is a musical composition from
a. ancient Babylon.
d.
b. the Bronze Age.
e.
c. ancient Greece.
ANS: C
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
ancient Rome.
the Stone Age.
18
TOP:
Ancient Greek Music
24. The fragmentary ode from Euripidesโs Orestes exhibits all of the following musical qualities
EXCEPT the
a. employment of instruments to support vocal music.
b. idea that music imitates ethos.
c. importance of poetic rhythm and structure in shaping the melody.
d. use of diatonic, chromatic, and enharmonic genera.
e. use of virtuosic improvisation.
ANS: E
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
18
TOP:
Ancient Greek Music
TOP:
Music in Ancient Rome
25. The tibia, tuba, cornu, and buccina are instruments from ancient
a. Babylon.
d. Mesopotamia.
b. Egypt.
e. Rome.
c. Greece.
ANS: E
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
18
TRUE/FALSE
1. The cultures of Europe and America have their roots in the Near East and Greece.
ANS: T
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
4
TOP:
Music in Antiquity
2. There is no surviving evidence of music-making before the Bronze Age (ca. 4000 B.C.E.).
ANS: F
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
5
TOP:
The Earliest Music
3. Ancient Babylonians developed a system of musical notation.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 8
MSC: Remembering
4. Scholars believe that the ancient Greek musical system of modes, and thus the European
musical system, was influenced by the Babylonian system.
ANS: T
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
REF: 8
MSC: Remembering
5. In ancient Greece, instruments were used only to accompany the voice.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
REF: 12
TOP: In Performance: Competitions and Professional Musicians
MSC: Applying
6. The Greater Perfect System was a scale based on the concept of an absolute fixed pitch.
ANS: F
DIF:
Difficult
REF:
16
TOP:
Greek Music Theory
MSC: Analyzing
7. Ancient Greek musical notation indicates pitches and durations.
ANS: T
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
18
TOP:
Ancient Greek Music
8. Surviving examples of Greek music show a close correlation between theory and practice.
ANS: T
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
19
TOP:
Ancient Greek Music
9. Music was used in ancient Roman religious, state, and military ceremonies.
ANS: T
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
19โ20
TOP:
Music in Ancient Rome
10. There is much evidence that ancient Roman musical culture influenced Western European musical culture.
ANS: F
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
20
TOP:
Music in Ancient Rome
SHORT ANSWER
1. Describe where ancient Mesopotamia was located, relative to todayโs political boundaries.
ANS:
Ancient Mesopotamia was located between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in the regions
occupied by modern-day Syria and Iraq.
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF:
6
TOP:
Music in Ancient Mesopotamia
2. Does notated music from ancient Egypt survive? Explain.
ANS:
Possibly. Some scholars think that Egyptian hieroglyphics, wall paintings, and bibles may
contain musical indications. But even if they do, their meanings are unclear.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
8โ9
TOP:
Other Civilizations
3. What is a kithara?
ANS:
A kithara is a large lyre that was used in ancient Greek processions and sacred ceremonies.
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF:
10
TOP:
Instruments and Their Uses
4. Define perfect melos.
ANS:
Perfect melos was an ancient Greek practice in which melody, text, and stylized dance were
conceived as a whole.
DIF: Moderate
REF:
MSC: Remembering
12
TOP:
Greek Musical Thought: Music, Poetry, and Dance
5. The concept in Greek philosophy that the universe is an orderly, unified system integrating
everything from mathematical proportions, astronomy, philosophy, and social structures to a
personโs soul is called ________.
ANS:
harmonia
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
13
TOP:
Greek Musical Thought
6. The ancient Greek notion that unheard music was produced by the revolutions of the planets
is known as ________.
ANS:
the music of the spheres
DIF: Moderate
REF:
MSC: Remembering
12
TOP:
Greek Musical Thought
7. In Greek thought, the idea of oneโs ethical character or way of behaving was called ________.
ANS:
ethos
DIF: Easy
REF:
MSC: Remembering
13
TOP:
Music and Ethos
8. Diatonic, chromatic, and enharmonic are types of ________.
ANS:
tetrachords
DIF: Easy
MSC: Applying
REF:
15
TOP:
Greek Music Theory
9. In 1969 the British band The Who created a rock opera called Tommy, an album of rock and roll songs produced
in a recording studio that tells a story about a visually, hearing-, and speech-impaired youth who excels at
pinball despite his disabilities. The different vocalists sing the songs on the album, each representing a character
in the story. Eventually the album was turned into a film, a live theater work, and a ballet. Would Plato have
approved of this fusion of classical and popular idioms and adaptations to different media? Why or why not?
ANS:
No. Plato did not approve of the mixing of genres and instruments and thought that musical conventions should
not be changed. This reflected a well-ordered society. Opera is a classical
genre and rock is a popular genre, so Plato would not have approved of a โrock opera.โ Breaking conventions,
such as turning a film into a live theater work, could lead to anarchy.
OR
Yes. โPerfect melosโ is when melody, text, and stylized dance are conceived as a whole.
Any opera, whether โclassicalโ or โrock,โ is conceived as whole (music, text, dance, staging, costumes, etc.).
One can argue that opera is an extension of perfect melos.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF:
12, 13โ14
TOP:
Greek Musical Thought; Music and Ethos
10. The two-octave span of available musical pitches in the Greek theoretical system is called ________.
ANS:
the Greater Perfect System
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
16
TOP:
Greek Music Theory
MSC: Remembering
MATCHING
Match each term to the correct definition below.
a. genus
b. interval
c. scale
d.
e.
species
tetrachord
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
the arrangement of tones and semitones within an interval of a fourth, fifth, or octave
the distance between two notes of different pitches
one of three arrangements of notes within a span of a perfect fourth
a series of four notes spanning a perfect fourth
a series of three or more different pitches in ascending or descending order
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
D
B
A
E
C
Match each author to the correct title below.
a. Anonymous
b. Aristotle
c. Aristoxenus
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Epitaph of Seikilos
Harmonic Introduction
Poetics and Politics
Republic and Timaeus
Rhythmic Elements and Harmonic Elements
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
d.
e.
Cleonides
Plato
A
D
B
E
C
ESSAY
1. Discuss how theories and practices of music-making in ancient Greece are similar to those
still in use today.
ANS:
Answers will vary.
2. What did the ancient Greeks believe about musicโs relation to the behavior of the individual,
the functioning of a well-ordered society, and the motions of the planets?
ANS:
Answers will vary.
chapter 2
The Christian Church in the First
Millennium
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Emperor Theodosius made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire in the year
a. 70 C.E.
d. 395 C.E.
b. 313 C.E.
e. 476 C.E.
c. 392 C.E.
ANS: C
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
23
2. The main practice shared by early Judaism and early Christianity was
a. the chanting of psalms.
c. living in monasteries.
e.
b. dancing.
d. sacrificing a lamb.
ANS: A
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Easy
REF:
23โ24
TOP:
The Diffusion of Christianity
the singing of hymns.
TOP:
The Judaic Heritage
3. The Judaic system of chanting sacred texts according to a system of melodic formulas
matching phrase divisions is called
a. cantillation.
d. reciting tone.
b. echoi.
e. tonoi.
c. psalmody.
ANS: A
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
24
TOP:
The Judaic Heritage
4. The focal point of the Christian Mass is a symbolic reenactment of the
a. birth of Christ.
d. Last Supper.
b. choir of Levites singing psalms.
e. ritual sacrifice of a lamb.
c. crucifixion of Christ.
ANS: D
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
24
TOP:
The Judaic Heritage
5. The group of influential Christian writers known as the โchurch fathersโ includes all of the
following EXCEPT
a. St. Augustine.
d. St. John Chrysostom.
b. St. Basil.
e. St. Paul.
c. St. Jerome.
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Music in the Early Christian Church
REF:
25
MSC: Remembering
6. The โchurch fathersโ advocated the singing of psalms because it
a. distanced Christian worship from pagan rituals.
b. made it easier to remember the words.
c. provoked devout thoughts and ideas of divine beauty.
d. reminded worshippers of Jesus of Nazarethโs Jewish heritage.
e. was enjoyable and gave pleasure.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
TOP: Music in the Early Christian Church
REF:
25
MSC: Applying
7. When did the Roman Empire split into the Eastern (Byzantine) Empire, centered in
Constantinople, and the Western Empire, centered in Rome and Milan?
a. 70 C.E.
d. 395 C.E.
b.
c.
313 C.E.
392 C.E.
e.
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult
REF:
TOP: Divisions of the Church and Dialects of Chant
476 C.E.
25
MSC:
Remembering
8. Who is likely to have written this: โWhen the Holy Spirit saw that mankind was ill-inclined
toward virtue and that we were heedless of the righteous life because of our inclination to
pleasure, what did he do? He blended the delight of melody with doctrine on order that
through the pleasantness and softness of sound we might unawares receive what was useful
in the words. . . . For this purpose these harmonious melodies of the Psalms have been
designed for usโ?
a. St. Ambrose
d. St. Gregory
b. St. Basil
e. St. Peter
c. St. Benedict
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult
REF: 26
TOP: Music in the Early Church; Source Readings: St. Basil on Psalms
MSC: Applying
9. The schedule of days commemorating special events in the lives of Christ and the saints or
times of year is called the
a. Christian Rite.
d. Mass.
b. church calendar.
e. service.
c. liturgy.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF:
TOP: Divisions of the Church and Dialects of Chant
10. Byzantine chant spread from the Eastern Empire to
a. France.
d.
b. Germany.
e.
c. Italy.
ANS: D
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
27
MSC:
Applying
Russia.
Spain.
28
TOP:
Byzantine Chant
11. The Frankish kings Pippin the Short and Charlemagne (Charles the Great) reigned
a. ca. 675โca. 750.
d. ca. 875โca. 950.
b. ca. 750โca. 815.
e. ca. 950โ1025.
c. ca. 815โca. 875.
ANS: B
DIF: Moderate
TOP: The Creation of Gregorian Chant
REF: 29
MSC: Remembering
12. Popes and secular rulers from the eighth century on sought to standardize the Catholic
liturgy in order to
a. centralize political and spiritual authority.
b. create a sense of unity among congregants.
c. identify and persecute non-believers.
d. reunite the Eastern and Western Empires.
e. revive the ideas of the church fathers.
ANS: A
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
29
TOP:
Western Dialects
13. The Holy Roman Empire was established when
a. Emperor Theodosius declared Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire.
b. Frankish king Pippin the Short brought the Roman liturgy and chant to his domain.
c. Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne, King of the Franks, emperor.
d. the Roman Empire fell.
e. the Roman Empire was partitioned into the Eastern and Western Empires.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
TOP: The Creation of Gregorian Chant
REF: 29
MSC: Remembering
14. Which best describes the Schola Cantorum?
a. a chant repertory preserved in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries compiled by Pope Stephen II
b. a school created by Pippin the Short meant to teach Gallican chant to the Franks
c. a widely copied music theory treatise by Boethius that was cited and copied for over 1,000 years
d. a catalogue of books grouping chant melodies together by church modes
e. a choir established in the late seventh century that sang when the pope officiated at observances and
that had a role standardizing chant texts
ANS: E
DIF: Moderate
TOP: The Creation of Gregorian Chant
REF: 26
MSC: Remembering
15. The similarities and differences from phrase to phrase of this melody provide evidence that
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
chant melodies may have been composed using a pool of melodic contours and formulas.
early notation was only an approximate way of preserving chant melodies.
oral transmission was unreliable.
the melody resulted from a blend of various chant dialects.
the Schola Cantorum purposely taught the Franks incorrect melodies.
ANS: A
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Difficult
REF:
31โ32
TOP:
Oral Transmission
TOP:
Stages of Notation
16. Why did church musicians develop a system for notating chant?
a. It helped advance the goal of disseminating a unified liturgy.
b. The vast repertory was too difficult to learn by rote memorization.
c. They wanted congregants to be able to join in the singing.
d. They wanted it to be a secret repertory, available only to the literate.
e. They wanted to preserve the music for posterity.
ANS: A
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
32
17. When did chant notation evolve from unheightened neumes to staff notation?
a. ca. 500โ600
d. ca. 850โ1025
b. ca. 600โ750
e. ca. 1025โ1150
c. ca. 750โ850
ANS: D
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
18. The idea of staff lines and clefs was suggested by
a. Boethius.
b. Guido of Arezzo.
c. Martianus Capella.
d.
e.
32โ35
TOP:
Stages of Notation
St. Gregory.
the Monks of Solesmes.
ANS: B
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
35
TOP:
Stages of Notation
35
TOP:
Stages of Notation
36โ38
TOP:
Solesmes Chant Notation
19. F and C clefs were the most often used in chant notation because they are
a. a fifth apart.
b. positioned just above the semitones in the diatonic scale.
c. the finals of the most often used modes.
d. the first notes of two of the hexachords.
e. the reciting tones of the most often used modes.
ANS: B
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
20. What is the correct transcription of this phrase?
a.
d.
b.
e.
c.
ANS: C
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Difficult
REF:
21. Which writer was one of the first to articulate the concept of the seven liberal arts, which
include music?
a. Guido of Arezzo
d. St. Augustine
b. Martianus Capella
e. St. Gregory
c. Pippin the Short, King of the Franks
ANS: B
DIF: Easy
REF:
TOP: The Transmission of Greek Music Theory
38
MSC: Remembering
22. Which mode is recognizable by its distinctive semitone interval above the final?
a. Dorian
d. Mixolydian
b. Hypodorian
e. Phrygian
c. Lydian
ANS: E
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
40
TOP:
The Church Modes
23. A melody that occupies a range from a fourth or fifth below the final to a sixth above the
final is called
a. authentic.
d. plagal.
b. hard.
e. soft.
c. natural.
ANS: D
MSC: Applying
DIF:
24. What is the mode of this chant?
Moderate
REF:
40โ41
TOP:
The Church Modes
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Dorian
Phyrgian
Lydian
Mixolydian
The chant does not clearly conform to any mode.
ANS: C
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Difficult
REF:
40โ42
TOP:
The Church Modes
42
TOP:
The Church Modes
TOP:
Music in the Early Church
25. Which best describes a reciting tone?
a. the first note of a chant
b. the highest note of a chant
c. the last note of a chant
d. the lowest note of a chant
e. the most frequent or prominent note of a chant
ANS: E
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
TRUE/FALSE
1. The early church leaders discouraged the use of music for pleasure.
ANS: T
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
25
2. The system of classifying Gregorian chants into eight church modes had its origins in Byzantine chant.
ANS: T
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
28
TOP:
Byzantine Chant
3. The Schola Cantorum was the institution musicians attended in order to learn Gregorian chant.
ANS: F
DIF: Easy
TOP: The Creation of Gregorian Chant
REF: 29
MSC: Remembering
4. Heightened neumes indicate the specific pitches of chant melodies.
ANS: F
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
30
TOP:
Stages of Notation
5. Guido of Arezzo suggested an arrangement of lines and spaces in notation, using a link of red
ink for F and of yellow ink for C.
ANS: T
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
30
TOP:
Stages of Notation
6. Chant notation from the Middle Ages gives consistent indications of rhythmic values.
ANS: F
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Moderate
REF:
36โ37
TOP:
Stages of Notation
7. In the Middle Ages, music was considered a verbal art, along with grammar and rhetoric.
ANS: F
DIF: Moderate
REF:
TOP: The Transmission of Greek Music Theory
38
MSC: Remembering
8. The eight church modes (Dorian, Hypodorian, Phrygian, Hypophrygian, etc.) correspond to
the ancient Greek modes.
ANS: F
MSC: Analyzing
DIF:
Moderate
REF:
42โ43
TOP:
The Church Modes
REF:
43
TOP:
Solmization
9. The medieval solmization system had six notes.
ANS: T
MSC: Applying
DIF:
Moderate
10. The reciting tone is the main note in a church mode and usually the last note in the melody.
ANS: F
DIF:
MSC: Remembering
Easy
REF:
36โ38
TOP:
The Church Modes
SHORT ANSWER
1. Who issued the Edict of Milan, making it legal to practice Christianity in the Roman Empire?
ANS:
Emperor Constantine
DIF: Moderate
REF:
MSC: Remembering
23
TOP:
The Diffusion of Christianity
2. Why did the church fathers disapprove of using musical instruments in church?
ANS:
They believed that only music that delivered Christian teaching and holy thoughts was worthy of hearing in
church and that music without words could not do this. It also distanced them from pagan spectacles involving
large choruses, instruments, and dancing.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
25
TOP:
Music in the Early Church
3. Why did different dialects of chant develop in various regions of Western Europe in the fifth through ninth
centuries?
ANS:
After the fall of the Roman Empire, Europe was controlled by different groups of people in different regions,
such as the Franks in Gaul (approximate modern-day France). They all had different local and regional rites
with their own bodies of chants or dialects.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
28
4. This painting illustrates what legend?
TOP:
Western Dialects
ANS:
It illustrates the legend that the Holy Spirit appeared in the form of a dove to St. Gregory and
dictated the repertory of Catholic chant to him.
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF:
30โ31
TOP:
The Creation of Gregorian Chant
5. What is a neume?
ANS:
A neume is an early notation sign that indicates the melodic gesture for each syllable, including
the number of notes, the melodic contour, and whether notes are repeated. It might indicate
rhythm or manner of performance.
DIF: Moderate
REF:
MSC: Remembering
35
TOP:
Stages of Notation
6. Today we think of music as an applied, practical, or performing art. Why did theorists in the Middle Ages
consider it a liberal art, along with such disciplines as dialectic (logic) and arithmetic?
ANS:
Theorists in the Middle Ages thought more about the mathematical and philosophical aspects of music. They
thought about how ratios and proportions create consonances, dissonances, and tuning. They also thought about
how music can affect the body and soul, and how it would prepare the student for more advanced philosophical
studies. Music was an object of knowledge and inquiry.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
39
TOP:
The Transmission of Greek Music Theory
7. This music theorist divided music into three categories: musica mundana (music of the universe), musica
humana (human music), and musica instrumentalis (instrumental music).
ANS:
Boethius
DIF: Easy
REF:
MSC: Remembering
39
TOP:
The Transmission of Greek Music Theory
8. Some chants do not conform to the rules of modal theory. Why is this?
ANS:
Modal theory was first described in the later Middle Ages, for example in Musica enchiriadis and in the writings
of Guido dโArezzo (ca. 1025โ1028). However, many chants were composed before the system was codified.
Many of these do not conform to the so-called rules. Chants composed after the tenth century often conform
very clearly.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
42, 44โ45
TOP:
The Church Modes
9. Describe the difference between authentic and plagal church modes.
ANS:
The odd-numbered modes are called authentic, covering a range from a step below the final to an octave above
it. Each authentic mode is paired with a plagal mode that has the same final but is deeper in range, moving from
a fourth (or sometimes a fifth) below the final to a fifth or sixth above it.
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Analyzing
REF:
36โ37
TOP:
The Church Modes
10. Identify this image. How was it used?
ANS:
This is the Guidonian Hand. It was used to teach music students how to find pitches of a melody on the system
of hexachords. It shows the solmization syllables for each note.
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF:
44
TOP:
The Hexachord System
MATCHING
Match each author to the correct title.
a. Anonymous
b. Boethius
c. Guido of Arezzo
1. Confessions
d.
e.
Martianus Capella
St. Augustine
2.
3.
4.
5.
De institutione musica (The Fundamentals of Music)
The Marriage of Mercury and Philology
Micrologus
Musica enchiriadis (Music Handbook)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
ANS:
E
B
D
C
A
ESSAY
1. In what ways is the history of Western music indebted to and intertwined with Christianity?
ANS:
Answers will vary.
2. Discuss the role of memory and notation in the learning and performance of chant in the Middle Ages.
ANS:
Answers will vary.
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