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Homework answers / question archive / MUSIC 009 - Final Exam Question 1) Female impersonators in Japanese kabuki drama
Question 1)
Female impersonators in Japanese kabuki drama.
Question 2
The instrumental ensemble in noh drama, which consists of a flute and three drums.
Question 3
Rasta chant, which was a major influence on mainstream genres that came to dominate the musical scene in Jamaica.
Question 4
The accenting of rhythms that would not normally be accented in Western art music.
Question 5
The term that describes levels of density in Javanese gamelan music.
Question 6
Over-amplified mobile disco popular in Jamaica during the 1950s and 1960s.
Question 7
The 'skeleton' or nuclear melody in a Javanese musical piece.
Question 8
The walkway that extends from the kabuki stage through the audience to the back of the theater.
Question 9
The South African policy of segregation, which allowed the white minority to secure their power over the black majority by regarding black South Africans as second-class citizens.
Question 10
Traditionally European musical dance set frequently performed by creole ensembles.
Question 11
The general term for traditional Japanese music.
Question 12
An Indonesian "orchestra" or musical ensemble.
Question 13
The blending of diverse elements into a unified mixture.
Question 14
General Indonesian term for their tuning systems.
Question 15
A song, which had overt Christian lyrics, sung by slaves who had been converted to Christianity.
Question 16
Official displays of power.
Question 17
The big dance in noh drama in which the shite reveals his new essence after his spiritual transformation.
Question 18
Japanese puppet theater.
Question 19
The Japanese aesthetic ideal, which is found in both small- and large-scale forms and applied at all levels of musical form, including musical phrase, composition, and performance. It is often translated as "introduction, development, and conclusion."
Question 20
Short patterns or forms which form the basis of learning in much of Japanese culture.
Question 21
The lyrical type of music found in Japanese music, which can stand on its own, separate from a play.
Question 22
The central dancing arena at a powwow.
Question 23
Match the following kabuki ensembles with their descriptions
The off-stage ensemble that creates sound effects for performance
The onstage ensemble comprised of a group of shamisens and singers as well as the traditional hayashi ensemble.
The onstage ensemble that consists of a narrator accompanied by a shamisen in kabuki theater.
Question 24
Match the sections of Japanese music with their definitions.
The section of a Japanese piece, which according to Japanese aesthetics is typically characterized by a slow exposition in free rhythm
The section of a Japanese piece, which translates literally as “breaking apart.” According to Japanese aesthetics, this is typically a more rhythmic section in which the tempo builds and becomes steady
The section of a Japanese piece, which translates literally as “rushing.” According to Japanese aesthetics, this is a faster, intense drive toward the end in which the tempo reaches its peak, then suddenly slows down at the end of the piece or performance
Question 25
Match the following Jamaican musical genres with their definitions.
An indigenous Jamaican folk song and dance style whose roots are primarily African and European, though it has a distinctly Jamaican sound
The Jamaican genre that was very closely connected with Rastafarianism and the “Back to Africa” movement
This genre had a much slower, more relaxed tempo, which allowed singers/songwriters to express themselves
The Jamaican genre that was a hybrid of mento, American R&B, doo-wop, and jazz
Question 26
Match the following Indonesian instruments with their descriptions.
The largest of the kettle gongs
Largest gong in gamelan
Thin metal bars suspended over tube resonators
Thick, curved metal bars that rest on a wooden resonating box
Question 27
Match the following Native American culture groups with their musical characteristics.
A very relaxed, lower-pitched vocal style
Complex rhythms and some use of polyphony. Melodies tend to have a larger range than many other culture groups
A narrow vocal range and limited musical variation; Songs involving phrases repeated in pairs (e.g., AA BB CC, etc.)
A more relaxed vocal style and songs performed in call-and-response, resulting occasionally in some polyphony
Question 28
A typical example of incomplete repetition is:
Question 29
Native American vocables are commonly believed to be:
Question 30
What decade was considered the "Golden Age" of mento?
Question 31
The group that truly defined the isicathamiya sound was Solomon Linda and the Evening Birds, who came into the spotlight in the 1930s.
Question 32
The last major clash between Native Americans and Euro-Americans, resulting in a huge massacre of approximately 300 Sioux in 1890, is now referred to as:
Question 33
Who were the members of the Wailers?
Question 34
The primary difference between reggae and rocksteady is that reggae has a smooth, relaxed sound and rocksteady has a more rhythmic funk sound driven by the rhythm section.
Question 35
Kabuki has changed drastically in its form and essence since the 18th century.
Question 36
Who founded the WOMAD festival?
Question 37
How many culture areas are the Native American people generally grouped into?
Question 38
When was Ladysmith Black Mambazo formed?
Question 39
Noh drama has as its goal personal enlightenment through self-understanding.
Question 40
When the Dutch took over Java, they stripped the Javanese courts of their power as well as their role of maintaining classical Javanese culture and traditions.
Question 41
Bando Tamasaburo V has done all of the following except:
Question 42
When did Rastafari originate?
Question 43
Music is used in religious rituals to transform ordinary experience.
Question 44
The veena is different from the sitar in that it has no sympathetic strings and that the frets are not raised and movable. Also it is held across the lap as opposed to being held like a guitar (as the sitar is).
Question 45
Both the mridangam and the tabla have spots of vegetable paste in the center of at least one of their drumheads.
Question 46
In cultures throughout the world, music reinforces boundaries between social groups, who view their music as an emblem of their identity.
Question 47
The double-headed drum that gives bhangra its characteristic sound.
Question 48
Music is used in religious rituals to transform ordinary experience.
Question 49
Not normally perceived as separate pitches but combine to make up the timbre of the instrument.
Question 50
The Iranian term for music, which includes composed, instrumental music with a strong sense of pulse.
Question 51
A melody or part of a melody that is characterized by an excessive number of small intervals.
Question 52
The Hindustani instrument that is perhaps the most famous Indian instrument worldwide, made famous through Western musicians’ interest, such as the Beatles.
Question 53
The main location where Sufism is practiced in the general region of West Asia which includes Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Question 54
The Iranian term for recitation, which includes more acceptable forms of musical sound, including Qur’anic recitation.
Question 55
In both Hindustani and Karnatak music there are always three layers of musical activity: a melodic soloist, an accompanying drummer, and a drone instrument.
Question 56
Large sheets of paper that were used to publish songs were called ____________.
Question 57
Narrative folk songs that are traditionally sung in the third person.
Question 58
Also known as tone color, this describes what makes sounds sound different from one another:
Question 59
The organization of elements in a musical work. It can be expressed by letter diagrams, in which each letter designates a different section or contrasting section, such as AABA or AABB.
Question 60
The activities that go into making music and into the way the music is heard and received by listeners. This is the “Who? When? Where? and How? in the five "W's."
Question 61
This instrument is used in Karnatak music and is lute shaped with a hollowed-out resonator and a second resonator (made from a gourd) attached to the other end of the instrument.
Question 62
The Indian term for meter, or rhythmic mode.
Question 63
Musicianship in a culture is often hereditary. If you are not born into a music al culture, you cannot become proficient in that musical culture
Question 64
In some cultures, music does not change, even in order to satisfy social needs.
Question 65
Tertiary form describes a piece of music as having two melodic phrases, each of which are repeated, so that the letter diagram is AABB (or written musically |: A :|: B :|
Question 66
Accompaniment or subsidiary lines of music that are different from a melody.
Question 67
Which of the following songs is sometimes referred to as the Cajun national anthem?
Question 68
What song became the unofficial anthem for Chinese student protesters killed by armed Chinese forces during the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989?
Question 69
Juju music is the popular music genre of which country?
Question 70
Which calypso song performed by Lord Invader expressed socio-political viewpoints against the influence of the American soldiers in Trinidad?
Which of the following instruments is NOT typically used in klezmer performance?
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