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Created by casey soles
about 8 years ago
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| Question | Answer |
| Semiotics | The study of signs and systems of signs. including in music. |
| Ethnocentrism | The assumption that one's own cultural patterns and understandings are normative and that those that differ are "strange", "exotic", or "abnormal". |
| Ethnomusicology | The scholarly study of any music within its contemporary cultural context. |
| Folklore | The study of orally transmitted folk knowledge and culture. |
| Comparative Musicology | An early term for the field that became ethnomusicology, when research emphasized comparisons of folk and non- western music with western practices. |
| Fieldwork | The first-hand study of music in its original context, a technique derived from anthropology. |
| Timbre | The tone quality or color of a musical sound. |
| Pitch | A tone's specific frequency level, measured in Hertz (Hz). |
| Rhythm | The lengths, or durations, of sounds as patterns in time. |
| Dynamics | The volume of a musical sound. |
| Aural Color | Terms such as nasal, dark, mellow, strained, rough, soothing, grating, and so on. |
| Organology | The study of musical instruments. |
| Sachs-hornbostel system | Standard classification for musical instruments created by Curt Sachs and Erik M. Von Hornbostel. |
| Aerophone | Instruments that require air to produce sound -- namely, flutes, reeds, trumpets, and bellows-driven instruments. |
| Chordophone | Four types of stringed instruments: lutes, zithers, harps, lyres. |
| Fret | A bar or ridge found on chordophones that enables performers to produce different melodic pitches with consistent frequency levels. |
| Idiophones | Instruments that themselves vibrate to produce sound, such as rattles, bells, and various other kinds of percussion. |
| Membranophone | Instruments, typically drums, that use a vibrating stretched membrane as the principal means of sound production. |
| Pitch | A tone's specific frequency level, measured in Hertz (Hz). |
| Tuning System | All the pitches common to a musical tradition. |
| Scale | A set of pitches. |
| Interval | The "distance" between two pitches. |
| Range | The span of pitches a given instrument or voice is capable of producing. |
| Melody | An organized succession of pitches forming a musical idea. |
| Ornamentation | Embellishments or decorations that are applied to a melody, and thus modify the original musical idea. |
| Text Setting | The rhythmic relationship of words to melody; can syllabic or melismatic. |
| Melodic Contour | The general shape and direction of a melody. |
| Drone | A continuous or repeating sound. |
| Rhythm | The lengths, or durations, of sounds as patterns in time. |
| Beat | A regular pulsation in sound. |
| Tempo | The relative rate of speed of the beat. |
| Accent | An emphasized beat. |
| Phonic Structure | The relationship between different sounds in a given piece; it can be either monophony or some form of polyphony. |
| Monophony | Music with a single melodic line. |
| Polyphony | The juxtaposition of overlapping of multiple lines of music; the three types of polyphony are homophony, independent polyphony, and heterophony. |
| Homophony | Multiple lines of music expressing the same musical idea in the same meter. |
| Heterophony | Multiple performers playing simultaneous variations of the same line of music. |
| Form | The underlying temporal structure of a musical performance. |
| Etic | The perspective of a cultural outsider. |
| Emic | The perspective of a cultural insider. |
| Melanesia | Dark islands. |
| Micronesia | Small islands. |
| Polynesia | Many islands. |
| Aborigines | A generic term for an indigenous population, often used to describe native peoples of Australia. |
| Animism | Belief systems in which natural phenomena as well as both animate and inanimate objects are considered to possess a spirit. |
| Dreamtime | A term describing the Australian aboriginal spiritual belief system and concept of creation. |
| Circular Breathing | A technique used to maintain a continuous exhaled airflow in aerophone performance. |
| Portamento | A smooth, uninterrupted glide from one pitch to another. |
| Pahu | A single-headed cylindrical membranophone. |
| Hula Pahu | Hawaiian dance songs using drum accompaniment. |
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