Terminology
a cappella: vocal music sung without accompaniment
aleatoric: music where the composer leaves choices to the performer and which involves randomness
bar: also ‘measure’, a unit with a specific number of beats, shown in the time signature and separated in the score by barlines
basso continuo: the group of bass and harmony instruments that forms the foundation of the Baroque orchestra
cadenza: an unaccompanied virtuoso solo passage in a concerto
cantus firmus: a melody around which a polyphonic work is built, often a Gregorian chant
chamber music: music for ensembles smaller than a symphony orchestra (but at least two instruments), typically with one musician per part
chanson: French for ‘song’, in classical music this refers to secular polyphonic songs from the Renaissance era
chord: three or more pitches sounded at once
chromatic: involving much use of semitones
concerto: a work for soloist and orchestra
crescendo: the volume of the music increases gradually
dance suite: a form used in the Baroque era featuring multiple movements in the style of various dances of the time, such as allemande, courante, gigue, minuet, air, bourrée or gavotte
Darmstadt School: a style of composition emerging from summer classes given in Darmstadt, Germany from the 1940s onwards
diminuendo: the volume of the music decreases gradually
electronic music: music where electronic devices are used to reproduce recordings or to generate sounds live in performance
figured bass: see thorough bass and basso continuo
forte, f: loud, strong dynamics
fragment: part of a larger entity; for instance, a melody may be reduced to fragments
fugue: a polyphonic work of the Baroque era with multiple simultaneous melodic lines based on imitation
functional harmony: a theory of harmony that developed in the Classical era, featuring logical and expected chord progressions
Gregorian chant: monophonic liturgical singing that was originally transmitted as an oral tradition in monasteries
harmony: several pitches sounding at once
homophony: music consisting of melody and accompaniment; compare polyphony
key: in tonal music, a key is an environment based on a specific set of pitches and with a specific tonic or fundament, the resting place where the music begins and ends
leading tone: the 7th tone in a major or minor scale that leads to the fundament or tonic
leitmotif: a composition technique developed by Wagner where each event or character is assigned a signature tune
Lied: German for ‘song’, this refers to a Romantic genre of solo song where the vocal part and piano part are of equal importance
madrigal: a secular vocal work of the Renaissance era for 4 to 6 voices
major: one of the two basic types of scale and chord in tonal music
mass: a sacred work usually based on the liturgy of the Catholic Church
microinterval: an interval smaller than a semitone
minimalism: a style of music based on much repetition of very simple elements and slow changes
minor: one of the two basic types of scale and chord in tonal music
modes: scales common in the Renaissance era (and again in the 20th century) that differ slightly from the major and minor scales of tonal harmony
monody: music consisting of a vocal line plus accompaniment (compare polyphony)
motet: an unaccompanied vocal work, usually on a sacred text
motif: a brief musical subject
neo-classicism: a style of the early 20th century that drew on influences from the Classical era
neumes: an early form of musical notation
noise: sounds that do not have a specific or identifiable pitch, e.g. traffic noise
overture: originally the introduction to an opera, later also an independent dramatic orchestral work that in the Romantic era evolved into the tone poem
part: the music for one orchestra member, showing only what he/she plays in the work in question
partita: a genre from the Baroque era
phrasing: how musical ideas are shaped or performed
piano, p: quiet, soft dynamics
polyphony: music with many voices, specifically with each voice having an independent melodic line
prelude: an introduction like an overture, with no preset form or duration
Renaissance: an era in the history of music approximately from 1400 to 1600
score: sheet music showing all the parts played or sung in a composition, used by the conductor
serialism: a technique that developed in the 1940s based on rational, formula-based organisation of musical material
solo: a musical passage played by a single musician
spectral music: music based on the acoustical properties of sound, specifically the overtone series
Sprachgesang: German for ‘speech-song’, a mode of expression between speech and singing developed by Arnold Schönberg, a composer of the Second Viennese School
symphony: a work for symphony orchestra, typically in four movements, that became established in the Classical era
thorough bass: a system of notation where a bass line was marked up with numbers based on which the basso continuo group was able to improvise harmonic accompaniment (similar to the use of chord symbols in popular music today)
through-composed: instead of repeated stanzas or choruses, the music changes throughout the work; a poem with stanzas may be set in a through-composed song with a different melody for each stanza
tonal music: music based on the existence of an anchor point called the tonic or fundament and on the harmonies generated from the major or minor scale built on the tonic
tone poem: a dramatic symphonic work that evolved from the overture, often with a specific narrative or programme
tone row (12-tone row): all 12 pitches of the chromatic scale arranged in a particular order by the composer
transposition: the pitch that sounds is different from the pitch that is written in the music
tutti: Italian for ‘all’, meaning that everyone in a section or the entire orchestra is playing
unending melody: ideally, a melody that has no beginning or end, no repeated stanzas or choruses (compare through-composed)
virtuoso: a musician with supremely brilliant technical command of his/her instrument