Music 21, Fall 2000
Final Exam Study Guide
I. Aural
A. Identification
Scale degrees (given a key-defining progression)
Intervals (from among M/m 2, M/m3, P5, P8)
Triads (from among Maj, min, aug, dim)
B. Dictation
Melodic (treble and bass clef)
Rhythmic (simple and compound meter)
Harmonic (provide soprano [notes and scale degrees], bass, Key, Roman numerals, cadence type)
C. Contextual Listening
Mode (major, minor)
Meter (simple/compound, duple/triple)
Scale degrees of first/last notes
Phrasing (number of sections, starting/ending harmonies, phrase diagram)
Comment on use of repetition
II. Written
A. Concepts
Pitch, pitch class, interval, scale, solfege, key signature, accidental, relative/parallel key, tertian harmony, triad, seventh chord, inversion, voicing (close and open position), doubling, chord progression, phrase, cadence, nonharmonic tones (passing and neighbor); notes, rests, dots, ties, meter (simple/compound, duple/triple), meter signature.
B. Pitch skills
Identify and provide:
Scales (major, harmonic/natural/melodic minor)
Intervals (all, ascending/descending, up to the octave)
Key signatures (all)
Relative and parallel keys
Solfege syllables (major and minor)
Triads (major, minor, augmented, diminished)
Diatonic triads
Primary and secondary triads
Seventh chords (MM, Mm, mm, half-diminished, fully diminished)
Inversions of triads and seventh chords
Figured bass symbols (inversions, chromatic alterations)
Roman numerals (diatonic triads, dominant seventh chord)
C. Rhythm skills
Given meter signature, add a note or rest to complete a measure
Given complete measures, provide meter signature
Given compete measures and meter signature, provide barlines
Identify beat and meter type of an example (compound duple, simple triple, etc)
D. Analytical skills
Given a musical example, comment on:
Harmonic implications of melody
Phrasing (phrase length, cadences)
Motivic development
Formal organization (letter schemes [ABA', etc], use of repetition, unity versus variety, etc)