Traditional music is defined as music that takes influences from traditional sources including folk music and reinterprets them in a contemporary style, an
Topic Synopsis
Traditional music is defined as music that takes influences from traditional sources including folk music and reinterprets them in a contemporary style, and traditional music from traditional sources and cultures that is performed as intended by the composer.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- **Instrumentation:** Recognising and describing the characteristic instruments of traditional music, such as the fiddle, tin whistle, Uilleann pipes, bodhrán, accordion, bagpipes, and their specific timbres.
- **Rhythmic Patterns:** Identifying and understanding common dance rhythms like jigs (6/8 time, often lively), reels (4/4 time, fast and flowing), and hornpipes (often 2/4 or 4/4, with a dotted rhythm feel), and their typical tempi.
- **Melody and Ornamentation:** Analysing melodic features, including the use of modes (e.g., Dorian, Mixolydian), pentatonic scales, and the prevalence of ornamentation (e.g., grace notes, rolls, cuts, slides) to embellish tunes.
- **Structure and Form:** Understanding common structures like binary (AABB), ternary (ABA), theme and variations, and call and response, often heard in folk songs and dance tunes.
- **Texture and Harmony:** Identifying typical textures such as monophonic (single melodic line), heterophonic (simultaneous variations of a single melody), and the use of drones or simple chordal accompaniments.
Exam Tips & Revision Strategies
- Ensure familiarity with the specific tracks listed for the study pieces.
- Be prepared to identify and apply musical vocabulary to both heard and notated music.
- Practice identifying musical elements in unfamiliar excerpts from the specified genres (Blues 1920-1950, Fusion, Latin, Folk).
Examiner Marking Points
- Ability to listen attentively to unfamiliar music from specified styles/genres.
- Ability to identify and accurately describe musical elements, musical contexts, and musical language.
- Critical appraisal of specified study pieces (Paul Simon: Graceland album; Esperanza Spalding tracks).
- Understanding the effect of audience, time, and place on the creation and performance of study pieces.
- Understanding how composer's purpose and intention are reflected in the use of musical elements.
- Application of relevant musical vocabulary and terminology.
- Knowledge of specific musical elements: Melody (blue notes, pentatonic, whole tone, modal, slide/glissando/portamento, pitch bend, appoggiaturas, ostinato, riff, melody-scat, melisma, improvisation), Tonality (modal, pentatonic), Structure (strophic, verse and chorus, cyclic, call and response, popular song forms, 12/16 bar blues), Sonority (generic families of instruments, use of technology/sampling/effects, drone, vocal techniques), Texture (a cappella, imitative, layered/layering).