Component 3: Appraising assesses students' listening and appraising skills through the study of four areas of study, each containing two set works. Student
Topic Synopsis
Component 3: Appraising assesses students' listening and appraising skills through the study of four areas of study, each containing two set works. Students must demonstrate knowledge of musical elements, musical contexts, and musical language, applying these to both set works and unfamiliar music.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Historical periods and their musical features: Baroque (e.g., terraced dynamics, basso continuo), Classical (e.g., sonata form, balanced phrases), Romantic (e.g., expressive harmony, rubato), and 20th/21st-century (e.g., atonality, minimalism).
- Genre and style conventions: e.g., the structure of a Baroque concerto, the use of word-painting in madrigals, or the typical orchestration of a film score.
- Purpose and audience: how music was written for specific functions (e.g., church, court, concert hall, film) and how that affects its character.
- Cultural and geographical influences: e.g., the fusion of Western and non-Western elements in 'Fusions' set works like 'Release' by Afro Celt Sound System.
Exam Tips & Revision Strategies
- Familiarize yourself with each set work as a whole before analyzing specific elements.
- Use the suggested wider listening to help place set works in a broader context.
- Practice identifying musical elements, chord patterns, and rhythms aurally.
- Ensure you can use the correct technical terms for different genres (e.g., 'ostinato' for classical, 'riff' for popular music).
- In the comparison essay, explicitly refer to musical elements and justify your opinions with evidence from the music.
Common Misconceptions & Mistakes to Avoid
- Using inappropriate descriptive terms like 'thick' or 'thin' instead of technical terms like 'homophonic' or 'polyphonic'.
- Failing to use accurate musical vocabulary when appraising set works.
- Not referring to the provided skeleton score for unfamiliar pieces.
- Inadequate comparison or evaluation in the extended response section.
- Ignoring the context of the music (historical, social, cultural) in evaluative answers.
Examiner Marking Points
- Ability to identify key musical features aurally in set works.
- Understanding of the context within which set works were composed.
- Ability to express and justify opinions on set work extracts.
- Accuracy in musical dictation and staff notation tasks.
- Quality of musical knowledge and understanding in extended responses.
- Quality of evaluation and conclusion in comparison questions.
- Application of knowledge of musical elements, contexts, and language to unfamiliar music.
- Use of accurate musical vocabulary and terminology.