Acr020106
contestada

Match the following.
1. A pair of musical phrases that complement each other in rhythm and harmony.
2. Two-part structure (AB).
3. Transitional material connecting two sections.
4. Verses sung to the same tune interspersed with chorus using a different tune (ABAB...).
5. The organizational structure of music.
6. Material that precedes the main section or movement.
7. All verses sung to the same tune (AAA...).

a. Bridge
b. Contrasting verse-chorus form
c. Simple verse form
d. Introduction
e. Antecedent and consequent
f. Binary form
g. Form

Respuesta :

Answer:

1. (e) Antecedent and consequent

2. (f) Binary form

3. (a) Bridge

4. (b) Contrasting verse-chorus form

5. (g) Form

6. (d) Introduction

7. (c) Simple verse form

Explanation:

I used some simple reasoning here since I'm not 100% familiar with these terms. Here are the steps I used in my reasoning:

  1. (d) is defined by the 6th definition. "Introduction" refers to a beginning, as when someone introduces a person to someone else. It can refer to the beginning of a textbook that precedes all the material. The 6th definition uses the word "precedes," which matches with the meaning of "Introduction."
  2. (g) is defined by the 5th definition. "Form" can refer to a physical appearance, and the verb "forms" means, amongst other definitions, to make or create something. In addition, I'd already seen the term used to describe musical structure.
  3. (a) is defined by the 3rd definition. I know the bridge of a song connects two different sections, just as a bridge over a river connects the two sides, and crossing a bridge leads you to a new section or place.
  4. (b) is defined by the 4th definition. The reasoning here was rather simple: the definition says the verse and chorus have different tunes/melodies. This means they contrast. From this, (b) is self-explanatory.
  5. (f) is defined by the 2nd definition. "Binary" contains the prefix "bi" meaning "two" and the 2nd definition describes a two-part structure.
  6. (c) is defined by the 7th definition. It describes everything as sung to the same tune... that's rather "simple" (no pun intended), and it uses only verses.
  7. (e) is defined by the 1st definition. I know this because there is only one term left, hahaha.

I hope this helps! Have a good day!