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AP Music Theory Unit 7
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What is a diatonic chord?
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1 point
A chord containing all accidentals
A chord within the given key signature
A chord outside the given key signature
A chord in the minor version of the given key signature
What are secondary dominants?
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Major triads or Major-minor seventh chords that want to resolve to a diatonic chord
Minor triads or Minor-major seventh chords that want to resolve to a diatonic chord
Major triads or Minor-major seventh chords that want to resolve to a diatonic chord
Minor triads or Major-minor seventh chords that want to resolve to a diatonic chord
Are secondary leading tone chords diatonic?
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1 point
Yes they are, they are always within the key
Yes they are, they are mostly within the key
No they aren’t, they require accidentals
No they aren’t, but they require to stay in the key
Which of the following doubling rules is true?
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Don't double secondary leading tones
Don't double the seventh of any seventh chord
Only A
Only A and B
What is the difference between tonicization and modulation?
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Modulation is a long term key change meanwhile tonicization is shorter and only lasts a couple chords
Tonicization is a long term key change meanwhile modulation is shorter and only lasts a couple chords
There is no difference, modulation and tonicization are a long term key change
There is no different both modulation and tonicization are short and only last a couple chords
How would you read a secondary dominant chord?
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V/V; Five over five
V/V; Five of five
V/V; Five of the fifth scale
V/V; Five under five
When does the V/iv chord appear?
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In a major key signature
In a harmonic minor key signature
In a minor key signature
In both major and minor key signatures
What is an augmented sixth chord used as?
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As a dominant chord
As a predominant chord
As a secondary chord
As a chord in a major key signature
What are the three different types of augmented sixth chords?
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German, english, french
German, spanish, english
German, french, spanish
German, french, italian
What is the name of a major triad chord based on the lowered supertonic?
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A predominant chord
A neapolitan chord
A french chord
A dominant chord
What is a direct modulation?
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A modulation without the use of a pivot chord
A modulation with the use of a pivot chord
A modulation with the use of a pivot chord on a dominant chord
A modulation without the use a pivot chord on a dominant chord
What does texture refer to?
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The way melody creates a piece of music
The way rhythm creates a piece of music
The way harmony synthesizes to become a piece of music
All of the above
What is the thickness of texture in music called?
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Range
Density
Texture
Melody
What does range consist of?
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The thickness of texture
The melody in the music
The distance between the highest and lowest notes
The distance between two intervals
What are the four different types of texture?
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Monophonic, range, melody, density
Monophonic, polyphonic, melody, homophonic
Monophonic, homophonic, range, density
Monophonic, homophonic, polyphonic, homorhythmic
What is the difference between monophonic and polyphonic?
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Monophonic has one melody line and polyphonic has two or more lines moving independently
Monophonic has two or more lines moving independently and polyphonic has one melody line
There is no difference, monophonic and polyphonic have one melody line
There is no difference, monophonic and polyphonic have two or more lines moving independently
What is the difference between homophonic and homorhythmic?
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Homophonic has the same rhythm and is usually choral music and homorhythmic has melody and accompaniment
Homophonic has melody and accompaniment and homorhythmic has the same rhythm and is usually choral music
There is no difference, homophonic and homorhythmic have the same rhythm and are usually choral music
There is no difference, homophonic and homorhythmic have the same melody and accompaniment
In which textures is there a primary melody?
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Homophonic and homorhythmic
Homophonic and monophonic
Homophonic and polyphonic
Monophonic and polyphonic
What is the secondary melody?
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Melodic material that is not as important as the primary melody
Melodic material that is an octave lower than the primary melody
Melodic material that is an octave higher than the primary melody
Melodic material is works as a harmonic support for the primary melody
What is static support?
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Harmonic support of the primary melody
The accompaniment that is harmonic and rhythmic support
Melodic material that is an octave lower than the primary melody
Sustained chords or tones that could be a pedal point
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