Music Test 2 Crossword
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
 
 
Down: 1) The five sung portions of the Mass for which the texts are unvaribale.3) Bases for music. A large body of unaccompanied monophonic vocal music, set to Latin texts, commposed for the Western Church over the course of fifteen cernturies, from the time of the earliest fathers to the Conal of Trent (1545-1563).4) Medieval fiddle.5) The name given to the early polyphony of the Western Church from the ninth through the thirtheenth centuries. It was the first music that includes harmony.7) Many notes sung to just one syllable. Fansy change that is decorated.8) Gregorian chant.9) Female poet-musican of medieval southern France.12) The sections of the Mass that are sung to texts that vary with each feast day.14) A male adult singer who had been castrated as a boy to keep his voice from changing so that it would remain in the soprano or alto register. The last recored song was in 1903.16) A type of secular poet- musican that flourished in northern France during the thirteen and early fourteenth centuries.17) The central religious service of the Roman Catholic Church, one that incorporates singing for spiritual reflection or as accompaniment to sacred acts.18) Slow, gliding Renaissance dance in duple meter performed by couples holding hands.20) This is two decades long (1545- 1563) conference at which leading cardinals and bishops undertook reform of the Roman Catholic Church, including its music.22) A composistion for choir or larger chorus setting a religious, decotional or solemn text, often sung a cappella.24) A popular genre of secular vocal music that originated in Italy during the Renaissance, in which usually four or five voices sing love poems.26) A French term used broadly to indicate a lyrical song from the Middle ages into the twetieth century. Across: 2) A type of secular poetmusician that flourished in southern France during the twelft and thirteenth centuries.6) A device, originating in the madrigal, by which key words in a text spark a particualarly expressice musical setting.9) The highest male vocal range.10) A term apllied to unaccompanied vocal music; originated in the expression a cappella Sistina, "in the Sistine Chapel" of the Pope, where instruments were forbidden to accompany the singers.11) Fast, leaping Renaissance dance in triple meter.13) Classical form with at least three statements of the refrain (A) and at least two contrasting sections (at least B & C) placement of the refrain creates symmetrical patterns such as ABACA, ABACABA, or even ABACADA.15) A high, soprano- like voice produced by adult male singers when hey sing in head voice and not in full chest voice.19) The Pope's private chapel within his vatican apartments.21) Renaissance belief that people have then capacity to create many things good and beautiful; it rejoicd in the human form in all its fullness, looked outward, and indulged a passion for invention and discovery.23) Movement that fostered reform in the Roman Catholic Church in response to the challenge of the Protest Reformation and led to a conservative, austere approach to art.25) The process by which one or more musical voices, or parts, enter and duplicate exactly for a period of time the music presented by the previous voice.27) A style of singing in which wach syllable of text has one, and only one, note; the opposite of melismatic singing.28) A type of secular poetmusician that flourished in Germany during the twelfth through fourteenth centuries.29) A process of depeting the text in music, be it subtly, overtly, or even jokingly, by means of expressive musical devices. Musical relects that same meaning as the text.
 

 

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