Art and Arc Final
Terms
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- brass
- outdoor instruments, invariably associated with kings and queens.
- a changing beat
- acting, dancing, singing. having involvement at ucla, bruin walk, finding what you are interested in
- Woodwinds
- made of wood — from which the first half of their family name derives. produce their sounds by means of vibrating air columns in conical tubes
- live laugh love
- acting, improv, dancing. how different cultures can be similar. huka. persian and lebanese dance
- Timpani
- resembles other drums — a skin (formerly of cowhide but today usually of plastic) is drawn tightly over a round frame (made of either brass or copper). the ability to "tune" it to specific pitches by tightening or loosening screws on its side. This strength means it can produce great power or a murmuring roll.
- suspending disbelief
- dancing, singing, narrative, acting. combo of all their different talents. inspired by frank dwyer and bulgarian dancing
- conductor
- The "leader" was usually the head of the first violins. But over the next few centuries composers injected more and more tempo [i.e. the speed] and dynamic [how soft or loud] variations in their music to express a wider, more extravagant range of emotions. During the nineteenth century, it grew from a necessary but journeyman task into a highly refined art form that was not without its dictatorial dimensions. ranged from heartthrobs to eccentrics, and were always celebrities in the middle of the public eye.
- bulgarian bagpipe
- made from goat
- how and cold: interpretation of a pop song
- poetry, music. popular upbeat song can be changed (mood) through instrumenttation. tried to make it more serious and have the insult come across clearer
- DJ101
- music, dance. integrated three electronic songs together. sway the steretype of what raving is.
- paganini
- violin
- art...whats that?
- acting, improv, visual, live music. parody on professor. "TA ADAM" plays guitar (really funny)
- gregorian chant
- large mideval cathedral monks began...
- shop
- people think they know everything. they take charge and they are assertive
- bulgarians
- combine triple and duple meter, 7/8 measure
- double-reed instruments.
- The oboe and bassoon use a single reed folded into two opposing sections. Oboe and bassoon players devote much time to making their own reeds, each of which lasts no more than a few weeks.
- bach
- baroque era, introduced chaconne, austian and german
- sleazy frat boys
- improv, theaster, music, comedy. mocking frat boys
- Der Rosenkavaleir
- The opera that shows all of the aspects of western love; sang in german
- halelujah
- poetry, live music, singing. see how two completely different forms of art could come together. poe, by leonard copem
- zelda. the end literally
- live music, acting, and video. saxophone, sword, skit
- barbara crougar
- formulated rage+woman=power
- urbing berlin
- imagining: wrote white christmas
- trumpet
- highest pride of brass
- The flute, oboe, and bassoon;
- woodwind instrument
- icky icky love song
- acting, dancing, instrument. piano and guitar, boy wants to fall in love
- heydyn
- In 1759, this composer become Kappelmiester before working for the Prince Esterhazy.
- Sophie
- (sung by our Joanna Foote) is a younger teenager perhaps about 16 years old.
- hector berlioz and richard wagner
- first romantic composers
- ensemble
- the act 3 finale with its 3 main singers
- The Flute
- "all composers do is to use the upper register, loud and piercing." 1 Dvorák was just plain fond of the instrument; one reviewer of the premiere noted that it "sings some of the most lovely passages."
- basson
- low woodwind instrument.. robery winter played this
- The Piccolo
- pitched an octave higher than the standard flute and produces a brilliant, sometimes shrill tone. It is a descendant of the wooden fife used in seventeenth-century military ensembles.
- thrace
- in 2/4 time=duple
- double reed
- oboe is different from the clarinet becasue..
- Der Rosenkavalaier
- 3 acts, by strauss in 1911, age of enlightenment
- marschallin (countess)
- sung by Rebecca Sjövall and considered to be almost over the hill. (30 years old)
- bulgarians
- danced in lines, right left right lift left lift
- tuba
- relatively recent newcomer to the symphony orchestra, having been gradually introduced during the second half of the nineteenth century. Wagner even designed his own instrument to be used in his operas (what he called music dramas). When this instrument plays, the floor should shake.
- cultural appropriation
- What AA10 Concept occurs when one culture takes something from another and assumes it into their own culture without giving he original credir, as examplified by the Manwich commertial?
- orchestra consisted of..
- conductor, strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion
- Franz Joseph Heyden
- (string quartet)austrian conposer around the same time as mozart, second of seventeen children
- dobrudzha
- all looking for jobs- ready to work. accents, small ornaments, music was fast and eager to get going!
- bela bartok
- The Takacs Quartet with Musikas featured the music of which composer
- jelly roll morton
- claimed to be the inventor of jazz
- translation in art
- live music, singing, acting. used foregn language. show how music and other forms of art can transcend cultural barriers. airport
- saxophone
- single reed, least playing
- Lucky
- Video, dance, live music. friends who became lovers. "love is a friendship set to music"
- spunk
- singing, acting, video. game show. guess definition of words. send a message not to give up.. that is what ".." means. the courage no to give up. to carry on
- tim rice
- global ethnomusicologist. studies normative and particular
- revolution
- poetry, music, costume. Jack caroac "on the road" beat poetry. poetry can be what you make it
- Autumn Leaves
- instrument, poetry, dance. art is all connected.
- super devoych
- ucla womens choir
- heyden
- composer of classical period, symphony, string quartet
- aaron copeland
- jew, never went west of mississippi, gay, wrote: rodeo
- viola
- roughly twenty percent larger than the violin and developed much the same way. Because much of the time it plays the inner voices (that is, neither the more audible melody nor the bass), it has often seemed destined for obscurity. Yet it received far more attention in Romantic orchestras than in those of a century earlier.
- a womens battlefield
- According to example quotes from Elizabeth Aldrich's From the Ballroom to Hell, the ballroom dance floor was what for women?
- trumpet
- partly conical partly cylindrical, this instrument is to the brass family what the violin is to the strings.
- chacone
- baseline that repeats in upper voices
- arnold shoenberg
- monumental 20th century composer "atonal revolution"
- freaky kinky
- improv, music, dancing. football players being crazy and kinky
- shack towns finest
- dancing, singing, costumes. boys dressed as girls, stuff in a box
- chamber music
- music played by small ensembles such as a string quartet with one player to a part.
- bulgarian
- rhythyms were additive, throat singing
- Samuel Parker Jones, Said you could not dance and be a good
- Who was the Moody of the South and what significance did he have on the history od Dance?
- "transposing instruments"
- clarinet;sound at different pitches than those notated in the score.
- vibrato
- a kind of "vibrating" sound that adds intensity to the tone and has been common since the 1920s. Most string players today employ a steady and consistent one
- why strings rather than woodwinds or some other grouping?
- Strings are ideally suited to the expressive, intimate, balanced (and very human) nature of chamber music. Although certain wind and brass instruments had recently migrated from the outdoors into the salon, it would be some time before they would approach the violin, viola, or cello in flexibility and expressiveness.
- zuma
- woodwind like instrument from turkey
- frank lloydright
- architect designed a river flowing through it
- you raise me up
- singing, dancing, music. two boys dancing, one girl singing
- bagpipe
- a tradition that is learned but not taught.
- expression
- aaron williams said cymbals are...
- crook
- the long piece of metal tubing connecting the instrument to the reed
- clarinet
- the last major woodwind to make its appearance. developed around 1720s to add another color in orchestras that played for operas. "transposing instruments" the mellow A and the more brilliant Bb are two types
- stars and stripe structure
- aabbc break c break c
- Richard Strauss
- wrote 16 operas between 1892-1941; wrote Der Rosenkavaleir
- two aspects of western music
- opera and string quartet
- i got my education from artsencounter10.com
- acting, live music, technology. commercial about att and arts and architecture class.
- Opera
- A drama set to music; the dominant form of Western music from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. first introduced around 1600 in Italy and has retained its popularity to the present day.
- communist
- up until early 1950's, they took over and wanted to modernize the country. singing was the symbol of the country, and they taught singers how to sing in harmony
- octavian
- mezzo-soprano (warmer sound)
- The English Horn
- kind of an uncle to the oboe — is perhaps the lushest instrument in Dvorák's Romantic orchestra.
- director
- not part of journey to a performance
- trope
- to lock up
- america
- pop culture
- Arch-Romantic composers
- Hector Berlioz [from France] and Richard Wagner [from Germany] were among the first composers to wield the baton as a major part of their musical activities.
- leonard bernstein
- west side story conductor
- the youths dependence on technology today
- improv, theater, technology. technology takes over peoples lives, there are healthier alternatives
- blue steel
- theater, improve, painting. simulate a typical class. painting of mr winter
- silence
- very eastern of the world
- womens soccer
- poety, technology. inspiration: beleive, respect, intensity bRUINS.
- ww1 and ww2
- avant guard in the 20th century was a reaction to...
- orchestra
- started in the seventeenth century, based on the core sound of string instruments;Viennese Classicism launched it; overpowering sounds produced by 100 or so musicians at the behest of an openly authoritarian conductor. The notion of up to 100 people playing together in absolute synchronicity foreshadowed the powerful diesel and electric motors that would soon take over the industrially developed world.occupies 750 square feet, or a rectangular space of about 40' x 19' in dimension. This is roughly the size of two regular two-car garages.
- rhodopes
- music contained long, spacious lines, smooth and flowing=broad logato. mountains, space, songs flying through the forest
- the french horn
- ust producing its rich, creamy tone can lead all too easily to a SPLAT heard by everyone in the audience. But it is also the instrument that, especially in groups of two to eight, can best create a sense of majesty and triumph — and as easily of a hero in mourning. As a family, the horns can create imposing waves of sound.
- blank slate
- video, skit, speaking, improv. boys acting out to be girls "gender identity". no bias, aproach life with a clean perspective
- mark occonnor
- played the FIDDLE, folk and classical
- rudolf valentino
- tango
- rhythym integration
- dance, instrument, singing. drums, tap dancing, "anything you can do i can do better" tap and drum have some sort of thythym
- woodwinds consist of...
- flute, picollo, oboe, english horn, clarinet, basson
- negotiation
- everything is a...
- aaron williams
- beat three, sneer drum
- global drum project
- indian, sabala, african talking drum
- mona lisa
- "she has a hot bum"
- bros before hos
- singing, live music, acting, improv. skit about liking the same girl
- strandzha
- a lot of ornaments, style thatucla choir sang in!
- movement
- a self contained, largely independent potion of a larger piece, such as a string quartet
- agnes demet
- french woman who came to america "dance in cowboy boots!"
- 4 movements
- 1 fast 2 slow 3 minuet (triple meter) 4 fast
- north of bulgaria
- serbia, montenegro
- The Oboe
- easily the most penetrating of the standard quartet of woodwinds. With their ability to carry over long distances, were originally part of ensembles that performed out of doors. The seventeenth-century French King Louis XIV took great pride in his "consort" [meaning a close-knit group]
- intern world
- acting, technology. spoof on what interns do. networking, exagerated office experience
- tuba
- instrument that has to do with the french revolution
- embochure
- Creating the proper position of the mouth, lips, and muscles around it is known by the French word
- part of the whole
- Live music, narration, drawing. art is made up of a bunch of smaller pieces; picture of a tree
- the sn will set for you
- dance, acting, narration. dance about the sugar ray song
- ragtime
- duple meter, 1898-1920
- brass
- play the loudest
- lip singing musical
- instrument, acting, singing. I'm yours, There she goes, she will be loved. boy and girl out out the songs
- tahitian trio
- tahitian dance, music, costumes. made their own costumes
- waltz
- three beats per measure
- strings
- violin, viola, cello, double bass
- haleluja
- became popular from black culture
- improv
- agreement, reveal emotion, talk aobut relationships
- piccolo
- highest instrument in orchestra
- at pitch
- The flute, oboe, and bassoon;
- if i aint got you
- music, acting, narration. facebook. "poke" shows how ridiculous facebook had become
- acidic jew who grew up in us
- master of reggae
- 4 movement plan
- The Classical string quartet is generally built on a a fast opening movement, a slow movement, a minuet (a dance in moderate triple meter), and a quick finale (the last movement).
- UCLA Philharmonia
- Music Director/Conductor Neal Stulberg
- south of bulgaria
- turkey and greece
- octavian
- (sung by Peabody Southwell) is an adolescent male, perhaps around the age of a high school senior
- the reason why its four instruments
- One reason may be that the most complex Classical harmonies, known as seventh chords, contain four pitches (we'll demonstrate that). Moreover, the combination of two violins, viola, and cello provides the full range of a Classical orchestra (except for the double basses, which generally reinforce the cellos an octave below).
- teleological
- goal oriented, logical
- body speak
- dance, poetry, improv. three girls dancing, really good
- chinese culture
- as much meaning can be what is unsaid than what is said
- tex mex girls
- singing, dancing, acting. Como te duele musical
- from yesterdays sorrows to today's celebration
- speaking, video, music, dancing. armenian dance
- french horn
- most courageous, more pressurized
- oboe and basson
- have double reeds
- violinist
- concert master
- Percussion
- generally things that you hit or shake or smack together. They have been around since the beginning of time since they define the very rhythms of life.
- bulgarian music
- only women do the singing, gypsies and roma people do the drumming, everyone dances, only men play the instruments
- brass consists of
- trumpet, french horn, tuba,
- dj cool hurk
- originartor of rap
- ngoma
- drumming, hand clapping, from africa but characteristic of the bulgarian music
- europe
- high culture
- sophie and marshallin
- soprano
- classic rock
- base drum, high hat, snare
- kfc commercial
- metaphor for the entire play because west is meeting the east
- violin
- Because its high range makes it a natural melody instrument, and because its tone is brilliant and penetrating, it is the most glamorous of the string instruments.
- singing in the rain
- tap dancing, music, singing. tap dancer, good outfits
- "Robert and the winters"
- Improv, Live music, poetry. Music predtending to be Mr. Winter
- The Triangle
- became associated with Western music in the seventeenth century when Turkish military bands first became popular. These small ensembles that featured cymbals, triangle, bass drum (the largest marching drum), and oboe-like instruments would lead their troops into conquered cities. The sound of these bands became so popular that many composers incorporated the style into their music.
- The Double Bass
- being roughly double the size of the cello. Its thick strings sound like they could shake buildings. People who play this (including many jazz players) are generally taller than average, since it requires long reaches from both arms. often sit on tall stools that allow them to hold their instruments in a more stable position.
- Bassoon
- boasts an equally surprising wide range. Their woody tone cuts through even busy textures.
- the art of YouTube
- skit, dance. sneezing panda, nobosyds perfect, danced with u tube
- life's manual
- dance, music, acting, video. US!
- beetoven
- classical composer
- druid theater
- rural ireland, not many choices in men, so lucky if the came around, brough old irish culture
- glass
- chinuly artist uses...
- Micheal Nictarus
- said that what is important for improv is to talk about issues and human comentary
- clarinet
- reed on the bottom
- string quartet
- the most prestigious genre of private music in Viennese classicism;an ensemble consisting of two violins, 1 viola, and one cello; chamber music; most important is its abiity to represent deep conversation
- step dancing
- dance, poetry, powerpoint. slaves way of communicating. used their boots. maya angelous poem about being a female african american
- rembrandt
- 1660s rendering subjects with intrepid realism
- the Enlightenment
- essentially the 18th century), a far-flung philosophical movement grounded in the optimistic belief that reasonable people could get together and resolve the perpetual problems of human existence
- at the beginning
- singing, acting, instrument. on a trip in italy, fell in love. pictures of italy in the backround. "ill be there when the world stops turning"
- cameron carpinter
- first started out with harry potter, young organist from juliart
- blue dragon
- shang high
- cymbal
- the oldest. References to this instrument in ancient cultures such as the Babylonians date back to at least 1500 B.C. The Old Testament of the Bible is filled with more than a dozen references to this instrument. The Greeks and Romans made regular use of them.
- cinema
- opera's cheif competition;began around the dawn of the twentieth century.
- cadence
- a particular series of intervals or chords that ends a phrase, section, or piece of music
- The Trombone
- it is the only wind or brass instrument that controls its pitch by means of a slide rather than valves.
- tuba, double bass
- lowest in foundation
- take some time and save a life.
- photos, poetry, music. african photos with piano
- UCLA Bulgarian Folk Ensemble
- directed by Prof. Tim Rice (who is also the Director of the new Herb Alpert School of Music). These students and their native Bulgarian mentor are widely known for their idiomatic and passionate rendition of both vocal and instrumental music as well as folk dance. We will be learning to sing a Bulgarian song and all of us will participate on the stage in some authentic folk dances.
- LA transportation group pros and cons
- video, improv, theater. got hit by a bus, international students
- drone
- one note held the entire time while another, more complicated voice is played on top
- cello
- more than twice the size of the viola. When these instruments play a passage in unison, the stage should almost seem to shudder. A few centuries ago it was played entirely by men because the between-the-legs playing position was considered un-ladylike.
- sight
- According to Richard Leppert in his book Art and The Committed Eye, what is the principal mean through which we learn to manuever through space and time?
- strings
- the heart and soul of the evolving orchestra. Modern bowed string instruments consist of a wooden frame with four strings stretched between the end of the fingerboard (where they are attached by tuning pins); tand the tailpiece. THEIR GOAL IS TO PLAY ABSOLUTELY TOGETHER, YET WITH A GREAT DEAL OF EXPRESSION.
- Libretto
- text/story of the opera. means "little book" in italian
- displacement
- narration, acting, music. couple, girl goes to study abroad, "officailly misses her"
- pirin
- in 7/8 meter, called additive meter. near macedonia . many mountains