Listen to Maranao epic poem "Darangan Paramata Gandingan"
Answer the following questions below.
1. How will you describe the music in terms of the melody, rhythm, tempo, and dynamics?
2. Describe the vocal styles used by the singer?
3. What can you say about the music? It is simple or Complicated? Explain why.
Helow po, pa answer po nyan pls maya na po kse i pass eh. Thank you po.
Answers & Comments
✏Answer
1.Melody, in music, the aesthetic product of a given succession of pitches in musical time, implying rhythmically ordered movement from pitch to pitch. Melody in Western music by the late 19th century was considered to be the surface of a group of harmonies.
Rhythm is the pattern of sound, silence, and emphasis in a song. In music theory, rhythm refers to the recurrence of notes and rests (silences) in time. When a series of notes and rests repeats, it forms a rhythmic pattern.
The tempo of a piece of music is the speed of the underlying beat. ... Tempo is measured in BPM, or beats per minute. One beat every second is 60 BPM. Sometimes the tempo is written at the beginning of the music and is called a metronome marking.
Dynamics means how quietly or loudly a piece of music should be played. Dynamics are an important way of conveying the mood of a piece and your use of dynamics is a marked element of your performance. Composers use dynamics to change the mood. ... Below you can see how mezzo forte has been abbreviated to mf
2. From opera to rock, RnB to musical theater (legit and belt) styles, vocal style is a term that distinguishes one singer from another and each style of music from another. That means that vocal style is unique to each person and each genre of music.
3.what can i say about music it is my favorite catigory of talent, full of instrument,singing,and dances music can make us happy because it can teach us how to use talent
#BetterWithBrainly
Dynamics: (forte, piano, [etc.], crescendo, decrescendo)
Melody: (pitch, theme, conjunct, disjunct)
Harmony: (chord, progression, consonance, dissonance,
key, tonality, atonality)
Tone color: (register, range, instrumentation)
Texture: (monophonic, homophonic, polyphonic,
imitation, counterpoint)
Form: (binary, ternary, strophic, through-composed)