Gened6
  • 1. The Art of carving or otherwise a three-dimensional work of art.
A) Music
B) Architecture
C) Sculpture
  • 2. Also called a free-standing sculpture
A) Round
B) High
C) Relief
  • 3. Contrary to a round sculpture, does not stand on its own because it is attached.
A) Relief
B) Low
C) Round
  • 4. almost the same as a free- standing sculpture but differs from the latter because it is attached so that the back part cannot be seen by an onlooker.
A) Low relief
B) High relief
  • 5. almost the same as a painting because it is somewhat flat and attached to a surface but differs from the latter because it has volume and the medium used varies from the mediums used in painting.
A) Low relief
B) High relief
  • 6. It is the art and OR science of designing O and constructing O M buildings, bridges, and M other structures to satisfy individual and A comminal needs.
A) Sculpture
B) Music
C) Architecture
  • 7. where strong horizontal elements are held up by strong vertical elements with large spaces between them.
A) Arch
B) Post & lintel
C) Cantilever
  • 8. Horizontal beam extended into space
A) Cantilever
B) Arch
C) Dome
  • 9. curved vertical structure spanning an open space underneath it.
A) Vault
B) Arch
C) Dome
  • 10. e, hemispherical structure evolved from the arch, usually forming a ceiling or roof.
A) Arch
B) Vault
C) Dome
  • 11. self-supporting arched form, usually of stone or brick, serving to cover a space with a ceiling or roof.
A) Dome
B) Vault
C) Arch
  • 12. a structure consisting of linear (straight) axial members arranged in triangles and connected at pin joints.
A) Cantilever
B) Truss
C) Dome
  • 13. It is the art of combining sounds of varying pitch to produce a coherent composition that is melodious, harmonious, intelligible, and expensive of ideas and emotions.
A) Music
B) Sculpture
C) Architecture
  • 14. The relative highness or lowness of a tone.
A) Pitch
B) Tone
C) Melody
  • 15. the loudness or softness of a sound
A) Volume
B) Melody
C) Harmony
  • 16. very soft
A) Fortissimo
B) Pianissimo
C) Piano
  • 17. very loud
A) Piano
B) Pianissimo
C) Fortissimo
  • 18. speed of a composition or any of its section.
A) Tempo
B) Allegro
C) Rate
  • 19. is the length of time during which a sound is produced.
A) Timbre
B) Tone
C) Duration
  • 20. the quality of sounds that makes it distinct from other sounds.
A) Timbre/tone color
B) Pitch
C) Duration
  • 21. the consisent pattern or succession of identical or similar sounds
A) Timbre
B) Melody
C) Rhythm
  • 22. the series of consicutive tones that vary in pitch and duration but form a line of individual significance and expressive value.
A) Harmony
B) Melody
C) Rhythm
  • 23. the simultaneous soundings of two or more tones.
A) Harmony
B) Texture
C) Melody
  • 24. the number of tones expected to be apprehended simultaneously.
A) Melody
B) Timbre
C) Texture
  • 25. sounding of one main melody supported by a subordinate one, as in the performance of a folk singer with a guitar accompaniment.
A) Polyphonic
B) Homophonic
C) Monophonic
  • 26. sounding of a single melodic line without an accompaniment.
A) Polyphonic
B) Monophonic
C) Homophonic
  • 27. simultaneous sounding of two or more melodic lines of a relatively equal interest.
A) Monophonic
B) Polyphonic
C) Homophonic
  • 28. The music produced by the voices of singers.
A) Instrumental
B) Ensemble
C) Vocal
  • 29. The music produced by the musical instruments.
A) Ensemble
B) Instrumental
C) Vocal
  • 30. The music is combination of vocal music and instrumental music.
A) Vocal
B) Ensemble
C) Mixed music/ensemble
  • 31. The music rendered by a group of performers/singers and or players of musical instruments used.
A) Ensemble
B) Orchestra
C) Music
  • 32. Usually performing under the directions of a conductor, the musicians playing several instruments of the same kind are given part.
A) Orchestra
B) Instrumental
C) Ensemble
  • 33. The strings are the largest family of instruments in the orchestra
A) String instruments
B) Piano instrument
C) Violin instrument
  • 34. The violin is the baby of the string family, and like babies, makes the highest sounds.
A) Viola
B) Violin
C) Cello
  • 35. older sister or brother of the violin. It is slightly larger, just over two feet long, and has thicker strings, which produce a richer, warmer sound than the violin.
A) Cello
B) Viola
C) Violin
  • 36. looks like the violin and viola but is much larger (around 4 feet long), and has thicker strings than either the violin or viola.
A) Viola
B) Cello
C) Violin
  • 37. This is the grandfather of the string family. At over 6 feet long, the double bass is the biggest member of the string family, with the longest strings, which allow it to play very low notes.
A) Double bass
B) Triple bass
C) One bass
  • 38. A shorter version of the flute. At half the size of a standard flute, piccolos play the highest notes of all the woodwinds; in the orchestra one of the flute players will also play piccolo if that instrument is required.
A) Piccolo
B) Oboe
C) Horn
  • 39. 2 foot long black cylinder with metal keys covering its holes, and its mouthpiece uses a double reed, which vibrates when you blow through it. This vibration of the reed makes the air inside the oboe move, and thus creates sound.
A) Viola
B) Horn
C) Oboe
  • 40. actually closely related to the oboe, also uses a double reed, and is played in the same manner. It's longer than an oboe and its tube is a bit wider.
A) Piccolo
B) English horn
C) Viola
  • 41. could easily be mistaken for an oboe, except for the mouthpiece, which uses a single reed.
A) Clarinet
B) Oboe
C) Viola
  • 42. just like a standard clarinet, but about half the length. Its shorter size allows it to play higher notes.
A) E flat clarinet
B) Clarinet
C) Violin
  • 43. This is the grandfather of the clarinet family.
A) Flat clarinet
B) Bass clarinet
C) Basson
  • 44. long pipe, doubled in half, made of wood, with many keys. The bend in the pipe makes it possible for musicians to play it comfortably. If it were straight, the bassoon would be around 9 feet long! Like the oboe, the bassoon uses a double reed, which is fitted into a curved metal mouthpiece.
A) Clarinet
B) Bassoon
C) Piano
  • 45. grandfather of the wind section and is so much larger than a regular bassoon that its tube is doubled over twice to allow the player to hold it. It takes a lot of breath to make sound come out of such a long pipe! The lone contrabassoon plays the lowest notes in the entire orchestra.
A) Contrabassoon
B) Clarinet
C) Bassoon
  • 46. This family of instruments can play louder than any other in the orchestra and can also be heard from far away. essentially very long pipes that widen at their ends into a bell-like shape. The pipes have been curved and twisted into different shapes to make them easier to hold and play.
A) Symbals
B) Clarinet instrument
C) Brass instrument
  • 47. the smallest member of its family and plays the highest pitches with its bright and vibrant sound. Today's modern trumpet is a slender brass pipe with three attached valves, which is curved and bent into long loops.
A) Trombone
B) Trumpet
C) French horn
  • 48. originally come from France and is unquestionably a horn. To play the French horn, hold it with the bell curving downward and buzz into the mouthpiece. Your left hand plays the three valves and you can change the type of sound you make by the way you place your right hand in the bell.
A) French horn
B) English horn
C) Pinoy horn
  • 49. only instrument in the brass family that uses a slide instead of valves to change pitch.
A) Trombone
B) Clarinet
C) Symbal
  • 50. the largest and lowest brass instrument and anchors the harmony not only of the brass family but the whole orchestra with its deep rich sound. Like the other brasses, the tuba is a long metal tube, curved into an oblong shape, with a huge bell at the end.
A) Trumpet
B) Tuba
C) Horn
  • 51. largest in the orchestra. include any instrument that makes a sound when it is hit, shaken, or scraped.
A) Percussion instrument
B) Symbal instrument
C) Piano instrument
  • 52. a percussion or a string instrument. You play it by hitting its 88 black and white keys with your fingers, which suggests it belongs in the percussion family.
A) Piano
B) Timpani
C) Symbal
  • 53. look like big polished bowls or upside-down teakettles, which is why they're also called kettledrums. They are big copper pots with drumheads made of calfskin or plastic stretched over their tops. Timpani are tuned instruments, which means they can play different notes.
A) Horn
B) Violin
C) Timpani
  • 54. originally came from Africa and Asia, but has a Greek name that means "wood sound." The modern xylophone has wooden bars or keys arranged like the keys of the piano, which the player hits with a mallet.
A) Cymbal
B) Triangle
C) Xylophone
  • 55. biggest noisemakers of the orchestra.
A) Triangle
B) Piano
C) Cymbal
  • 56. It's a small metal bar that's bent into the shape of a triangle and makes a ringing sound when you hit it.
A) Piano
B) Horn
C) Triangle
  • 57. smallish drum made of wood or brass with drumheads made of calfskin or plastic stretched over both ends of a hollow cylinder. It has a set of wire-wrapped strings stretched across the bottom head (the snare), which give the snare drum its unique "rattling" sound when the drum is hit.
A) Tambourine
B) Snare drum
C) Bass drum
  • 58. like the double bass, is the biggest member of the percussion family and therefore makes the lowest sounds. The bass drum is built like a very large snare drum, although without the snare; it is also an untuned instrument.
A) Bass drum
B) Snare drum
C) Tambourine
  • 59. small drum with metal jingles set into the edges. Both the drumhead and the jingles are untuned. To play it, you hold it in one hand and tap, shake or hit it, usually against your other hand
A) Xylophone
B) Tambourine
C) Cymbal
  • 60. come from Mexico. They are rattles, often made from gourds (a kind of squash), filled with dried seeds, beads or even tiny ball bearings that make them rattle. Maracas can also be made of wood or plastic; the sound they make depends on what they're made of. To play them, you hold them in your hands and shake.
A) Gong
B) Tambourine
C) Maracas
  • 61. also known as the tamtam, is a very large metal plate that hangs suspended from a metal pipe. It looks similar to a cymbal and is also untuned, but is much larger and has a raised center. To play it, you hit the center with a soft mallet. Depending on how hard you hit it, you can make a deafening crash or the softest flicker of sound.
A) Chimes
B) Maracas
C) Gong
  • 62. are metal tubes of different lengths that are hung from a metal frame. When you strike the tubes with a mallet, they sound like the ringing bells of a church. Each chime sounds a different pitch.
A) Celesta
B) Castanets
C) Chimes
  • 63. the largest type of orchestra and is composed of strings, brass, woodwinds, and percussion.
A) Concerto
B) Band
C) Symphony orchestra
  • 64. piece of classical
A) Band
B) Rondalla
C) Concerto
  • 65. an instrumental ensemble having the size of an orchestra but consisting mainly or exclusively of wind and percussion instruments.
A) Band
B) Rondalla
C) Concerto
  • 66. A bandusually composed of stringed instruments ( banduria, laud, octavina, piccolo, guitarra, and bajo).
A) Rondalla
B) Octavina
C) Piccolo
  • 67. a small group of instrumental players. the numbers usually ranges from one to nine.
A) Chamber orchestra
B) Special ensemble
  • 68. is a grouping other than the ones earlier mentioned.
A) Special ensemble
B) Orchestra
C) Non special ensemble
  • 69. This is the original name for the modernpiano, which comes from the fact that a player could play both soft (piano) and loud (forte), unlike its harpsichord ancestor.
A) Monoforte
B) Violinforte
C) Pianoforte
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