1. A melody consists of a linear succession of sounds and silences ordered in time. By its very nature, melody cannot be separated from rhythm. Each musical sound in a melody has two fundamental qualities. They are pitch and duration. When used in succession, pitch plus duration values form melodies.
2. When pitches change in a melody, they give the melody direction. Sometimes the direction moves upward; sometimes it moves downward; and other times it stays the same. The upward and downward motion of a melody, the ease or tension that results when a melody changes direction, and the rate of change in a melody's direction contribute to the expressiveness of the melodic line.
long dashRozmajzl, Michon, and Rene Boyer-Alexander. Music Fundamentals, Methods, and Materials for the Elementary Classroom Teacher. 3rd ed., Longman, 2000, p. 51.
Question content area bottom
Part 1
Which of the following topics would be evident upon previewing the selection?
A.
the effect of pitch changes
B.
the definition of melody
C.
composers today and melody
D.
both A and B