Aqa A Level Handbook
Aqa A Level Handbook
Aqa A Level Handbook
MUSIC
NAME:
FORM:
TEACHER:
TARGET GRADE:
CONTENTS
1
Component 1: Appraising
Key Vocabulary
14
Component 2: Performing
Performing Practice Log
16
Performance Feedback Log
20
Component 3: Composing
Composition Log
Composition Feedback Log
23
26
Marking Criteria
2
A LEVEL MUSIC
AT A GLANCE
COMPONENT 1:
APPRAISING
MUSIC
COMPONENT 2:
PERFORMING
MUSIC
COMPONENT 3:
COMPOSING
MUSIC
Whats assessed?
Listening
Analysis
Contextual
Understanding
How its assessed
Exam paper with
listening and written
questions using
excerpts of music.
What's assessed?
Music performance
What's assessed?
Composition
Questions
Section A:
Listening
(56 marks)
Section B:
Analysis
(34 marks)
Section C: Essay
(30 marks)
This component is 40%
of A-level marks (120
marks).
Requirement
A minimum of ten
minutes of
performance in total
is required.
This component is 35%
of A-level marks (50
marks).
Requirement
A minimum of four
and a half minutes of
music in total is
required.
This component is
worth 25% of A-level
marks (50 marks).
Non-exam assessment
(NEA) will be externally
marked by AQA
examiners.
Composition 2:
production (via
Free composition (25
technology).
marks)
COMPONENT DETAILS
COMPONENT 1: APPRAISING MUSIC (40% of your A Level
Grade)
The areas of study provide an appropriate focus for you to appraise,
develop and demonstrate an in-depth knowledge and understanding of
musical elements, musical contexts and musical language. The areas of
study can also provide a rich source of material for you to work with when
developing performance and composition skills.
The areas of study we will be focusing on are:
Western classical tradition 16501910 (compulsory)
Pop music
Music for media
AREA OF STUDY 1: Western classical tradition 16501910
(compulsory)
For the purposes of this specification, the western classical tradition is defined as art
music of (or growing out of) the European tradition, normally notated, and normally
intended for public performance. There are three strands of music represented which
cover three key genres:
Baroque: the solo concerto
Classical: the operas of Mozart
Romantic: the piano music of Chopin, Brahms and Grieg.
Musical language
You must be able to use musical language in the following ways:
Reading staff notation
You must be able to identify musical elements (as in elements list) when reading staff
notation. For unfamiliar music, you must be able to read short passages of a minimum of
four bars and a maximum of eight bars. For familiar music, you must be able to read
approximately two pages of music score.
Writing staff notation
You must be able to:
write melodic notation in all keys within short passages of music of a minimum of four
bars and a maximum of eight bars
write rhythmic notation, including compound time within short passages of a minimum
of four bars and a maximum of eight bars.
Chords
You must learn standard and extended chords, including chord inversions and secondary
dominant 7ths, and be able to identify them in aural and written form. Examples of
relevant types of chords can be found in the Musical elements lists.
Musical vocabulary and terminology
You must be able to identify and apply appropriate musical vocabulary and terminology
to both music heard and notated. The appropriate vocabulary and terminology required
can be found in the tables appropriate to the areas of study.
Joni Mitchell
Muse
Beyonc
Daft Punk
Labrinth
Hans Zimmer
Michael Giacchino
Thomas Newman
Nobuo Uematsu
You must be able to listen attentively to unfamiliar music from all the named
artists/composers in their selected areas of study to identify and accurately describe
musical elements and use musical language (including staff notation).
For three of the named artists/composers from each of your optional areas of study, you
must be able to appraise music and make critical judgements, using knowledge and
understanding of:
how the artists/composers use of musical elements for at least two published works
reflects the style of the genre and their purpose and intentions for the work
how the style of the artists/composers music has varied over time through
comparison of published works
musical vocabulary and terminology relevant to the work and Area of study.
Definition
Technical
Control,
including;
Expressive
Control,
including;
Instrumental/Voc
al
Solo performance
Your performance can be
one or more of the
following:
a single musician
playing/ singing solo
a soloist accompanied
by another musician (eg
pianist, guitarist, backing
track etc).
Pitch (including
Tempo, dynamics,
intonation)
phrasing and
Rhythm Tone
articulation
(including
breathing and
diction, bowing
and pedalling etc)
Synchronisation of
ensemble
Ensemble performance
as an accompanist to a
solo musician
as an
instrumentalist/singer
contributing to a unique
and significant role (ie
that is not doubled) to a
small group (of up to
eight musicians).
COMPONENT 1
KEY VOCABULARY
AREA OF STUDY 1: WESTERN CLASSICAL TRADITION
Students must be able to use knowledge and understanding of the following
musical elements when appraising music from this Area of study.
The following table contains all the musical elements, for Area of study 1,
that students must know and understand, to answer questions in Section A
(Listening) and Section B (Analysis and contextual understanding) of the
exam. Marks will also be awarded for knowledge of other terms, if relevant
to this Area of study, in Section B (Analysis and contextual understanding)
of the exam.
ELEMENT TYPE
Melody
HARMONY
ELEMENT
contour ascending, descending, stepwise, conjunct, disjunct,
scalic, triadic and arpeggio
intervals, including compound intervals
phrase length equal, unequal and balanced
ornaments trill, mordent, turn, acciaccatura and appoggiatura
passing notes accented, unaccented and chromatic
auxiliary notes upper, lower and chromatic
note of anticipation
echappe note
portamento
melodic devices sequence, motif, fragmentation, repetition,
intervallic augmentation and diminution.
consonant and dissonant
diatonic primary and secondary triads, dominant 7th and all
inversions
chromatic diminished 7th, secondary dominant 7th, substitution
chords (borrowing from opposite mode), chord of the Neapolitan,
Neapolitan 6th and augmented 6th chords (Italian, German, French)
cadences perfect, imperfect, interrupted, plagal, half close,
phrygian and tierce de Picardie
circle of 5ths progression, harmonic sequence
9
TONALITY
STRUCTURE
SONORITY/TIMBRE
TEXTURE
TEMPO METRE
AND RHYTHM
DYNAMICS AND
ARTICULATION
10
HARMONY
TONALITY
STRUCTURE
SONORITY/TIMBRE
ELEMENT
riff
pitch bend
melisma, syllabic
hook
slide
glissando
ostinato
blue notes.
power chords
sus4 chords
chord extensions secondary 7th, 9th, 11th, 13th
other complex chords eg half diminished 7th, added 6th chord
symbols eg C/E C7 C and C+
tonic and dominant pedal.
specific modes eg dorian, lydian
pentatonic
blues scale.
intro/outro
middle 8
bridge
breakdown
verse
chorus
instrumental
break
drum fill.
studio/technological effects eg reverb, panning
standard contemporary instrumental types eg electric guitar,
synthesisers
11
TEXTURE
TEMPO, METRE AND
RHYTHM
DYNAMICS/ARTICULA
TION
Here is a list of the Set Works to listen to any time you can and some suggested
pieces not on the set list to listen to for good practice.
AREA OF STUDY 1: Western Classical Tradition 1650 1910
STRAND A: Baroque Solo Concerto
Set Works
Sonata for trumpet and strings on D major Z.850 (complete) Purcell
Flute concerto in D II Gardellino op. 10 no 3 RV428 (complete) Vivaldi
Violin concerto in A minor BWV1041 (complete) Bach
Suggested Unfamiliar
Spring Vivaldi
Flute Sonata in G Major Handel
Violin Concerto in A Minor - Vivaldi
STRAND B: The Operas of Mozart
Set Works
Le Nozze di Figaro k.492: Act 1, focusing on:
overture
No.1 Duettino (Figaro and Susanna, including following recitative)
No.3 Cavatina (Figaro, including the previous recitative) No.4 Aria (Bartolo)
No.5 Duettino (Susanna and Marcellina)
No.6 Aria (Cherubino)
No.7 Terzetto (Susanna, Basilio, Count)
No.9 Aria (Figaro).
STRAND C: Romantic: The Piano Music of Chopin, Brahms and Grieg
Ballade no.2 in F major op.38 by Chopin
Intermezzo in A major op.118. no.2 by Brahms
Norwegian march op.54 no.2 by Grieg
Joni Mitchell
Big Yellow Taxi, from Ladies of the Canyon (1970)
Carey, from Blue (1971)
Help Me, from Court and Spark (1974)
Muse
Stockholm Syndrome from Absolution (2003)
Supermassive Black Hole, from Black Holes and Revelations (2006)
Uprising, from The Resistance (2009)
Supremacy, from The 2nd Law
(2012)
Beyonc
Crazy in Love, from Dangerously in Love (2003)
Singles Ladies, from I AmSasha Fierce (2008)
from 4 (2011)
Daft Punk
Around the World, from Homework (1997)
One More Time, from Discovery (2001)
Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger, from Discovery (2001)
Get Lucky, from Random Access Memories (2013)
Labrinth
Earthquake, from Electronic Earth (2012)
Express Yourself, from Electronic Earth (2012)
Beneath Your Beautiful, from Electronic Earth (2012)
Let It Be, from Take Me To The Truth (2015)
Jealousy, from Take Me To The Truth (2015)
Area of study 3:
Music for media
Specific cues will be selected in due course from the following film scores:
Bernard Herrmann
Psycho
Citizen Kane
Taxi Driver
Hans Zimmer
Pirates of the Caribbean
12 Years a Slave
Rain Man
Vertigo
North by Northwest
Inception
The Dark Knight Rises
The Lion King
Gladiator
Michael Giacchino
Call of Duty or Medal of Honor
Lost
Up
The Incredibles
Mission impossible III
Star Trek into Darkness
13
Thomas Newman
American Beauty
Saving Mr. Banks
Finding Nemo
Gaming Music
Nobuo Uematsu
Opening medley
Terra's Theme (VI)
One-winged Angel
Vamo alla Flamenco (IX)
Skyfall
The Shawshank Redemption
Lost Odyssey
Light of Blessing/A Letter
BEGINNING ANALYSIS OF
STUDY PIECES AT HOME
Below are some useful starting questions to ask when listening to a piece of
music for the first time. Your set works are listed at the beginning of this
booklet. For each piece, write answers down on a separate piece of paper in
the form of notes and add them to your folder. You can use these questions
when you are studying your set works, or for when you are listening to other
pieces of music. Be sure to answer the questions in as much detail as
possible. Do not just write 'high', but 'woodwinds are playing in a high
tessitura', for example. As you continue to develop your key vocabulary you
will be able to analyse the music in greater detail. And remember that these
questions are just starting points, if you feel there are any other features of
interest when listening to a piece of music then be sure to make a note of
them.
Melody:
Big or small range?
Which instrument performs the main melody?
Does the melody stay in that one instrument?
Is the rhythm of the melody mainly made up of quavers, minims or a
mixture?
Is there a wide range of the dynamics?
Is the tessitura (average note) high or low?
Is the melody syllabic or melismatic?
Is the melody pentatonic/minor/major?
Is the melody conjunct (scalic) or disjunct (leaps)?
Rhythm:
What is the time signature does it change?
14
15
COMPONENT 2
PERFORMING - PRACTICE
LOG
As previously mentioned, you will need to perform a recital consisting of a
solo and/or ensemble pieces that is at least 10 minutes long. If your recital
is less than 10 minutes you will be awarded no marks for this component of
the course.
You need to ensure that you are completing daily practice on your
instrument/voice (ideally a minimum of 30 mins a day including weekends
and school holidays). Your final coursework performance must be recorded
when you are in year 13, however it is vital that you have your pieces
prepared well before this time if you wish to achieve a high mark in this
aspect of the course. Over the next few pages is a weekly practice log to
show evidence that you are practising. You need to fill in how many minutes
practising you have completed each day, and your parents/teacher need to
sign it off each week to confirm that this has taken place. This will be
monitored by the teacher at specific intervals over the course of each term
and parents will be notified if there are any concerns with the amount of
practice taking place.
Week
beginni
ng
Mon
Tues
Weds Thur
s
Fri
Sat
Sun
Signed
Example
0 mins
20
mins
50
mins
0 mins
30
mins
0 mins
E. Stevens
30
mins
16
Week
beginni
ng
Mon
Tues
Weds Thur
s
Fri
Sat
Sun
Signed
17
Week
beginni
ng
Mon
Tues
Weds Thur
s
Fri
Sat
Sun
Signed
18
Week
beginni
ng
Mon
Tues
Weds Thur
s
Fri
Sat
Sun
Signed
19
PERFORMING
ASSESSMENT FEEDBACK
Use the following pages to record any feedback (teacher, peer etc) related
to your performance coursework. This can include formal teacher
assessment feedback, hand writing of verbal feedback, etc
20
PERFORMING
ASSESSMENT FEEDBACK
(CONT..)
21
PERFORMING
ASSESSMENT FEEDBACK
(CONT..)
22
COMPOSITION LOG
This composition log is for you to plan what you are going to do each
lessons, and to record what you have achieved, and any feedback you have
received in lessons. Be sure to use it at the beginning and end of each
composition session.
DATE
Feedback when
applicable
(peer or
teacher)
23
DATE
Feedback when
applicable
(peer or
teacher)
24
DATE
Feedback when
applicable
(peer or
teacher)
25
COMPOSITION
ASSESSMENT FEEDBACK
Use the following pages to record any feedback (teacher, peer etc)
related to your composition coursework (separate from your composition
log). This can include formal teacher assessment feedback, hand writing of
verbal feedback, etc
26
COMPOSITION
ASSESSMENT FEEDBACK
CONT.
27
COMPOSITION
ASSESSMENT FEEDBACK
CONT.
28