AP Music Theory. Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary. Inside: Free Response Question 6. Scoring Guideline.

Similar documents
AP MUSIC THEORY 2013 SCORING GUIDELINES

AP MUSIC THEORY 2007 SCORING GUIDELINES

AP MUSIC THEORY 2007 SCORING GUIDELINES

AP Music Theory 2011 Scoring Guidelines

AP Music Theory 2009 Scoring Guidelines

AP Music Theory 2000 Scoring Guidelines

AP Music Theory 2004 Scoring Guidelines

Voice Leading Summary

FUNDAMENTAL HARMONY. Normal Progressions using Circle of Fifths (Major Keys) ii 5 V I I V I. Dominant Function Group. Pre-Dominant Function Group

Music Theory I (MUT 1111) Prof. Nancy Rogers

GRADE 6 MUSIC THEORY. First Inversions I V I. ii 5 V I I I 6 V I I V 7. Strong in the soprano part suggests a I - V - I chord progression.

Advanced Chromatic Harmonies I: The Neapolitan, and Augmented-Sixth Chords as a Combination of Modal Borrowing and Applied Procedures

CHAPTER8. Non-Harmonic tones (non-chord tones) occur with chords but are not chord members.

Music Theory. Content Skills Learning Targets Assessment Resources & Technology CEQ: HOW IS MUSIC PUT TOGETHER?

RAM Analytical Skills Introductory Theory Primer Part 1: Intervals Part 2: Scales and Keys Part 3: Forming Chords Within Keys Part 4: Voice-leading

Main Types of Intervals

A GUIDE TO ADVANCED HARMONY

The Shearer Method: Guitar Harmony. by Alan Hirsh

Modulation. Phrase Development. Minor Key Melody. Common Weaknesses. Two -Year Structure. An Approach To Harmony - Intervals

Cadences Ted Greene, circa 1973

Additional Theory Resources

NCEA Level 3 Music Studies (91421) 2013 page 1 of 8

OpenStax-CNX module: m Interval * Catherine Schmidt-Jones

The Shearer Method: Guitar Harmony. by Alan Hirsh

Delyth Knight Certified Music Judge LABBS Music Category Director

CHAPTER TWO SECOND SPECIES (2:1)

MU 3322 JAZZ HARMONY II

THE LANGUAGE OF HARMONY

Let's revise the technical names for the scale degrees:

Color Score Melody Harmonization System & User Guide

Interval Spelling CHEAT SHEET

Jazz Theory and Practice Module 5 a, b, c Dim. 7 th & 9 th Chords; Extensions to the 13 th ; Other Harmonic Structures

The Fundamental Triad System

Worksheet: Marian's Music Theory Shorthand (video 4, stepping outside the scale) 1 / 6

Copyright MCMLXXIX by Alfred Publishing Co., Inc.

FREE music lessons from Berklee College of Music

Additional Open Chords

Jazz Lesson 4. Technique. 1. Phrasing a. Phrasing is a very important part of technical exercises. If you can get in the habit of

Staves, Times, and Notes

CHAPTER TEN THREE-PART COUNTERPOINT

Lesson HHH Nonharmonic Tones. Introduction:

The Fundamental Triad System

Land of Music Part 3: Musical Mind. Sample Lesson

The (Early) Fixed Bass Tour By James Hober

Copyright Jniz - HowTo

Jniz V2 - HowTo. Most of the graphical components have tool tips, just move your mouse on components and you will get their actions.

Violin Harmony Syllabus. (Ear Training, and Practical Application of Remedial Theory) Allen Russell

Assessment Schedule 2014 Music: Demonstrate knowledge of conventions used in music scores (91094)

MUAG 1011 KEYBOARD SKILLS 1 (SKILLS 1-12 & Three EXAMS)

NAME DATE SECTION. Melodic Dictation: Melodies Using m2, M2, m3, M3

The Basics of Jazz Piano Missouri Music Educators Association Conference January,

Foundation Piano Level 1

Method 2 The Chord Tone Gap Method By James Hober

Vertical Harmony Concepts

œ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ b œ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ œ n œ ? b b ? b b œ # œ ? b b œ œ b œ ? b b œ œ œ b œ

FREE music lessons from Berklee College of Music

MUSIC THEORY. INTERMEDIATE (Level Two) By Francois H. Tsoubaloko

Week 9, Unit 9: The V7/ii, V7/iii and V7/vi Chords

Non-Harmonic Tones (NH Tones)

AP World History. Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary. Inside: Short Answer Question 3. Scoring Guideline.

Contents. Beginning Theory for Adults. Introduction Chapter One 5

Harmonizing Scales with Triads

Preface Introduction 12

Theory of Music Grade 5

FENDER PLAYERS CLUB THE ii-v-i

Chronicles II Part 1: Chord Phrasing Chord Phrasing Lesson 1: The C Shape

The Fixed Soprano Tour By James Hober

Chord Construction. I am going to approach chord construction from the point of view of the major scale. E Form

Harmony for Jazz Guitar

CHAPTER 8: EXTENDED TETRACHORD CLASSIFICATION

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Preface... iii

The Baroque 3/4. ca Based on the writings of Anna Butterworth: Stylistic Harmony (OUP 1992)

INTRODUCTION TO CHORDS

A0S2 HARMONY & TONALITY A0S2 HARMONY & TONALITY A0S2 HARMONY & TONALITY A0S2 HARMONY & TONALITY

PERFORMANCE GENERALITIES THE SWING

Ear Training Exercises Ted Greene 1975, March 10 and May 8

SCALES (SIMILAR MOTION)

Chord Phrasings and Progressions

Level 7. Piece #1 12 Piece #2 12 Piece #3 12 Piece #4 12. Total Possible Marks 100

In 'Beach-ball' position, the 'root' will always be the bottom note...

w w w P5 w w œ # œ & w # w # w n w n œ & œ # Sequential Singing of Dyads Dyads play on piano 8ve sing top voice # w sing bottom voice

MUAG 1012 KEYBOARD SKILLS 2 (SKILLS & Three EXAMS)

Elements of Predictability

Weekly Bass Lessons: Week 7 Walking Bass Line Concepts

Chapter 3: Scales, arpeggios, and easy pieces. Scales

Contents. Bassic Fundamentals Module 1 Workbook

Method 1 How to Recognize By James Hober

G (IV) D (I) 5 R. G (IV) o o o

Chord Essentials. Resource Pack.

Basically this chord is just like a G7 with the first fingered note on the High E string at the second fret instead of the first fret.

The diminished harmonic system produces three eight-note

Level 6. Piece #1 12 Piece #2 12 Piece #3 12 Piece #4 12. Total Possible Marks 100

CHORD RECOGNITION USING INSTRUMENT VOICING CONSTRAINTS

Jim Hall Chords and Comping Techniques

Jim Hall Chords and Comping Techniques

Pedals, or Suspension via Bass Note Glen Halls. All Rights Reserved

Tutorial 3K: Dominant Alterations

A Complete Guide to Piano Chords

Virginia Standards of Learning IB.16. Guitar I Beginning Level. Technique. Chords 1. Perform I-IV-V(V7) progressions in F, C, G, Scales

Companion to the Cape Breton Piano Accompaniment Online Workshop Winter 2012

Transcription:

2017 AP Music Theory Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary Inside: RR Free Response Question 6 RR Scoring Guideline RR Student Samples RR Scoring Commentary 2017 The College Board. College Board, Advanced Placement Program, AP, AP Central, and the acorn logo are registered trademarks of the College Board. AP Central is the official online home for the AP Program: apcentral.collegeboard.org

AP MUSIC THEORY 2017 SCORING GUIDELINES Question 6 0 18 points I. Chord Spelling (6 points, 1 point per chord) A. Award 1 point for each chord that correctly realizes the given chord symbols. 1. The chord must be spelled correctly and in the proper inversion (i.e., the bass note must be correct). An incorrect accidental on the wrong side of the notehead will be considered a misspelling. 2. The fifth (but not the third) may be omitted from any root-position triad. 3. The fifth (but not the third or seventh) may be omitted from a root-position seventh chord. 4. All inverted triads and inverted seventh chords must be complete. 5. All triads must contain at least three voices. 6. All seventh chords must contain at least four voices. B. Award 0 points for a chord that breaks one or more of the conditions of I.A. Note: Award 0 points for voice leading into and out of these chords. C. Award ½ point for a correctly realized chord that has exactly one of the following errors: 1. A doubled leading tone, a doubled chordal seventh, or incorrect doubling of a 6 4 chord. 2. More than one octave between adjacent upper parts. D. Award 0 points for a correctly realized chord that has: 1. More than one error listed in I.C. (e.g., doubled leading tone and spacing error, or two spacing errors); or 2. The correct accidental on the wrong side of a notehead. (For an incorrect accidental on the wrong side of a notehead, see I.A.1.) However, do check the voice leading into and out of these chords. II. Voice Leading (12 points) A. In general, award 2 points for acceptable voice leading between two correctly realized chords. N.B.: This includes the voice leading from the given chord to the second chord. B. If all chords are correctly realized, and there are no voice-leading errors (as described in II.C. and II.D.), but the response seems to have excessive leaps within the three upper voices: 1. Award 12 points for voice leading if there are five or fewer leaps in the three upper voices combined. 2. Award 11 points for voice leading if there are more than five leaps in the three upper voices combined. 2017 The College Board.

AP MUSIC THEORY 2017 SCORING GUIDELINES Question 6 (continued) C. Award only 1 point for voice leading between two correctly realized chords (as defined in I.A.) that features exactly one of the following errors: 1. Uncharacteristic unequal fifths. (See DCVLE, no. 4.) 2. Uncharacteristic hidden (covered) or direct octaves or fifths between outer voices. (See DCVLE, nos. 5 and 6.) 3. Overlapping voices. (See DCVLE, no. 7.) 4. Motion leading to a chord with crossed voices. (See DCVLE, no. 8.) 5. A chordal seventh approached by a descending leap. D. Award 0 points for voice leading between two correctly realized chords (as defined in I.A.) if any of the following statements is true: 1. Parallel octaves, fifths, or unisons occur (immediately successive or on successive beats), including those by contrary motion. (See DCVLE, nos. 1 through 3.) 2. An uncharacteristic leap occurs (e.g., augmented second, tritone, or more than a fifth). 3. A chordal seventh is unresolved or resolved incorrectly. (The voice with the seventh must move down by step if possible. In some cases, such as ii 7 to cadential 6 4, the seventh will be retained in the same voice.) 4. The leading tone in an outer voice is unresolved or resolved incorrectly. N.B.: When I and vi are connected by Ⅴ or Ⅴ 6 (i.e., I Ⅴ vi or I Ⅴ 6 vi) early in the phrase (so that there is no expectation of a cadence), an 8ˆ-7ˆ-6ˆ line is acceptable in any voice. 5. The 6 th or 4 th of a 4 6 chord is unresolved or resolved incorrectly. 6. An embellishing tone specified by the figures is omitted or handled incorrectly. If the required dissonance occurs in the first half of the chord, then consider this as voice leading before the chord; if the required dissonance occurs in the second half of the chord, then consider this as voice leading after the chord. 7. At least one of the chords has more or fewer than four voices (soprano, alto, tenor, and bass). 8. More than one error listed in section II.C. occurs. E. Award 0 points for voice leading into and out of an incorrectly realized chord. III. Scores with Additional Meaning 1 This score can be given to a response that has redeeming qualities. 0 This score is used for a response that represents an unsuccessful attempt to answer the question (has no redeeming qualities, or only one) or a response that is off-topic or irrelevant. The dash is reserved for blank responses. IV. Scoring Notes A. Do not penalize a response that includes correctly used nonchord tones. B. An incorrectly used nonchord tone will be considered a voice-leading error. 1. Award 1 point if the nonchord tone results in one error listed in II.C. 2. Award 0 points if the nonchord tone results in at least one error from II.D. or more than one error from II.C. C. Half-point totals round up with one exception: A total score of 17½ rounds down to 17. 2017 The College Board.

AP MUSIC THEORY 2017 SCORING GUIDELINES Definitions of Common Voice-Leading Errors (DCVLE) 1. Parallel fifths and octaves (immediately consecutive) unacceptable (award 0 points). 2. Beat-to-beat fifths and octaves (equal perfect intervals on successive beats) unacceptable (award 0 points). 3. Fifths and octaves by contrary motion unacceptable (award 0 points). 4. Unequal fifths (d5 P5). In a three- or four-part texture, a rising d5 P5 is acceptable ONLY when passing between I and I 6 where neither tone of the d5 forms a dissonance with the bass, e.g., I Ⅴ 3 4 I 6 and I vii 6 I 6 (no deduction). A rising d5 P5 in other progressions is unacceptable (award 1 point only). Unequal fifths between two upper voices are acceptable in either order when the voices are descending (no deduction). P5 d5 is acceptable voice leading in either direction involving any pair of voices (no deduction). 5. Hidden (or covered) fifths and octaves in outer voices (similar motion to a perfect interval that involves one voice moving by step). When the step is in the upper voice, as shown in Ex. 5a acceptable (no deduction). When the step is in the lower voice, as shown in Ex. 5b unacceptable (award 1 point only). 6. Direct fifths and octaves in outer voices unacceptable (award 1 point only). Definition: Similar motion to a perfect interval that involves a skip in each voice. N.B.: Many sources equate hidden and direct. 7. Overlapping voices unacceptable (award 1 point only). Definition: Two voices move to a position in which the lower voice is higher than the previous note in the higher voice, or they move to a position where the higher voice is lower than the previous note in the lower voice. 8. Crossed voices unacceptable (award 1 point only). Definition: Voicing in which the normal relative position of voices is violated, e.g., if the soprano is below the alto or the bass is above the tenor. 2017 The College Board.

2017 The College Board.

2017 The College Board.

2017 The College Board.

AP MUSIC THEORY 2017 SCORING COMMENTARY Question 6 Overview This question assessed students ability to: write a four-part chord progression from Roman numerals; demonstrate an understanding of chord inversions; demonstrate command of voice-leading procedures; demonstrate knowledge of secondary dominant chords; demonstrate an understanding of tendency tones and their resolutions; and demonstrate knowledge of how to approach chordal dissonances. Sample: 6A Score: 16 This represents an excellent response. Chords three through seven are spelled correctly and earned 1 point each. Chord two contains a doubled leading tone; it was awarded ½ point for chord spelling. Between chords five and six there are parallel fifths in the outer voices, and no points were awarded for this voice-leading connection. All of the remaining voice-leading connections are acceptable. The response earned 5½ points for chord spelling and 10 points for voice leading, for a total of 15½ points, which was rounded up to 16 points. Sample: 6B Score: 9 This represents a fair response. Because there are spacing errors in chords three, five, and seven, these chords were awarded ½ point each for chord spelling. All of the remaining chords are spelled correctly and were awarded 1 point each. The voice-leading connection between chords one and two is acceptable, so it was awarded 2 points. Between chords two and three, the alto overlaps the tenor; 1 point was awarded for this voice-leading connection. Between chords three and four, there is an uncharacteristic leap in the alto and no points were awarded for this voice-leading connection. The chordal seventh in chord four does not resolve properly; no points were awarded for the voice-leading connection between chords four and five. The chordal seventh in chord six is approached by a descending leap, and therefore 1 point was awarded for the voice-leading connection between chords five and six. Between chords six and seven, there are parallel fifths between the bass and tenor; no points were awarded for this voice-leading connection. The response earned 4½ points for chord spelling and 4 points for voice leading, for a total of 8½ points, which was rounded up to 9 points. Sample: 6C Score: 3 This represents a poor response. Chords three and seven are spelled correctly and were awarded 1 point each. The chordal seventh is doubled in chord six, which was awarded ½ point for chord spelling. Only the voice-leading connection between chords six and seven could be considered, but since the chordal seventh does not resolve properly, no points were awarded. The response earned 2½ points for chord spelling and no points were awarded for voice leading, for a total of 2½ points, which was rounded up to 3 points. 2017 The College Board.