AoS3 Star Wars Flashcards

You may prefer our related Brainscape-certified flashcards:
1
Q

What is a leitmotif?

A

A specific theme tune for a character or emotion in a film

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2
Q

Who is represented by the opening theme of Star Wars?

A

Luke Skywalker, with ideas of heroism and struggle

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3
Q

What is the instrumentation used in Star Wars?

A

Full symphony orchestra

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4
Q

What are the sections in a traditional orchestra?

A

Strings, Woodwind, Brass and Percussion

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5
Q

What does instrumental doubling mean?

A

More than one instrument playing a particular idea at once, sometimes an octave apart

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6
Q

What is similar to the scoring of Star Wars and Killer Queen?

A

No use of synthesisers - strange, considering the film is futuristic

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7
Q

What is a fanfare and why might it be used for this theme?

A

A brass motif, used to show heroism and bravery and gives the sense of something amazing is going to happen

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8
Q

What do the violins start with on their first note?

A

They are playing a tremolo inverted tonic pedal

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9
Q

What is the rhythmic device used underneath the main theme

A

Syncopation, rhythmic articulation

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10
Q

What happens after the main theme is played once?

A

It is repeated, but this time accompaniments change slightly

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11
Q

What is the interval played by the string parts in the second contrasting section?

A

Octaves - the strings actually play across three octaves

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12
Q

What percussion instrument can be heard playing the important notes of the melody line?

A

Glockenspiel

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13
Q

What is it called when all of the accompaniment are playing all chords at the same time?

A

Block Chords

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14
Q

What instrumental device is the harp playing to link into the transition section?

A

Glissando, or slide

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15
Q

What is different harmony wise in the transition section and the main theme?

A

The harmony in the second section is a lot less stable, dissonant and tonally ambiguous

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16
Q

Which instruments play the second leitmotif heard in the piece?

A

Brass again, the leitmotif for the Imperial Forces

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17
Q

What is the difference between a theme and an underscore?

A

The theme is played usually over credits or for a particular character, however an underscore fits with what is happening on screen

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18
Q

What is the effect of the harmonic differences between the sections?

A

The harmonically unstable second second represents the bad and war hungry side of the film, whereas the beginning is more triumphant and brave

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19
Q

What does ritardando mean?

A

Slowing down

20
Q

What is an ostinato and when is it used?

A

Near the end, where the brass all play the same rhythmic pattern over and over again.

21
Q

What is the main texture?

A

Mostly different types of homophony

22
Q

Which type of homophony is mainly used?

A

Melody and accompaniment, or melody dominated

23
Q

Name two different types of pedal used in the extract

A

Inverted tonic (intro) and dominant pedal (bars 12-15)

24
Q

What is the structure of the piece BEFORE the transition?

A

AABA (the two contrasting themes form the structure)

25
Q

What is the tonality at the start of the piece?

A

Major

26
Q

What is the key at the start of the piece?

A

Bb Major

27
Q

What is the tonality from the transition onwards?

A

More unclear and unstable

28
Q

What gives the audience the impression that the song has modulated to C Major?

A

A C can be heard as a bass pedal

29
Q

What does atonal mean?

A

Without key

30
Q

What does bitonality mean?

A

A combination of two keys

31
Q

What word best describes the harmony in this piece?

A

Tonal, though the conventional cadence points aren’t always used

32
Q

What position are the majority of the chords in?

A

Root and first inversion

33
Q

What is it called when the harmonies in the fanfare are built on fourths, as opposed to thirds?

A

Quartal Harmony

34
Q

What type of cadence is used, at the end of the first phrase?

A

Imperfect, landing on V

35
Q

What is a ‘foreign’ chord?

A

A random chord (in this case, Db Major) which is out of place

36
Q

What is a cluster chord?

A

A chord built around closely spaced notes/close intervals

37
Q

What is a tritone?

A

An interval built on three tones (Devils’ interval - doesn’t sound pleasant!)

38
Q

What is dissonance and why is it used?

A

Clashing notes or chords to emphasise that bad things are going to happen

39
Q

What is an anacrusis?

A

Where the melody starts on the upbeat to the bar instead of beat 1

40
Q

Does the main theme (A) use stepwise motion or leaps, or both?

A

It uses both, with careful balance between the two.

41
Q

What is a triplet?

A

A rhythmic pattern where three notes are split over the space of two, creating a compound effect

42
Q

Why is the tempo suitable for the main theme?

A

The faster tempo matches the mood and the genre of the film

43
Q

What is the metre of the piece and why is it suitable for the piece?

A

4/4 simple quadruple reflecting military nature of the war

44
Q

What rhythmic features are common in fanfares?

A

Rapid repeated notes and triplets

45
Q

What happens to the pulse in the transition?

A

It becomes a lot less clear

46
Q

What does homorhythmic mean?

A

Where everything is playing in rhythmic unison - this part sounds like ‘Mars’ from the Planets