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Music Then And Now By Thomas Forrest Kelly - Test Bank

Music Then And Now By Thomas Forrest Kelly - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   CHAPTER 5: George Frideric Handel’s Messiah   MULTIPLE CHOICE   A large-scale religious drama performed without costumes or staging is called: a. a concerto d. a cantata …

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Music Then And Now By Thomas Forrest Kelly – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

CHAPTER 5: George Frideric Handel’s Messiah

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

  1. A large-scale religious drama performed without costumes or staging is called:
a. a concerto d. a cantata
b. an oratorio e. a mass
c. an opera  

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 119             TOP:   Introduction

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Audiences attending Messiah’s premiere expected to witness all of the following operatic elements EXCEPT:
a. dialogue in recitative d. an instrumental overture and interludes
b. emotive solo songs e. choral works
c. elaborate aristocratic narratives  

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 119             TOP:   Introduction

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Handel did NOT spend time living and working in which of the following countries?
a. England d. Germany
b. Italy e. Spain
c. Ireland  

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 120

TOP:   The Setting: George Frideric Handel                                 MSC:  Applied

 

  1. When Handel died in 1759, he was buried in:
a. Westminster Abbey, London d. Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris
b. St. Peter’s Basilica, Rome e. St. Michaelis Church, Hamburg
c. Trinity Church, Dublin  

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 120

TOP:   George Frideric Handel (1685–1759)           MSC:              Factual

 

  1. How did Messiah’s reception affect Handel’s career?
a. It led him to leave England permanently.
b. It led him to compose more chamber music.
c. It made it harder for him to find patrons and audiences.
d. It led him to stop composing operas.
e. It made him rent smaller performance spaces.

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 121

TOP:   The Setting: George Frideric Handel                                 MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Opera seria has all of the following characteristics EXCEPT:
a. It is sung in Italian.
b. It is economical to produce.
c. It features historical or mythological characters.
d. It  was written for an aristocratic audience.
e. Its unrealistic plots were full of evocative and emotional moments.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 121             TOP:   The Setting: Opera

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Opera seria recitatives do NOT:
a. advance the plot
b. feature simple basso continuo accompaniment
c. make use of melodic and rhythmic contours that mimic speech
d. inevitably lead to arias
e. often elicit passionate applause from the audience

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 121             TOP:   The Setting: Opera

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Opera seria and oratorio are alike in all of the following ways EXCEPT:
a. They are long-form vocal works.
b. They are narrative works.
c. They have elaborate staging and costumes.
d. They feature specific characters who sing the entirety of their roles.
e. They make use of alternating recitatives and arias.

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Hard              REF:   p. 122             TOP:   The Setting: Oratorio

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Opera seria and oratorio differ in all of the following ways EXCEPT:
a. Operas are staged, whereas oratorios are not.
b. Opera seria is sung in Italian, whereas oratorios can be set in a variety of languages.
c. Operas have secular plots, whereas oratorio features sacred topics.
d. Opera seria choruses have a less important role than oratorio choruses.
e. Opera seria makes use of recitative, whereas oratorio utilizes spoken dialogue.

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Hard              REF:   p. 122             TOP:   The Setting: Oratorio

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Messiah is an unusual example of an oratorio in that:
a. it does not explicitly refer to King George of England
b. its text is drawn directly from the Bible, and it does not rhyme
c. its characters are not aristocratic figures
d. it does not include a chorus
e. its plot is taken from the Old Testament

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 122             TOP:   The Setting: Oratorio

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. A majority of Dublin’s music, opera, and theater came from which of the following sources?
a. It was produced by the children of the Foundling Hospital.
b. It was created at Trinity College.
c. It came from the city’s churches.
d. It was imported from England, Italy, and the rest of Europe.
e. It was part of the city’s rich tradition of improvisation.

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 123             TOP:   The Setting: Dublin

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Handel’s first performances in Dublin were:
a. premieres of newly created works for the Irish audience
b. private events for wealthy patrons
c. oratorios and concertos he had already produced in London
d. free promotional events
e. sacred works performed within Protestant worship services

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 124

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. At the premiere, Messiah’s choral movements included all of the following performers EXCEPT:
a. boy sopranos d. female altos
b. male countertenors e. a full orchestra
c. male tenor and bass vocalists  

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 124

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. The original instrumental score for Messiah includes all of the following EXCEPT:
a. a flute soloist d. Kettledrums
b. a string ensemble e. basso continuo
c. two trumpets  

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 124

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Though he did not compose specific parts for them, Handel most likely included oboes and bassoons in the premiere of Messiah, asking them to:
a. Improvise
b. play the parts written for strings and voices
c. compose their own parts
d. transcribe Handel’s keyboard improvisations
e. perform from the figured bass notation

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 125

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. In rehearsals for Messiah’s premiere, Handel changed all of the following EXCEPT:
a. He adapted several male solos the better to suit the soloists.
b. He shortened a few pieces.
c. He transposed some solos to fit the vocal ranges of the singers.
d. He added additional wind instruments to the ensemble.
e. He rearranged the order of individual pieces.

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 125

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. The first official performance of Messiah was organized as a:
a. subscription concert d. private gathering for Handel’s friends
b. benefit for Handel’s charitable sponsors e. part of a large festival
c. free event  

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 125

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. The audience that attended the public rehearsal preceding the premiere of Messiah consisted of:
a. members of the Dublin leisure class who could afford the steep ticket price
b. orphans from the Foundling Hospital
c. working-class Dubliners
d. friends and family of the performers
e. Handel’s corporate sponsors

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 126

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. We know which soloists performed which pieces at the premiere of Messiah, because:
a. Handel made detailed notes in his journal
b. the New Music Hall published the relevant information in an advertisement
c. an audience member wrote the singers’ names in a copy of the wordbook
d. the soprano soloist told her sister in a letter
e. the roles were included in the first published edition of the score

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 126

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Applied

 

  1. At the conclusion of Susannah Cibber’s performance of the aria “He Was Despised,” the Reverend Dr. Delaney is said to have shouted:
a. “Encore!”
b. “Begone, ye demon!”
c. “Amen! Hallelujah!”
d. “Woman, for this be all thy sins forgiven thee!”
e. “Get thee behind me, Satan!”

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 126

TOP:   Susannah Cibber in the Eyes of Contemporaries                MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Handel conducted the performance from his position:
a. standing in front of the ensemble d. at the back of the hall
b. at the harpsichord e. in the violin section
c. at the side of the stage  

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 127

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Handel organized Messiah thematically and musically by all of the following means, EXCEPT:
a. The texts are organized into three parts, each of which is thematically unified.
b. The first act consistently alternates recitatives, arias, and choruses.
c. Handel makes direct musical connections between adjacent movements.
d. The texts are consistently drawn directly from the Old Testament of the Bible.
e. All the movements are in the same key.

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Hard              REF:   p. 128

TOP:   Listening to the Music: The Shape of the Oratorio              MSC:  Applied

 

  1. In “There were shepherds,” Handel utilizes which of the following word-painting techniques?
a. horn calls to depict shepherds
b. thundering low strings to depict the power of God
c. alternation of secco recitative and accompagnato recitative, which depicted the angels
d. a high vocal range to depict the fearful shouts of the shepherds
e. repeated plucking in the violins to depict the twinkling of stars

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 129

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Recitatives   MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Handel’s arias do NOT demonstrate which of the following characteristics?
a. extensive word painting
b. speechlike melodic phrasing
c. strong emotional expression
d. ample opportunity for soloists to embellish the melodies
e. ritornello form

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 130

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Applied

 

  1. The musical “sentences” at the heart of Handel’s arias are similar in structure to the grammatical constructions of:
a. Children d. Preachers
b. Kings e. native Italian speakers
c. working-class Dubliners  

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 132

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Applied

 

  1. A cadence is:
a. a gesture that creates musical closure
b. a musical idea repeated on a series of higher or lower pitches
c. the concluding section of a composition
d. a type of aria
e. a polyphonic structure in which individual instruments imitate each other

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 132

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Which of the following elements contribute(s) to the mood of an aria?
a. the words d. the key
b. the tempo e. all of the above
c. the melodic contour  

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 132

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Applied

 

  1. In the aria “Ev’ry valley,” Handel uses word painting through all of the following musical elements EXCEPT:
a. long-held notes
b. elaborate sequences
c. long, descending vocal lines
d. dramatic pauses
e. sharp contrast between jagged and smooth melodies

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 133

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Applied

 

  1. A ritornello is:
a. a polyphonic structure in which voices imitate one another
b. a melody that returns between verses of an aria
c. one syllable of text set to multiple notes
d. a virtuosic passage improvised by a soloist
e. rapid alternation between two notes

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 133

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Factual

 

  1. In the final section of a da capo aria, the soloist will deviate from the score by:
a. singing fewer notes so that the accompaniment can be heard more clearly
b. improvising a new melodic line
c. embellishing the melody with a series of virtuosic ornaments
d. singing at a louder dynamic level to emphasize the end of the aria
e. singing melodies from earlier movements in the piece

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 136

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Handel’s basic approach to composing a chorus does NOT involve which of the following?
a. breaking the text into brief phrases
b. assigning each phrase its own melody
c. connecting the individual phrases together into longer melodies
d. changing the rhythms of each phrase to create contrast
e. combining multiple melodies into dense polyphonic segments

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Hard              REF:   p. 136

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Choruses     MSC:  Applied

 

  1. In the middle of the “Hallelujah” chorus, each section of the choir sings the phrase “And He shall reign for ever and ever” on the same melody, but starting at different times. This technique is called:
a. Imitation d. Minuet
b. Homophony e. Exposition
c. Ritornello  

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 138

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Choruses     MSC:  Factual

 

  1. A fugue chorus includes all of the following elements EXCEPT:
a. a central melody called the subject
b. an exposition in which the main melody is introduced in each section of the chorus
c. episodes in which the subject is not present
d. a polyphonic texture
e. long passages in which only one or two voices perform

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 140

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Choruses     MSC:  Applied

 

  1. In 1784, five hundred performers gathered to honor Handel’s legacy by performing Messiah at:
a. Trinity Church, Dublin d. Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris
b. St. Michaelis Church, Hamburg e. St. Peter’s Basilica, Rome
c. Westminster Abbey, London  

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 143             TOP:   Messiah Then and Now

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Messiah’s long-standing commercial and artistic success comes in part from the fact that:
a. it blurs the lines between sacred and secular
b. it is a personal work with a universal message
c. it presents a dramatic narrative drawn from Old Testament texts
d. it is suitable for performance in both theaters and churches
e. all of the above

 

 

ANS:  E                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 143             TOP:   Messiah Then and Now

MSC:  Conceptual

 

TRUE/FALSE

 

  1. Handel composed Messiah to be performed in public concerts during Lent.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 119             TOP:   Introduction

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. In 1730s England, Handel was best known as a composer of concertos.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 120

TOP:   The Setting: George Frideric Handel                                 MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Opera seria plots were designed to maximize the number of emotive arias sung by the main characters.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 121             TOP:   The Setting: Opera

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Compared with operas, oratorios were inexpensive to produce because they required no sets or costumes.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 121             TOP:   The Setting: Oratorio

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Although the majority of Irish citizens were Protestant, their rulers enforced Catholicism as the country’s sanctioned religion.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 123             TOP:   The Setting: Dublin

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. As with all of his vocal works, Handel had particular vocalists in mind when he composed the solos in Messiah.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 124

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Handel changed the two tenor arias in Messiah to improve the dramatic flow of the piece.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 125

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Conceptual

 

  1. Handel was generally displeased with the quality of the musicians involved in the premiere of Messiah.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 125

TOP:   The Performance: Preparations         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. In the eighteenth century, a daytime performance was less expensive than one held at night, in part because it required no candles.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 126

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. A man singing in a well-developed falsetto voice is known as a countertenor.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 126

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Recitativo secco is a special kind of accompanied recitative that is generally reserved for the most intense moments of an opera or oratorio.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 129

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Recitatives   MSC:  Applied

 

  1. In his arias, Handel rarely repeats individual phrases of text.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 130

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias           MSC:  Factual

 

  1. In the second half of the “Hallelujah” chorus, Handel creates a dense polyphonic texture through extensive use of imitation.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 138

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Choruses     MSC:  Factual

 

  1. A fugue is a composition in which all voices perform exactly the same part.

 

ANS:  F                    DIF:    Hard              REF:   p. 140

TOP:   Listening to the Music: Choruses     MSC:  Applied

 

  1. From the enthusiastic reviews in the Dublin newspapers, we know that Messiah’s premiere was a rousing success.

 

ANS:  T                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 142             TOP:   How Did It Go?

MSC:  Factual

 

SHORT ANSWER

 

  1. In eighteenth-century England, ___________ was banned during Lent.

 

ANS:

opera

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 119            TOP:   Introduction    MSC:  Factual

 

  1. In 1719, Handel became the inaugural director of London’s ___________.

 

ANS:

Royal Academy of Music

 

DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 120            TOP:   George Frideric Handel (1685–1759)

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. The Italian word for song is ___________.

 

ANS:

aria

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 121            TOP:   The Setting: Opera

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. The ___________ is a poet who writes the text for an opera or oratorio.

 

ANS:

librettist

 

DIF:    Medium         REF:   p. 122            TOP:   The Setting: Oratorio

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. In the eighteenth century, Ireland was controlled by the government of ___________.

 

ANS:

England

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 122            TOP:   The Setting: Dublin

MSC:  Factual

 

  1. Ticketholders for the premiere of Messiah were also invited to attend a public ___________, similar to a “preview” performance of a Broadway show.

 

ANS:

dress rehearsal

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 125

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. At the premiere, audience members could purchase ___________ that contained the entire text of Messiah.

 

ANS:

wordbooks

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 126

TOP:   The Performance: Tuesday, April 13, 1742, 12 Noon         MSC:  Factual

 

  1. ___________ are short melodic phrases that are repeated several time at higher or lower pitch levels.

 

ANS:

Sequences

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 132            TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. A standard form for operatic solos, in which the vocalist sings an opening section, a contrasting section, and an ornamented repeat of the opening, is known as ___________.

 

ANS:

da capo aria

 

DIF:    Hard               REF:   p. 136            TOP:   Listening to the Music: Arias

MSC:  Applied

 

  1. Several choruses in Messiah feature only one or two voices singing for long stretches. These movements, which Handel adapted from earlier Italian works, are called ___________.

 

ANS:

duet choruses

 

DIF:    Easy               REF:   p. 141            TOP:   Listening to the Music: Choruses

MSC:  Factual

 

MATCHING

 

Match each item to the correct description below.

a. recitativo secco d. recitativo accompagnato
b. fugue e. aria
c. cadenza  

 

 

  1. an emotive, virtuosic song

 

  1. recitative accompanied by a large orchestral ensemble

 

  1. “dry” recitative, featuring spare basso continuo accompaniment

 

  1. an ornamented, virtuosic version of a piece’s final cadence, traditionally performed by the soloist

 

  1. a polyphonic structure in which individual voices or instruments directly imitate one another

 

  1. ANS:  E

 

  1. ANS:  D

 

  1. ANS:  A

 

  1. ANS:  C

 

  1. ANS:  B

 

Match each person to the correct description below.

a. Charles Jennens d. Christina Maria Avolio
b. Jonathan Swift e. Matthew Dubourg
c. Susannah Cibber  

 

 

  1. violinist and leader of the State Music of Ireland

 

  1. Italian opera soprano whom Handel brought from London

 

  1. Handel’s associate, who assembled the texts for Messiah

 

  1. famed Irish author and dean of St. Patrick’s Cathedral

 

  1. alto soloist and actress whom Handel discovered in London

 

  1. ANS:  E

 

  1. ANS:  D

 

  1. ANS:  A

 

  1. ANS:  B

 

  1. ANS:  C

 

ESSAY

 

  1. Discuss Handel’s alternating use of recitatives, arias, and choruses in Messiah. What function does each serve, and how do they work together to dramatize the work’s message?

 

ANS:

Answers will vary

 

MSC:  Conceptual

 

  1. Explain the gesture-amplification-conclusion model of text setting, and provide a specific example of its use in the aria “Ev’ry valley.” Describe the specific musical materials and compositional techniques that Handel uses to create initial gestures, amplify those gestures, and conclude his musical sentences.

 

ANS:

Answers will vary

 

MSC:  Conceptual

 

  1. What elements (commercial, social, musical) have allowed Messiah to retain its extraordinary popularity over the 250 years since its premiere?

 

ANS:

Answers will vary

 

MSC:  Conceptual

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