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        | frequency, duration, wave-shape |  
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        | rate of a sound's vibration |  
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        | selected set of frequencies that are legitimatized when the others are filtered out |  
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        | referential system of tonal music |  
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        | class of octave-related pitches, including enharmonic pitches |  
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        | momentary durational recalibration |  
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        | stretch or compress not slightly to make musical point |  
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        | tone-color; quality of any musical sound that enables us to distinguish between different instruments playing the same pitch |  
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        | lowest pitch heard, single pitch |  
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        | typically changes key, accidentals; moves all notes up/down by same exact interval |  
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        Term 
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        | maintain same key, no accidentals; moves most notes up or down a generic size |  
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        | only notes within collection |  
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        | outside of collection or scale |  
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        | accent by virtue of duration |  
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        | accent based on register on the scale, up or down |  
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        | short clipped idea; "word" in a sentence |  
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        | complete idea; "sentence" |  
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        split in 2; 2/8, 2/4, 2/2;  example: Flintstones |  
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        split in 3; 3/8, 3/4, 3/2 example: Popeye |  
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        split in 4; 4/4, 4/2, 4/8 example: |  
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        6/8, 6/2, 6/4, 6/16 example: Mr. Ed |  
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        9 eighth notes; 9/8, 9/2, 9/4, 9/16 example: Vaughner |  
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        12 eighth notes; 12/2, 12/4, 12/8, 12/16 example: Mr. Rogers |  
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        | hear a greater meter, small grouping, little different meter than what is written |  
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        | breakdown measures; 5/4 breaks into 2/4, 3/4 |  
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        | two different meters played at the same time |  
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        | scale degrees 4, flat 6, and 7 |  
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        | a melody's relative position within the universe of pitches |  
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        | melody's spread of pitches through the register |  
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        | where a melody lies within its range; high, low, middle |  
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        | motion by repetition or step |  
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        | motion by intervals larger than a M2 |  
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        | scale degrees 1, 3, flat 3, and 5 |  
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        | three tones in a row in descending or ascending order, middle tone unstable |  
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        | go up or down by a step for middle note then back to the original note; neighbors always unstable |  
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        Definition 
        
        | leap then second half of a neighbor, middle note unstable |  
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        | note that doesn't resolve |  
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        | hear two lines and two melodies when one instrument is playing |  
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        | starts together then moves away |  
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        | completely different lines and voices apparent |  
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        | consonant vertical intervals |  
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        | primes/8ves, 3rds/10ths, 5ths and 6ths; perfect, major, and minor, simple and compound |  
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        | when melodies are combined so that harmonic sonorities appear between them; in counterpoint, contrapuntally related |  
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        | hear tones all together, not as distinct voices |  
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        Term 
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        | each pitch in either voice is directly and exactly aligned with another pitch in the other voice |  
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        | lowest and highest voices in a passage |  
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        | 3rds/10ths and 6ths predominate |  
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        | 5ths and 8ves allowed, beginnings and ends of phrases |  
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        | bass moves from scale degree 5 to 1, 10th, 5th, or 8ve above both 5 and 1 |  
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        | bass ends on scale degree 5, same rules as authentic cadence |  
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        | immediate change of direction |  
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        Term 
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        | 2 voices moving in opposite directions |  
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        Term 
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        | when one voice stationary, other moves |  
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        | both voices moving in same direction |  
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        Term 
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        | two voices moving in same direction by same generic interval; no 5-5 or 5-8 or 8-5 parallel motion |  
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        Term 
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        Definition 
        
        | upper voice contains pitch that is lower than that of lower voice |  
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        | upper voice contains pitch that is lower than that of previous or following lower voice |  
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        | stereotypical contrapuntal patterns |  
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        Definition 
        
        | 5-6/6-5 pattern, parallel motion, voice exchange |  
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