All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #6 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth Century Music
Based on the way in which each instrument produces sound, which of the following instruments is most similar to an accordion?
Violin
Harmonica
Trumpet
Guitar
Flute
Harmonica
Although configured and played quite differently, both the accordion and the harmonica produce sound by having air blow over free reeds. While the accordion has buttons to open and close specific reeds, a harmonica player blows over a specific hole to create the desired tone.
Example Question #1 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth Century Music
Neoclassicism in music is a term reserved for works from which of the following centuries?
Twentieth century
Sixteenth century
Nineteenth century
Seventeenth century
Eighteenth century
Twentieth century
While the term Neoclassicism typically refers to the Enlightenment trends that focused on ancient Greece and Rome, in music the term refers to twentieth-century music that looked back to the "Classical" music of the eighteenth century. The composers Igor Stravinsky and Alfredo Casella were important figures in this movement.
Example Question #2 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth Century Music
The note "piano" above a clef on a sheet of music indicates that the musician should __________.
only use a keyboard instrument
play the music softly
play the music slowly
take a brief pause
play the music briskly
play the music softly
In musical notation, the note "piano" above a clef indicates that the music should be played softly. Often such a mark, sometimes abbreviated with just a "p," will come in the middle of a piece to indicate a change of volume. The opposite notation is "forte," which indicates that the music should be played loudly.
Example Question #51 : Performing Arts
Philip Glass is a composer most associated with what musical style?
Modernism
Minimalism
Neoclassicism
Postmodernism
Expressionism
Minimalism
Philip Glass was part of a group of composers who used simple motifs that were repeated over steady beats. This music was dubbed "minimalism" by crtics, but also embraced by the figures who founded it, as it expressed their desire to reduce music to its essentials.
Example Question #4 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth Century Music
On a piano, the black keys indicate __________.
lower register notes
non-natural notes
shifting notes
droning tones
higher register notes
non-natural notes
The eighty-eight notes on a keyboard are produced by pressing white and black keys. The black keys are positioned slightly higher and farther back, as they hold all of the sharp and flat notes on the twelve-tone chromatic scale. This arrangement allows the natural notes to be played more easily, and make the non-natural notes more obvious.
Example Question #11 : Twentieth Century Music
The accordion is a traditional piece of ensembles in all of the following musical genres except which one?
Klezmer
French Chansons
Bluegrass
Tejano
Cajun
Bluegrass
Accordions have been used in a wide variety of traditional folk music around the world. Accordions, free reed instruments that can be played with either a keyboard or diatonic buttons, provide a multitonal and varied sound that can accompany a voice all on its own. One notable exception to the kind of folk music that features the accordion is bluegrass, a folk style developed in Appalachia that exclusively features string instruments such as the guitar, banjo, fiddle, dobro, and mandolin.
Example Question #12 : Twentieth Century Music
The so-called "twelve-tone technique," which uses all twelve chromatic notes in a scale and abandons keys, was developed by the composer __________.
John Cage
Arnold Schoenberg
Igor Stravinsky
Sergei Prokofiev
Phillip Glass
Arnold Schoenberg
In the early twentieth century, many composers sought to go beyond the traditional eight note scale of Western music. The first composer to set out a system to use atonality in compositions was Arnold Schoenberg, who created a "twelve tone system" in the 1920s of chromatic tones that gave each note equal weight. The system was used heavily by composers after World War II.
Example Question #13 : Twentieth Century Music
In a musical time signature, the top number indicates __________.
the total number of notes in the piece
the tempo the musician should play
the length of each beat
the number of beats in a measure
which kind of notes should be played
the number of beats in a measure
The time signature is two numbers, which are stacked one on top of the other and are placed at the beginning of a piece of music. The top number indicates how many beats are in each measure. The bottom number indicates how long each beat will last, with a four meaning a quarter more, and an eight an eighth note.
Example Question #14 : Twentieth Century Music
Which of the following instruments is not played by a keyboard?
Accordion
Piano
Clarinet
Organ
Harpsichord
Clarinet
The clarinet is a woodwind instrument, and produces sound like all woodwind instruments, by the player blowing through a reed and controlling the sound by opening and closing valves with his or her fingers. Every other instrument listed in some way uses a keyboard, or in the case of the organ, multiple keyboards.
Example Question #15 : Twentieth Century Music
Which of the following instruments is not a typical part of a bluegrass ensemble?
Clarinet
Mandolin
Banjo
Dobro
Standup Bass
Clarinet
Bluegrass is a form of folk music developed in the middle of the twentieth century, primarily in Appalachia. The musical form developed around string instruments, which were available and primarily used in square and barn dances in the region. The clarinet, a wind instrument, is the only instrument listed that is not a key element of bluegrass ensembles.