All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2 : Answering Other Questions About Twentieth Century Music
Which composer wrote the controversial and avant-garde ballet The Rite of Spring?
Modest Mussorgsky
Frederic Chopin
Igor Stravinsky
Pyotr Tchaikovsky
Sergei Prokofiev
Igor Stravinsky
In the 1913 Paris Ballet season, the Russian artists Igor Stravinsky, a composer, and Vaslav Nijinsky, a choreographer, debuted the ballet The Rite of Spring. The extremely avant-garde nature of the piece nearly caused the audience to riot. Stravinsky's score played with every convention in music at the time, including rhythm, melody, and dissonance.
Example Question #1 : Romantic Music (1810 1900)
Frederic Chopin is most well known for his compositions for the __________.
guitar
harpsichord
violin
flute
piano
piano
Frederic Chopin was a Polish-born composer of the Romantic Era, who was a child prodigy on the piano and began composing in his teens. As an adult, he moved to Paris, France, and became a well known composer of works for the piano, both solo and as a featured member of an ensemble.
Example Question #341 : Clep: Humanities
The mandolin is a fretted instrument with four double courses of strings tuned similarly to a __________.
cello
viola
violin
guitar
bass
violin
The mandolin is the most famous member of the "mando" family that also includes the mandola and mandocello, among other instruments. The instruments in this family all have double courses of four strings, meaning that each string is paired with an exact twin, that is the same size and tuned to the same note. A mandolin is tuned just like a violin, while the mandola and mandocello are tuned like the viola and cello, respectively.
Example Question #2 : Romantic Music (1810 1900)
Pyotr Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture utilizes as musical motifs the national anthems of __________.
Poland and Germany
Germany and France
France and Russia
Great Britain and Russia
Germany and Russia
France and Russia
Tchaikovsky's 1880 masterpiece commemorates the Russian defense of the French invasion of 1812 during the Napoleonic Wars. Anachronistically, though, both anthems Tchaikovsky used to represent each army were not used during the 1812 invasion. Napoleon had banned "La Marseillaise" in 1805, and "God Save The Tsar" was not even written in 1812.
Example Question #342 : Clep: Humanities
Which of the following songs were not written by the nineteenth-century American songwriter Stephen Foster?
"Camptown Races"
"Dixie"
"Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair"
"My Old Kentucky Home"
"Oh, Susanna"
"Dixie"
Stephen Foster (1826-1864) is considered the "Father of American Music" for his many famous and influential compositions, including "Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair," "My Old Kentucky Home," "Camptown Races," and "Oh, Susanna." Despite Foster's immense fame both at the time and in the years since, he was actually part of a broader popular music explosion thanks to sheet music's development. Among the other popular songs of the time was Daniel Decatur Emmet's "Dixie," from 1859.
Example Question #343 : Clep: Humanities
Which of the following instruments is NOT a brass instrument?
Sousaphone
Saxophone
Tuba
Cornet
Trumpet
Saxophone
Brass instruments, while deriving their name from the material they are usually made from, are not defined by the material from which they are composed. Instead, brass instruments are united by the the way air enters the instruments, and are each further controlled by a limited number of valves. A saxophone, despite its construction, is a woodwind due to its use of reeds and a series of tone holes the player can open and close.
Example Question #21 : Music
Which modernist composer is known for the silent piece 4'33"?
Arnold Schoenberg
Philip Glass
Modest Mussorgsky
Glenn Gould
John Cage
John Cage
John Cage became well known in the mid-twentieth century for his radical and odd compositions. In particular, Cage used odd instruments and strange tunings, and created a piano with objects placed on keys. His most famous work is the completely silent 4'33", which calls for the performer(s) to sit and do nothing for four minutes and thirty three seconds.
Example Question #22 : Music
Gregorian chants were developed by clerics of which religious tradition?
Protestant Christianity
Roman Catholic Christianity
Orthodox Christianity
Rabbinic Judaism
Sunni Islam
Roman Catholic Christianity
Developed in the ninth and tenth centuries in Western Europe, Gregorian chants are a simple, monophonic form of music used as sacred music by monks in the Catholic tradition. Gregorian chants helped spread the Latin Rite of Roman Christianity by having a common, uniform musical style for worship. Among certain monastic orders, the Gregorian chant is still a common form of worship.
Example Question #23 : Music
The note allegro on sheet music tells musicians __________.
to play the music in half time
to play the music softly
to play the piece at a brisk, bright pace
to play the music at a slow, somber pace
to play the music loudly
to play the piece at a brisk, bright pace
"Allegro" is one of the many Italian words that can be placed above a staff on sheet music, to indicate at what tempo a piece should be played. "Allegro" indicates a brisk pace, and for the musician to play the piece brightly. Usually, a tempo marker is given for an entire piece, but sometimes multiple tempo markers can be given throughout a piece.
Example Question #2 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Classical Music
What is the name of the traditional first movement in a classical symphony?
Minuet
Allegro
Opera
Sonata
Concerto
Sonata
The "classical symphony" features four separate movements: a sonata, or up-tempo section; an adagio, or slow movement; a minuet, or 3/4 dance section; and another up-tempo piece. This format was developed in the late eighteenth century by composers such as Mozart and Haydn. Nonetheless, despite its typical form, a symphony does not always have to adhere to such a strict format.