A | B |
Ruler of England during time of Thomas Weelkes life | Elizabeth I |
The English Madrigal got much of its inspiration from: | the Italian Madrigal |
Also called a Motet | Anthem |
Byrd's "Sing Joyfully" has ___ distinct voices across a wide range. | six |
Wrote "The Cricket" | Josquin |
Two distinct parts that both repeat (as in Susato's Moorish Dance") | AABB form |
"Moorish Dance" consists of which instrument groups: | brass, percussion, woodwinds |
A point of arrival in music that subtly melds right into the next section of music | elided cadence |
A melodic idea that is sung by one singer, then enters another singer with that same idea, and so on with several other singers following this pattern. | imitation or contrapuntal imitation |
More voices in polyphony tended to cause potential: | lack of clarity of text |
"Since Robin Hood" has two meters: | duple and triple |
Music of the Renaissance frequently followed the rhythm and meter of: | poetry |
In "The Cricket", there is a fairly long one of these on the word "love", which helps highlight the word's importance | melisma |
Which religious affiliation was William Byrd? | Catholic |