- Section (music)
-
This article is about musical form. For groups of like instruments, see Musical ensemble#Larger ensembles.
In music, a section is "a complete, but not independent musical idea"[1]. Types of sections include the introduction or intro, exposition, recapitulation, verse, chorus or refrain, conclusion, coda or outro, fadeout, bridge or interlude. In sectional forms such as binary, the larger unit (form) is built from various smaller clear-cut units (sections) in combination, analogous to stanzas in poetry or sort of like stacking legos.
Some well known songs consist of only one or two sections, for example "Jingle Bells" commonly contains verses ("Dashing through the snow...") and choruses ("Oh, jingle bells..."). It may contain auxiliary members such as an introduction and/or outro, especially when accompanied by instruments (the piano starts and then: "Dashing...").
A section is, "a major structural unit perceived as the result of the coincidence of relatively large numbers of structural phenomena."[2] Episode may refer to a section.
A passage is a musical idea that may or may not be complete or independent. For example, fill, riff, and all sections.
Musical material is any musical idea, complete or not, independent or not, including motifs.
Auxiliary member
In musical form, an auxiliary member is a section, including introductions, transitions and codas.[3]
See also
Sources
- ^ Bye, L. Dean (1993). Mel Bay Presents Student's Musical Dictionary, p.51. ISBN 0-87166-313-9.
- ^ Spencer & Temko (1988). Form in Music, p.31. ISBN 0-88133-806-0.
- ^ Benward & Saker (2003). Music: In Theory and Practice, Vol. I, p.315. Seventh Edition. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
Musical form Arch form · Binary form · Coda · Conclusion · Exposition · Movement · Development · Recapitulation · Rondo · Section · Sonata form · Sonata rondo form · Strophic form · Ternary form · Through-composed · Transition · Variation
Categories:- Formal sections in music analysis
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.