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GCSE Music

AQA AoS3: Traditional Music

9 questions2 subtopicsAQA
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What's covered

Blues and folk6
World music and fusion3

Key facts

1

The blues commonly uses a 12-bar chord progression built on chords I, IV and V.

2

Blues features include blue notes, call and response, and a walking bass.

3

Call and response is a texture where a leader's phrase is answered by a group.

4

British folk music is often strophic, modal and passed on by oral tradition.

5

AQA AoS3 covers traditional music: blues, folk of the British Isles, and world music.

6

World music studied includes African drumming (polyrhythm) and Indian classical music (raga and tala).

Sample questions

A taste of the 9 questions in this topic, answers marked. Sign up to practise the full set with spaced repetition.

1Blues and folk

AQA's AoS3 studies which kind of music?

  • β€’Only Baroque instrumental concertos
  • β€’Only electronic dance music
  • β€’Only orchestral film scores
  • βœ“Traditional music: blues, folk and world
2World music and fusion

Indian classical music is organised around which two ideas?

  • βœ“Raga and tala
  • β€’Riff and fill
  • β€’Sonata and rondo
  • β€’Verse and chorus
3Blues and folk

The standard blues chord progression is how long?

  • βœ“12 bars
  • β€’20 bars
  • β€’3 bars
  • β€’7 bars
4World music and fusion

Call and response is a texture where a leader's phrase is answered by a group.

Answer: True

5Blues and folk

The 12-bar blues is built on which three chords?

  • β€’All twelve chords
  • βœ“I, IV and V
  • β€’II, III and VI
  • β€’Only chord I
6Blues and folk

Which feature is characteristic of the blues?

  • β€’A full symphony orchestra only
  • β€’A solo harpsichord cadenza
  • βœ“Blue notes and a walking bass
  • β€’Strict atonal serialism

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