Mark Scheme (Results) Summer Pearson Edexcel GCE in Music (6MU03/01) Paper 1: Musical Understanding

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Scheme (Results) Summer 2015 Pearson Edexcel GCE in Music (6MU03/01) Paper 1: Musical Understanding

Edexcel and BTEC Qualifications Edexcel and BTEC qualifications are awarded by Pearson, the UK s largest awarding body. We provide a wide range of qualifications including academic, vocational, occupational and specific programmes for employers. For further information visit our qualifications websites at www.edexcel.com or www.btec.co.uk. Alternatively, you can get in touch with us using the details on our contact us page at www.edexcel.com/contactus. Pearson: helping people progress, everywhere Pearson aspires to be the world s leading learning company. Our aim is to help everyone progress in their lives through education. We believe in every kind of learning, for all kinds of people, wherever they are in the world. We ve been involved in education for over 150 years, and by working across 70 countries, in 100 languages, we have built an international reputation for our commitment to high standards and raising achievement through innovation in education. Find out more about how we can help you and your students at: www.pearson.com/uk June 2015 Publications Code US042217 All the material in this publication is copyright Pearson Education Ltd 2015

General ing Guidance All candidates must receive the same treatment. Examiners must mark the first candidate in exactly the same way as they mark the last. schemes should be applied positively. Candidates must be rewarded for what they have shown they can do rather than penalised for omissions. Examiners should mark according to the mark scheme not according to their perception of where the grade boundaries may lie. There is no ceiling on achievement. All marks on the mark scheme should be used appropriately. All the marks on the mark scheme are designed to be awarded. Examiners should always award full marks if deserved, i.e. if the answer matches the mark scheme. Examiners should also be prepared to award zero marks if the candidate s response is not worthy of credit according to the mark scheme. Where some judgement is required, mark schemes will provide the principles by which marks will be awarded and exemplification may be limited. When examiners are in doubt regarding the application of the mark scheme to a candidate s response, the team leader must be consulted. Crossed out work should be marked UNLESS the candidate has replaced it with an alternative response.

Part A: Listening 1 Acceptable Answers 1. (a) The instruments in the concertino group are two flutes/recorders (1) and one violin (1) 2 Acceptable Answers 1. (b) Chord I/G/tonic Chord V/D/dominant Two alternating chords Root position Perfect cadences Slow harmonic rhythm/one chord per bar Diatonic/functional (Dominant) pedal 2 Acceptable Answers 1. (c) Ascending/rising Sequence Broken chords/arpeggio figures 2 Acceptable Answers 1. (d) Hemiola/syncopation/syncopated 1 Acceptable Answers 1. (e) Circle/cycle Fifths/5ths Sequence 2

Acceptable Answers 1. (f) (i) (Solo) Violin dominates/plays melody (Solo) Violin is soloistic/virtuosic (Solo) Violin plays constant semiquavers (Solo) Violin melody built on broken chords Flutes play fragments of theme Flutes play less Thinner texture 2 Note: If candidate, instead, uses section A to show differences, accept creditworthy points. Acceptable Answers 1. (f) (ii) Section A is in G major Section A modulates to dominant Section B modulates to/ends in dominant Sections A and B modulate to D/Dominant Section A modulates to Em/goes to a minor key Section B modulates to C/subdominant Section B stays in major keys 3 Acceptable Answers 1. (g) B. Ritornello form 1 Acceptable Answers 1. (h) A. Concerto grosso 1

2 Answer 2. (a) A. an anthem 1 Acceptable Answers Reject 2. (b) 4 pitches 2 Repeated notes Begins/ends/centred on G/tonic Diatonic / G major / E minor Range of perfect 4 th/ F#-B/narrow range Leaps of a third Quaver rhythms/even rhythms Unaccompanied/a capella/monophonic Mostly syllabic Mixture of syllabic and melismatic / Melisma on lamb and/or who Melisma on its own 2. (c) (i) Acceptable Answers (Mirror)Inversion/contrary motion Same rhythm Same number of notes Same range Same number of pitches Begins in unison Ends in unison (Alto) in Eb (major) 1 2. (c) (ii) Acceptable Answers Bitonal(ity)/polytonal(ity) 1 Acceptable Answers 2. (d) Retrograde/backwards 1

Acceptable Answers Reject 2. (e) SIMILARITIES Any one of: 2 Pitches Harmony/chords Word setting/melismas (in same place) Four parts/satb Homophonic/chordal (Aeolian) mode /key/e minor DIFFERENCES Any one of: Rhythm (bar 10)/augmentation/double note length Words Bass (octave) lower at end DIFFERENCES slower Acceptable Answers 2. (f) Any three of: 3 Bars 3/4 monophonic / solo / single part / unison Bars 5/6 two part / homorhythmic / homophonic Bars 7-10 homophonic / four parts / SATB Acceptable Answers 2. (g) Any two of: 2 Modal Functional Perfect cadence 7ths 9ths Joy/sorrow chord Suspensions I(7) IIb - V7 I Repeated each bar

Acceptable Answers 2. (h) Any two of: 2 (Simple) quaver rhythms Speech rhythms/freedom of metre Piano/soft dynamics Repetitive (Starts with) Children s voices/trebles Limited melodic material Homophonic Narrow range Acceptable Answers 2. (i) B: Strophic 1

Part B: Investigating Musical Styles 3 3. (a) (i) Describe the stylistic features of Piano Sonata in B flat, K.333: movement I by Mozart which show that this music was composed in the Classical period. Indicative Answer Structure s 10 Sonata form Exposition-development-recapitulation Codetta (at end of expo- bars 50-63)/coda Bridge/transition Melody 1 st subject (b 1-10) 2 nd subject (group) (bar23) Melody in right hand part Ornamentation/appoggiaturas/trills Periodic/balance phrasing (Mostly)diatonic Harmony Functional / chords I and V Chromatic harmony in development V7 in all inversions Cadential 6/4 (e.g. bars 57-59) Circle/cycle of 5ths Dim 7 th (e.g. bars 67 and 69) Aug 6 th (e.g. bar 80 and 82) Accented dissonance/double appoggiatura on final chord of cadence/feminine cadence Tonality (Frequent) perfect cadences 1 st subject in tonic / B flat major 2 nd subject in dominant / F major Modulations to related keys (e.g to the dominant) F minor C minor G minor Dominant preparation (b 87-93) 2nd subject in recap in tonic

Texture/ Accompaniments (melody dominated) homophony 2 part textures Chordal homophony (at beginnings of sections) Broken chords (left hand) Alberti bass (bars 71-80) Other Fortepiano Credit up to three clear examples as additional points

3. (a)(ii) Compare and contrast the melody and texture of Sonata for Horn, Trumpet and Trombone: movement I by Poulenc and String Quartet No.8, Op. 110: movement I by Shostakovich. Indicative Answer Melody Poulenc 18 Triadic/ broken chord figure/ G major triad Opening melodic motif altered/varied Anacrusis Augmentation Diatonic Periodic phrasing/ balanced phrasing Octave/2 octave leaps in trumpet Repeated notes Ornamentation Cadenza Chromatic scale/melody in trombone/trumpet Shostakovich DSCH/DEbCB motif/cypher Motif starts on different pitches Motto used in augmentation Conjunct Repetition (bars 50-56) Chromatic All 12 pitches appear in bars 1-7 Low tessitura of opening section Melody quote from symphony 1 / 5

Texture Poulenc (Mostly) 3 part Melody dominated homophony (trumpet tune/trombone bass/ horn harmony notes) 2 part texture 6ths trumpet and horn Dialogue Arpeggiated/broken chord accompaniment Homorhythmic Oompah accompaniment Pedal (trumpet) Octaves (last bar) Shostakovich Cello alone/ monophonic Imitation/counterpoint/fugal/polyphony 4 parts 2 part counterpoint (Three parts in) octaves Parallelism Homophony/homophonic Homorhythmic (Melody with) drones / (double) pedals Texture of b. 50-78 similar to b.52 onwards Countermelody added Credit up to six clear examples as additional points

3. (b) (i) Describe the stylistic features of Tupelo Honey by Van Morrison which show that this is an example of a 1970s fusion pop song. Indicative Answer Genre max 2 10 (Rhythm and) Blues Rock Jazz Soul Irish/Celtic/Folk Structure Verse-chorus form Intro(duction) Instrumental/break/middle 8 Coda/outro Rhythm Improvisatory [if not credited under Melody] Freedom in words (influenced by soul) Syncopation Cross rhythms Melody Based on one melody Little difference in melody between sections Improvisation [if not credited under rhythm] Pentatonic(Bb-C-D-F-G)/diatonic [if not credited under Harmony/Tonality] Folk influenced melody Vocal phrases end on tonic triad notes High Bb/falsetto/high vocal range (Mainly) syllabic Small melismas Harmony / Tonality Repeated chord pattern/ostinato I-III(c)-IV-I/Bb Dm Eb Bb Uses V on alternate cycles Functional/diatonic [if not credited under Melody] No modulation/same key (B flat) throughout Occasional chromatic note in bass

Texture (Melody dominated) homophony Counterpoint/polyphonic (in instrumental) dialogue/fill(b vox) Instrumentation Flute solo (folk influence) Sax solo Lead guitar used as melody instrument Bass plays melody Straight/rock rhythm (drums) Organ Credit up to three clear examples as additional points

3. (b)(ii) Compare and contrast melody and harmony of Ohimѐ, se tanto amate by Monteverdi and Waterloo Sunset by The Kinks. 18 Indicative Answer Melody Monteverdi Syllabic Speech-like rhythms Varied phrase lengths Repeated notes (mainly) conjunct Falling 3rds/sigh motif Interval of 7 th Tritone/dim 5 th Modal inflections Sequences Kinks (5 note) hook sequence Varied by extension Downward shape of phrase Pentatonic (E-F#-G#-B-C#) Syllabic Different melody/stepwise - in section B/middle 8 Periodic phrasing (of melody) Ornamentation/decoration/grace notes in guitar melody Harmony Monteverdi (Mixture of) Minor and Major Root position First inversion Perfect cadences Pedal (tonic/dominant) Modal False relations Dissonance IIIb-I final cadence Tierce de Picardie

Kinks Diatonic/functional Primary triads A section= I-IV-V7 B section = II-VI#3-II-V7 Turnaround uses extended V7 chord Pedal (dominant) Perfect cadences Suspensions Begins/ends with V7 F# minor(bar17)/ C# major(bar18) Secondary dominant Credit up to six clear examples as additional points

Part C. Understanding Chords and Lines 4 4. (a) Bar 1 beat 3 Answers Acceptable Answers Reject I Ia I 5/3 I in root position Accept i instead of (capital) I Ib Ic or equivalent expressions that imply anything other than chord I in root position. 1 Bar 2 beat 1 V Va V 5/3 V in root position Vb Vc Vd 1 Accept v instead of (capital) V Bar 2 beat 2 IVb IV 6/3 IV in first inversion IVa IVc IV 1 Bar 2 beat 3 Accept iv instead of (capital) IV Ib I 6/3 I in first inversion Accept i instead of (capital) I I Ia Ic 1 Answer 4. (b) Bar 11 beat 1 1 Answer Accept 4. (c) Sequence melisma 1

Answer Reject 4. (d) G minor / g minor / Gm / gm / G min / g min / dominant (minor) / G- / g- / g G 1 Answer 4. (e) D: Lower auxiliary 1

5 5. Complete the music below for SATB voices in short 12 score choosing suitable chords. Some credit will be given for the appropriate use of non-harmonic notes. Some space for rough work is given on the next page but you must write your answers on the score. Answer 2 marks are available per chord (10 marks available for chords) Award 2 marks per chord if the chord choice is appropriate and there are no part-writing faults associated with it. Award 1 mark for a chord if there is one problem with partwriting, which might include: a single set of consecutives or exposed 5ths/8ves terminates at the beat or falls within it An augmented melodic interval ends there An essential note of the chord is missing (accept omitted 5th in root-position chords) A leading note is doubled Parts cross unnecessarily Parts overlap unnecessarily Final chord not being in root position A seventh is unprepared and/or unresolved (apart from passing seventh) Use of Chord II in root position (diminished triad) OR OR OR If the chord is unsuitable but not actually wrong If there is one wrong note in the chord If one part is omitted Award 0 if the chord is unsuitable, or two notes of the chord are incorrect (or missing) or there are 2 or more problems with partwriting Also Award 1 mark for each non-harmonic note used correctly, to a maximum of 2 marks e.g passing notes, suspensions, Tierce de Picardie. Deduct 1 mark from total if more than an octave interval between Alto and Tenor or Soprano and Alto for 2 chords or more.

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