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Basic Musicianship TestGeneral InformationThe Basic Musicianship Test (BMT) is taken by incoming freshmen, and is used as a diagnostic tool by the IU Jacobs School of Music. Most transfer students are not required to take the BMT. The BMT consists of 50 questions on a fundamental level which cover both the pitch and rhythmic components of music. These questions are divided into two sections: aural and written. [More on the BMT format and scoring.] The Basic Musicianship Test may be repeated ONCE if you do not pass it the first time. ScheduleThe Basic Musicianship Test is given several times throughout the year, including each audition period, and during orientation week before each semester. Students do not need to sign up for the test. Summer 2008
Fall 2008
Format and ScoringThe Basic Musicianship Test consists of 50 questions on a fundamental level which cover both the pitch and rhythmic components of music. These questions are divided into two sections: aural and written. The aural section constitutes 50% of the test, the written the remaining 50%. All answers are in a multiple-choice format. The student indicates answers by darkening circles on a computer-graded answer sheet. For the aural section, the examples are played from a CD. Each example is heard twice. This section takes approximately 15 minutes. The remaining 45 minutes are then available for the written section. Each question is worth two points; thus the possible total is 100. A score of 70 or higher is necessary to demonstrate proficiency. In the event that a student scores lower than 70 points, there are two options: 1) to take a rudimentary theory course (T109), or 2) to retake the Basic Musicianship Evaluation no later than the following semester and score 70 or above. Once a student takes T109, the option to retake the test is no longer available. Students who score below 50 may not take the first semester of the required undergraduate music major theory sequence (T151) until after they pass T109. Question Categories and Explanation of TerminologyAural SectionPart A - five melodic intervals to identify Written SectionPart A - four intervals to identify and one to invert All intervals are identified by quality and numeric size, e.g., M6 (major sixth), m2 (minor second), +4 (augmented fourth), °5 (diminished fifth). Augmented or diminished intervals are not included in the aural section; they are included in the written section. Melodic intervals are performed with the two notes played successively; harmonic intervals are performed with the two notes played simultaneously. The chord types included on this test are major, minor, augmented, and diminished triads and the major-minor (dominant) seventh. Questions on scale types include major, natural minor, harmonic minor, and ascending melodic minor. All rhythmic notation conforms to standard beaming practice. Throughout the test, examples are given in both the treble and bass clefs. Sample QuestionsAural SectionPart A. Melodic intervals. Identify each interval. An example is played twice. 1. Identify the interval played a. m3 Part E. Melody. 2. Which example is played? (Choose "e" if none.) A short melody is played twice.
Part F. Bass of chord progressions. 3. Choose the bass line of the chord progression played. (Choose "e" if none.) A five-chord progression is played twice.
Written SectionPart C. Key signatures. 4. Which of the following is the key signature for F# minor?
Part E. Rhythm, meter, tempo. 5. Which note value completes this measure: a. Selected Fundamentals Materials for Beginning Music Theory(High School and College/Adult Students) Benward, Bruce and Barbara G. Jackson. Practical Beginning Theory: A Fundamentals Worktext. McGraw-Hill, 8th edition, 2000. Comprehensive book covering pitch materials, rhythm, melodic structures (including beginning form), and diatonic harmony. Has both written and ear training materials. Instructor's resource manual; CD. Bland, Leland D. Basic Musicianship. Prentice-Hall, 1989. Covers basics of rhythm and pitch as well as scales, melody (including variation and improvisation techniques), and harmonization with basic chords. Exercises. Clough, John, Joyce Conley, and Claire Boge. Scales, Intervals, Keys, Triads, Rhythm and Meter. W.W. Norton, 3rd edition, 1999. Programmed book; exercises to be done individually with CD and score anthology. Duckworth, William. A Creative Approach to Music Fundamentals. Schirmer/Thomson Learning, 8th edition, 2004. Comprehensive text with many exercises and musical examples from a variety of styles. Harder, Paul and Greg A. Steinke. Basic Materials in Music Theory: A Programmed Course. Prentice-Hall, 10th edition, 2003. Instructor's Manual. Extensive course which can be studied individually. Henry, Earl. Fundamentals of Music. Prentice-Hall, 4th edition, 2003. With CD of intervals, scales, triads. Kolosick, J. Timothy and Allen H. Simon. Explorations, A New Approach to Music Fundamentals using the Macintosh. Mayfield, 2nd edition, 1999. Musical notation, rhythm, scales, intervals, chords; with instructor's manual and software. Musical examples (sound and music for performance). Manoff, Tom. The Music Kit. W.W. Norton, 4th edition, 2001. Workbook, rhythm reader, and scorebook, CD. Also CAI version and CD-ROM. Wide variety of tunes (including folk and popular melodies). Nelson, Robert and Carl J. Christensen. Foundations of Music: A Computer-Assisted Introduction. Wadsworth/Thomson Learning, 5th edition, 2003. Dual platform CD-ROM. Ottman, Robert and Frank Mainous. Rudiments of Music. Prentice-Hall, 4th edition, 2004. White, Gary. Music First! McGraw-Hill, 4th edition, 2003. Anthology and tutorial CD-ROM. Pitch and rhythmic materials; harmonic system; introduction to harmonizing and composing; musical structure. Singing and playing examples on electronic keyboards, guitar, etc. |
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