Music in the World (Part Three) Quiz
- Question: What arranger formed a legendary musical partnership with singer Frank Sinatra?
- Answer: Frank Sinatra’s collaboration with arranger Nelson Riddle was a legendary musical partnership. Riddle, a former big-band trombonist who had arranged for artists such as Nat King Cole and Ella Mae Morse, scored some of Sinatra’s first recording sessions in 1953. Their collaboration would extend over two decades and hundreds of recordings. Riddle was, in Sinatra’s words, “the greatest arranger in the world.”
- Question: In a Japanese hayashi ensemble, percussion instruments are played in combination with what instrument?
- Answer: Hayashi, in Japanese music, is any of various combinations of flute and percussion instruments. In Noh and kabuki theatre, for example, the hayashi normally consists of a flute plus the hourglass-shaped hand drum (ko-tsuzumi) held on the right shoulder, the larger o-tsuzumi held on the left hip, and the taiko stick-struck barrel drum set on a stand on the floor.
- Question: Which rock group created the British punk movement of the 1970s?
- Answer: The Sex Pistols were the rock group who created the British punk movement of the late 1970s and who, with the song “God Save the Queen,” became a symbol of the United Kingdom’s social and political turmoil.
- Question: Which aristocrat of jazz is considered to have been rivaled only by Charles Ives as the greatest American composer?
- Answer: The American pianist Duke Ellington was considered the greatest jazz composer and bandleader of his time. Charles Ives was perhaps his only rival for the title of the greatest American composer.
- Question: Which innovative 19th-century composer wrote more than 200 works for solo piano?
- Answer: Frédéric Chopin’s works for solo piano included about 60 mazurkas, 16 polonaises, 26 preludes, 27 études, 21 nocturnes, 20 waltzes, 3 sonatas, 4 ballades, 4 scherzos, and 4 impromptus.
- Question: What is the name of a sign used for one or more successive musical pitches (which is also the predecessor of the modern note on a musical staff)?
- Answer: In musical notation, a neume is a sign for one or more successive musical pitches and is the predecessor of modern musical notes. Neumes have been used in Christian (e.g., Gregorian and Byzantine) liturgical chant as well as in medieval polyphony (music in several voices, or parts) and some secular monophony (music consisting of a single melodic line).
- Question: Which entertainer is associated with the song “Minnie the Moocher”?
- Answer: In 1931 Cab Calloway became a bandleader at the Cotton Club; his orchestra, along with that of Duke Ellington, became one of the two house bands most associated with this legendary Harlem nightspot. In the same year Calloway first recorded his most famous composition, "Minnie the Moocher," a song that showcased his ability at scat singing.
- Question: With which field of music is Luciano Pavarotti associated?
- Answer: The Italian operatic lyric tenor Luciano Pavarotti was considered one of the finest bel canto opera singers of the 20th century.
- Question: In the music of India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, what is the name for the melodic framework for improvisation that is based on a given set of notes (usually five to seven) and characteristic rhythmic patterns?
- Answer: In the music of India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, a raga is a melodic framework for improvisation based on a given set of notes (usually five to seven) and characteristic rhythmic patterns.
- Question: Which percussion instrument symbolizes prosperity and marks social status in China?
- Answer: Gongs function as accompaniment to dance, theatre, and song, and in China they symbolize prosperity and mark social status.
- Question: Who composed “St. Louis Blues”?
- Answer: W.C. Handy changed the course of popular music by integrating the blues idiom into the then fashionable ragtime. Among his best-known works is the classic “St. Louis Blues” (1914).
- Question: Which family was the first group admitted to the Country Music Hall of Fame?
- Answer: The Carter Family was a singing group consisting of A.P. Carter; his wife, Sara; and his sister-in-law Maybelle Carter. They were a leading force in the spread and popularization of Appalachian Mountain folk songs, and they were the first group admitted to the Country Music Hall of Fame.
- Question: Where in the West Indies was singer-songwriter Bob Marley born?
- Answer: Bob Marley combined a thoughtful ongoing distillation of early ska, rock steady, and reggae forms that blossomed in the 1970s into an electrifying rock-influenced hybrid that made him an international superstar.
- Question: What is Korea’s national instrument?
- Answer: The kayagŭm is Korea’s national instrument. It is a rectangular board zither measuring about 5 feet (1.5 metres) in length and having 12 silk strings, movable bridges, and a convex upper surface.
- Question: Who was the most important force in reestablishing the guitar as a concert instrument in the 20th century?
- Answer: Spanish musician Andrés Segovia was acclaimed as the foremost guitarist of his time. He was the most important force in reestablishing the guitar as a concert instrument in the 20th century, chiefly through demonstrating its expressive and technical potential.
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From "The Saint Louis Blues" by W.C. Handy (Pace & Handy Music Co., Memphis; 1914)
From "The Saint Louis Blues" by W.C. Handy (Pace & Handy Music Co., Memphis; 1914)