Library
Classrooms
Curriculums
Articles
Pricing
Faculty
AudioPedia
Support
Login
Sign Up
Share
Go
or browse by category
Audio
Video
Graphics
Productivity
Web
Take a 25 question quiz to test and certify your knowledge of the tutorial-video course
Music Theory 104 - Song Form.
Get a mark of 80% or higher to pass this quiz!
1
The section that contains the song's hook is called the __________.
Pre-Chorus
Refrain
Chorus
Bridge
2
The AAA song form is also referred as "strophic" song form. True or false?
False
True
3
The AABA form was a common form in jazz. True or false?
False
True
4
The term rhythm changes come from the song "I Got Rhythm" from George Gershwin. True or false?
False
True
5
The formal name for the outro is the _________.
end
coda
tag
staccato
6
A Contrafact is a song based on the same progression of another song but with a new melody. True or false?
False
True
7
The "head" is the jazz term for the ____________.
melody
Intro
Chorus
Refrain
8
The AAA song form was often used in folk music in the '60s and '70s. True or false?
True
False
9
A Riff is similar to ____________.
a Ritardando
an Ostinato
a Cappuccino
an Allargando
10
Typically in blues, each chords will be played as ____________ chords.
Major
Major 7th
Minor
Dominant 7th
11
The traditional 12-Bar Blues is based on the ______________.
I, ii and V chords
I, iii & IV chords
I, IV & V chords
I, IV & vi chords
12
A line that is repeated somewhere during every verse is called a __________.
Verse
Chorus
Refrain
Bridge
13
The B section in the AABA song form is _________.
a Hook
a Chorus
a Bridge
a Refrain
14
The Hook is often the title of the song. True or false?
False
True
15
The song "Rhythm Changes" is a
32-bar AABA form
jazz 12-bar blues
traditional 12-bar blues
16
Vamps refers to an open-ended section that repeat over and over. True or false?
False
True
17
A lead sheet is a very precise notation of a song. True or false?
False
True
18
The Refrain is commonly found ________.
at the end of the Chorus
in the breakdown
in the introduction
at the end of the Verse
19
In a Traditional 12-Bar Blues, by starting with an E7 chord, what would be the two Chords completing the cycle?
A7 & B7
A7 & C7
B7 & C7
C7 & D7
20
Which statement is incorrect?
If the Chorus takes too long to arrive, the song can get boring
The Pre-Chorus can be effective when the song gets to the Chorus too quickly
If the Chorus arrives too early, it won't have enough impact
The Intro is also referred to as a Build
21
Fine means "The End". True or false?
True
False
22
What is the song form frequently used in modern pop music?
Tradiotional 12-bar blues
Verse-Chorus
AAA
AABA
23
"A Double Prime" refers to?
The Bridge in an AABA song form
The third "A" section in an AABA song form
An overweight Transformer
Another name for the Chorus
24
What is the song form of "Mary Had a Little Lamb"?
AABA
Verse-Chorus
Traditional 12-bar blues
AAA
25
The Bridge is a transitional section. True or false?
False
True
Music Theory 104
Song Form
You have answered
0
out of 25
questions.
You must
login
to take this quiz.
If you do not have an account, please
sign up
.
Get Your Grade
Cancel Quiz
Nice try! Unfortunately you didn't have enough correct answers to pass the quiz. No sweat! You can retake a quiz once per day.
-
-
You need 80% to pass this quiz
Retake Quiz
Back to the Course
View My Grades
Feedback
How are we doing?
We'd love your thoughts, feedback and questions regarding our new site. All feedback is appreciated!
We do not respond to this form! If you need support, please visit our
support page
.
Thank you for your input!
Your message has been successfully sent
Course Advisor
Don't Know Where To Start?
Ask A Course Advisor
Ask Us!
Copy the link below and paste it into an email, forum, or Facebook to share this with your friends.
copy
Make money when you share our links
Become an Ask.Video Affiliate!
The current affiliate rate is: 50%
Sign Up
Facebook
Twitter
Linkedin
Google+
Reddit
Pinterest
Classes Start Next Week!
Live 8-week Online Certification Classes for:
Logic Pro X
Learn More
Ableton Live
Learn More
Bitwig
Learn More