All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #41 : Performing Arts
Who was the composer who arranged and first conducted the educational musical piece The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra (1945)?
Dmitri Shostakovich
Samuel Barber
Benjamin Britten
Sergei Prokofiev
John Ireland
Benjamin Britten
The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra was conceived as a multi-media piece to educate children about orchestra music. Benjamin Britten's adaptation of the work of Henry Purcell, however, showed such great arrangements and inventiveness of instrumentation that it was immensely popular as an orchestral piece and record.
Example Question #1 : Understanding Terminology That Describes Twentieth Century Music
Which of the following musical clefs is highest in pitch?
Neutral clef
Bass clef
Octave clef
Treble clef
Alto clef
Treble clef
In musical notation, a clef indicates where the notes on the staff are placed, based on the clef symbol's position and shape. The three main clefs are, from highest to lowest in pitch, are the treble, alto, and bass clef. A neutral clef and an octave clef both indicate a non-traditional clef, with different emphases than the treble, alto, and bass.
Example Question #327 : Clep: Humanities
Which of the following is typical instrument to find in a rock 'n' roll band?
Electric bass
Banjo
Lute
Oboe
Harpsichord
Electric bass
Rock 'n' roll developed in the mid-twentieth century as a combination of other genres, such as blues, country, and jazz. Despite its eclectic origins, the music was usually stripped down, featuring limited combos. The typical instrumentation of a rock combo is one or more guitars, electric bass, drums, and occasionally a piano, organ, or horns.
Example Question #328 : Clep: Humanities
How many strings are on a typical mandolin?
Six
Five
Ten
Eight
Four
Eight
A mandolin is tuned exactly like a violin, but with one key difference. Instead of having one string each tuned to G, D, A, and E, the mandolin has two courses of strings tuned in unison to each of these notes. The mandolin shares this trait with the entire "mando" family, including the mandola and the mandocello.
Example Question #2 : Music
What is a musical form that features improvisation around short themes in small ensembles?
Jazz
Bluegrass
Baroque
Modernist
Romantic
Jazz
Jazz music developed around New Orleans in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Played by small ensembles featuring horns, pianos, and guitars, jazz was developed to have extended dances done with the music as accompaniment. As such, jazz began to promote its performers playing extended improvisations during parts of songs.
Example Question #3 : Music
Based on the way in which each instrument produces sound, which of the following instruments is most similar to an accordion?
Trumpet
Harmonica
Violin
Guitar
Flute
Harmonica
Although configured and played quite differently, both the accordion and the harmonica produce sound by having air blow over free reeds. While the accordion has buttons to open and close specific reeds, a harmonica player blows over a specific hole to create the desired tone.
Example Question #1 : Twentieth Century Music
Neoclassicism in music is a term reserved for works from which of the following centuries?
Seventeenth century
Twentieth century
Eighteenth century
Sixteenth century
Nineteenth century
Twentieth century
While the term Neoclassicism typically refers to the Enlightenment trends that focused on ancient Greece and Rome, in music the term refers to twentieth-century music that looked back to the "Classical" music of the eighteenth century. The composers Igor Stravinsky and Alfredo Casella were important figures in this movement.
Example Question #2 : Twentieth Century Music
The note "piano" above a clef on a sheet of music indicates that the musician should __________.
play the music softly
only use a keyboard instrument
play the music slowly
take a brief pause
play the music briskly
play the music softly
In musical notation, the note "piano" above a clef indicates that the music should be played softly. Often such a mark, sometimes abbreviated with just a "p," will come in the middle of a piece to indicate a change of volume. The opposite notation is "forte," which indicates that the music should be played loudly.
Example Question #3 : Twentieth Century Music
Philip Glass is a composer most associated with what musical style?
Minimalism
Postmodernism
Neoclassicism
Modernism
Expressionism
Minimalism
Philip Glass was part of a group of composers who used simple motifs that were repeated over steady beats. This music was dubbed "minimalism" by crtics, but also embraced by the figures who founded it, as it expressed their desire to reduce music to its essentials.
Example Question #4 : Twentieth Century Music
On a piano, the black keys indicate __________.
lower register notes
droning tones
shifting notes
non-natural notes
higher register notes
non-natural notes
The eighty-eight notes on a keyboard are produced by pressing white and black keys. The black keys are positioned slightly higher and farther back, as they hold all of the sharp and flat notes on the twelve-tone chromatic scale. This arrangement allows the natural notes to be played more easily, and make the non-natural notes more obvious.