England Β· AQASyllabus
Music syllabus, dot point by dot point
Every dot point in the England Musicsyllabus, with a focused answer for each one. Click any dot point for a worked explainer, past exam questions, and links to related dot points. Written by Claude Opus 4.8, Anthropic's latest AI.
Component 1 Appraising: areas of study
Module overview β- What are the conventions of art music since 1910, and how do you analyse it in the appraising exam?Area of Study 7 (optional): art music since 1910, covering the breakdown of tonality, atonality and serialism, modernist rhythm and timbre, minimalism and the named composers Shostakovich, Messiaen, Reich and MacMillan.13 min answer β
- What are the conventions of the Baroque solo concerto, and how do you analyse one in the appraising exam?Area of Study 1, strand 1 (compulsory): the Baroque solo concerto, covering ritornello form, the contrast of tutti and solo, the basso continuo, the fast-slow-fast three-movement plan and the named composers Vivaldi, Bach and Handel.13 min answer β
- What are the conventions of contemporary traditional music, and how do you analyse them in the exam?Area of Study 6 (optional): contemporary traditional music, covering folk and world traditions, the conventions of named styles, traditional and fusion instruments, modal harmony and characteristic rhythms.8 min answer β
- What are the defining features of jazz styles, and how do you analyse jazz in the exam?Area of Study 5 (optional): jazz, covering styles from early jazz to bebop and beyond, improvisation, swing, blues harmony, instrumentation and the named performers.9 min answer β
- How does music for media support image and action, and how do you analyse it in the exam?Area of Study 3 (optional): music for media, covering film, television and video-game music, leitmotif, mood and atmosphere, synchronisation with action and the named composers and styles.8 min answer β
- How does music for theatre convey character and drama, and how do you analyse it in the exam?Area of Study 4 (optional): music for theatre, covering musical theatre and named composers, song types, how music conveys character and drama, orchestration and dramatic structure.8 min answer β
- What are the conventions of Romantic piano music by Chopin, Brahms and Grieg, and how do you analyse it in the appraising exam?Area of Study 1, strand 3 (compulsory): the piano music of Chopin, Brahms and Grieg, covering character pieces, rubato and lyrical melody, rich chromatic harmony, pianistic textures and idiomatic writing, and how to analyse Romantic piano extracts.13 min answer β
- What are the conventions of pop music, and how do you analyse them in the appraising exam?Area of Study 2 (optional): pop music, covering named artists, song structures such as verse and chorus, riffs and hooks, instrumentation, production techniques and how to analyse pop extracts.8 min answer β
- What are the conventions of Mozart's operas, and how do you analyse one in the appraising exam?Area of Study 1, strand 2 (compulsory): the operas of Mozart, covering recitative and aria, ensembles and the overture, voice types, the Classical orchestra and how music conveys character and drama in works such as Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni and Die Zauberflote.13 min answer β
- What defines the Western classical tradition from 1650 to 1910, and how do you analyse it in the exam?Area of Study 1 (compulsory): the Western classical tradition 1650 to 1910, covering Baroque, Classical and Romantic style features, the development of tonal harmony, form and the orchestra, and the named set works.9 min answer β
Component 3 Composition (non-exam assessment)
Module overview β- What does the AQA composition brief require, and how do you compose a successful response?Composing to a brief: the Component 3 requirements, the brief that targets the Western classical tradition, responding to a stimulus, the minimum length, and how a brief composition is assessed and submitted.8 min answer β
- What is the free composition, and how do you write a successful one for Component 3?Free composition: the second composition where you choose the style and forces, developing your own ideas, structuring an original piece, and how the free composition is assessed and submitted.8 min answer β
- What harmonic and contrapuntal techniques should you use when composing?Harmonic and contrapuntal techniques: functional progressions, cadences, modulation, voice-leading, four-part writing, suspensions, sequences, imitation, canon and the principles of counterpoint.9 min answer β
- How do you orchestrate and arrange music effectively when composing?Orchestration and arrangement: writing idiomatically for instruments and voices, instrumental ranges and transposition, balance and blend, doubling, texture, and arranging existing material for new forces.8 min answer β
Musical elements and theory
Module overview β- How do I analyse an unfamiliar listening extract for the Section A and Section B questions?Analysing unfamiliar extracts: a systematic method for describing the musical elements of an unheard extract in Section A listening and Section B analysis, using precise terminology and, where a score is given, bar references.12 min answer β
- What do harmony and tonality mean, and how do you describe them accurately in the appraising exam?Harmony and tonality: chords, cadences, functional harmony, diatonic and chromatic harmony, modulation, keys and modes, and dissonance and consonance.9 min answer β
- How do you describe melody and motif accurately, and how are melodic ideas developed?Melody and motif: melodic shape and contour, conjunct and disjunct movement, intervals, phrasing, ornamentation, motifs and motivic development including sequence, inversion and augmentation.8 min answer β
- How do you read a score and analyse it under exam conditions?Reading and analysing scores: clefs, key and time signatures, transposing instruments, score layout, identifying chords and cadences from notation, and applying the musical elements to a printed extract.9 min answer β
- How do you describe rhythm, metre and tempo accurately in the appraising exam?Rhythm, metre and tempo: note values, simple and compound time, syncopation, dotted and triplet rhythms, cross-rhythm and polyrhythm, ostinato, rubato and tempo markings.8 min answer β
- How do I notate a short rhythm by ear for the Section A dictation question?The Section A rhythmic dictation: notating the rhythm of a short heard passage in staff notation, including compound time, working from the given time signature and pulse to accurate note values.12 min answer β
- How do you describe sonority, timbre and instrumentation accurately in the appraising exam?Sonority and instrumentation: timbre and tone colour, the families of the orchestra, playing techniques, voice types, electronic and amplified sounds, and how instrumentation creates colour and effect.8 min answer β
- How do you describe musical texture and structure accurately in the appraising exam?Texture and structure: monophonic, homophonic, polyphonic and heterophonic textures, layering and number of parts, and structural forms including binary, ternary, rondo, sonata, theme and variations, verse-chorus and through-composed.8 min answer β
- How do I plan and write the 30-mark Section C essay on an area of study?The Section C essay: choosing one question, building an argument from named works in an area of study, using precise musical detail and context, and structuring an extended response to the level-of-response mark scheme.12 min answer β
Component 2 Performance (non-exam assessment)
Module overview β- How do you perform expressively and interpret a piece for the highest marks?Interpretation and expression: dynamics, phrasing, articulation, tempo and rubato, tone, stylistic awareness, communication with an audience and shaping a convincing musical interpretation.8 min answer β
- How do you plan, rehearse and record a performance programme for Component 2?Preparing a performance programme: selecting repertoire to meet the time and difficulty requirements, planning rehearsal, managing performance anxiety, and recording and submitting the recital as non-exam assessment.8 min answer β
- What does the AQA performance component require, and how are solo and ensemble performances assessed?Solo and ensemble performance: the Component 2 requirements, the minimum recital length, accuracy and fluency, choice of repertoire and instrument, and how solo and ensemble playing are assessed and recorded.8 min answer β