Wales Β· WJECSyllabus
Music syllabus, dot point by dot point
Every dot point in the Wales 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.
Composing (Component 2)
Module overview βMusical Elements and Analysis (Appraising)
Module overview β- How do you describe melody and harmony accurately in the WJEC Appraising listening exam, across any style of music?Melody and harmony: describing melodic features (conjunct and disjunct motion, range, sequence, ornamentation, phrasing, motif), chords and progressions, consonance and dissonance, and the difference between diatonic, chromatic and modal harmony, applied to listening extracts in any style.14 min answer β
- How do you describe rhythm, metre, texture and sonority in the WJEC Appraising listening exam, across any style of music?Rhythm, texture and sonority: describing rhythm and metre (note values, syncopation, dotted rhythms, hemiola, time signatures), texture (monophonic, homophonic, polyphonic, heterophonic, antiphonal), and sonority and dynamics (instrumental and vocal timbre, articulation, tempo), applied to listening extracts in any style.14 min answer β
- How do you describe tonality and structure in the WJEC Appraising listening exam, across any style of music?Tonality and structure: identifying major, minor, modal and atonal tonality, key relationships and modulation, and recognising musical structures (binary, ternary, rondo, sonata, variations, verse-chorus, head-solos-head, strophic, through-composed), applied to listening extracts in any style.14 min answer β
Optional Areas of Study (Appraising)
Module overview β- What musical features of early twentieth-century music, including impressionism, does the WJEC Into the Twentieth Century area of study expect you to recognise and analyse in its set works?Into the Twentieth Century area of study: the features of early twentieth-century music including impressionism (whole-tone and modal scales, parallel chords, blurred tonality, rich colour) and neoclassicism, analysed through set works by Debussy and Poulenc.14 min answer β
- What features of contemporary art music does the WJEC Into the Twenty-first Century area of study expect you to recognise and analyse in its set works?Into the Twenty-first Century area of study: the features of contemporary art music including complex rhythm and metre, post-tonal and eclectic harmony, extended techniques, varied textures and the mixing of styles, analysed through set works by Thomas Ades and Sally Beamish.14 min answer β
- What are the musical features and styles of jazz that the WJEC Appraising exam expects you to recognise and describe in listening extracts?Jazz area of study: the features of jazz including swing rhythm, improvisation, the head-solos-head structure, extended and altered chords (sevenths, ninths), the walking bass and comping, blues influence, and the main styles, recognised in listening extracts.13 min answer β
- What are the musical features and song types of musical theatre that the WJEC Appraising exam expects you to recognise and describe in listening extracts?Musical Theatre area of study: the song types (solo number, duet, ensemble, chorus), the use of music to convey character and drama, leitmotif and underscoring, the pit-orchestra forces and the conventions of the genre, recognised in listening extracts.13 min answer β
- What are the musical features of rock and pop that the WJEC Appraising exam expects you to recognise and describe in listening extracts?Rock and Pop area of study: the musical features of rock and pop, including verse-chorus structure, chord-based harmony and riffs, the standard band line-up, vocal and instrumental styles, and production, recognised and described in listening extracts.13 min answer β
Performing (Component 1)
Module overview βThe Western Classical Tradition (Area of Study A)
Module overview β- How do harmony and tonality work in the Classical and early Romantic symphony, and how do you describe the chords, cadences and key relationships in the WJEC set works?Harmony and tonality in the symphony: diatonic functional harmony, chords and inversions, cadences, modulation to related keys, the tonic and dominant axis of sonata form, and chromatic colour, applied to the Haydn and Mendelssohn set works.15 min answer β
- What are the key features of Haydn's Symphony No. 104 in D major (the London Symphony) that the WJEC Appraising exam expects you to analyse across its four movements?Haydn Symphony No. 104 in D major, the London Symphony (set work): the four movements, the slow introduction and sonata-form first movement, the songful slow movement, the minuet and trio, and the rondo-sonata finale, with their structure, orchestration and harmony.15 min answer β
- What are the key features of Mendelssohn's Symphony No. 4 in A major (the Italian Symphony) that show early Romantic style for the WJEC Appraising exam across its four movements?Mendelssohn Symphony No. 4 in A major, the Italian Symphony (set work): the four movements, the energetic sonata-form first movement, the processional slow movement, the graceful third movement, and the saltarello finale, with their structure, orchestration, harmony and early Romantic features.15 min answer β
- How did the symphony develop from 1750 to 1900, and what features of form, orchestration and harmony define the Classical and Romantic symphony for the WJEC set works?The development of the symphony 1750 to 1900: the rise of the four-movement Classical symphony, sonata form, the growth of the orchestra, and the move towards the larger, more expressive Romantic symphony, the compulsory Area of Study A context for the WJEC set works.14 min answer β