Edexcel GCSE Set Works: Moby, Miles Davis and Koko: by David Ashworth
Edexcel GCSE Set Works: Moby, Miles Davis and Koko: by David Ashworth
Edexcel GCSE Set Works: Moby, Miles Davis and Koko: by David Ashworth
Important musical features covered include structure, texture, tonality, harmony, melody, rhythm and metre.
These should complement existing resources, and will provide students with some useful pointers on how to
write perceptively about the music.
Sections A and B
In their responses to the questions in both sections, students will need to demonstrate an
understanding of the following in relation to the set works within the Areas of Study:
the musical elements (pitch, duration, dynamics, tempo, timbre, texture, structure)
identifying how resources are used in different combinations (identifying instruments and
groups of instruments)
identifying key musical features
identifying musical and melodic devices (ornamentation, ostinati, riffs, use of imitation, pedal
point and sequence)
identifying rhythmic devices (syncopation, swung rhythms, dotted rhythms and triplets)
identifying and discriminating between major, minor, modal, pentatonic, chromatic and atonal
tonalities
relating music to the context in which it was created
identifying conventions used in different times and places
using appropriate musical vocabulary
expressing and justifying opinions and preferences
Section A
Students should study the set works for each Area of Study, aurally identifying the key musical
features in each work. They should understand the context within which the set works were
composed and their place within the Area of Study as a whole. In this section of the examination,
students will also be expected to express and justify opinions on the set work extracts and complete
short musical dictation and staff notation questions.
Student should be encouraged to listen to music in a discriminating way, developing their skills of
aural perception.
Section B
In Section B, students write in more detail about the set works that they have studied and this
extended response will be assessed for QWC as well as the quality of the musical information
conveyed.
Some knowledge of related works within the Area of Study will be given credit but is not required.
However, students will need to know how the work fits within the context of other pieces written in
similar genres around the same time.
Students should be encouraged to express their ideas about the set works using correct musical
vocabulary.
Moby was an important figure in the dance music scene of the 1990s. He was seen as a lone figure, standing
apart from most others making music in this genre. In some ways, his music was typical – he combined
electronic disco-style beats with heavily processed instruments and samples from film soundtracks and pop
songs. But on the album Play, he also included samples of field recordings made by Alan Lomax decades
earlier of many legendary folk and jazz musicians from the first part of the 20th century. These samples help to
give the tracks on this album a more expressive, soulful and ‘human’ feel, which is often missing from some of
the more sterile techno tracks made during this era.
On this particular song, both samples are taken from a 1950s Gospel song called ‘King Jesus Will Roll All
Burdens Away’. The surface noise of the original vinyl recordings has been left on the track to give a more
atmospheric and authentic feel to the vocal parts.
This was a breakthrough recording for Moby, helping to make the transition from niche electronic composer
to global celebrity pop star status. He was largely responsible for bringing this type of music to a much larger
mainstream audience, but at the same time was criticised by many techno artists for ‘diluting’ the musical form.
This track was a massive hit for Moby and has been recreated live by many artists. You can hear a version by
Elton John here. Released in 1999, Play subsequently became the biggest-selling independent album in the
UK for the year 2000.
acoustic piano
sampled vocal sounds, reverb added
Roland drum machine kit (plus claves)
bass line – later, an extra sustained bass line during the female vocal sample
a processed backing vocal added as an echo
strings synth plus a vocal synth towards the end
Texture
As in much music in this style, texture and timbre are important elements. The musical interest is focused here
rather than on the dominating features of melody, harmony and rhythm, which are central to more traditional
rock and pop styles.
The build-up of texture and contrasts is controlled by careful consideration of how to combine and develop the
musical materials. Close attention is paid to the manipulation of timbral combinations to build up the ‘tension’
and the ‘release’ that follows.
The track begins in the classic techno way, by gradually adding loops to thicken the texture. In sections 3 to
6 the texture stays thick, swapping male and female vocal samples. From section 4 onwards, the bass and
synth parts are thickened by the adding of long, sustained notes. The backing vocal in section 6 is a heavily
processed echo of the sampled vocal line. Section 7 is a short gap, although the reverb/echo on some parts
allows them to ‘bleed’ through initially. There is a sense of symmetry with the final three sections – a dense
section 9, sandwiched between quieter sections involving solo sampled voice plus sustained synth parts.
section 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
piano gap
‘bass’ more
‘strings’ more
backing
vocal
synth pad
The sampled vocals are interesting. Both seem to have copious amounts of reverb added. On the male singer
sample, the original recording backing can be heard, particularly at the very end of the sample. The sounds
here clash in a interesting way with the contemporary accompaniment provided by Moby.
As we noted in the previous section, there is not a great deal of melodic interest in this piece. The two vocal
samples can be thought of as a call and response. The call consists of two fragments, where the notes rise
and fall in alternating 3rds.
The long sustained note in the middle of this phrase is in fact sung melismatically. Although transcribed here
a long sustained note of A, the singer subtly adds notes above and below this pitch.
The response covers a slightly wider range. Again, in the first fragments the intervals between consecutive
notes are 3rds, whereas the second fragment is built on a falling second interval.
The female vocal sample is a single phrase, looped against a changing harmonic accompaniment. It is a short
series of notes that fall over an interval of a 6th.
Both vocal parts use notes from the home key of A minor. The female phrase uses just pentatonic notes from
this scale.
This song essentially consists of two sections: the male vocal section and the female vocal section. We will
refer to these as sections A and B respectively.
The track begins with a solo piano playing the section A chords in a simple, reported pattern. There are slight
variations, but the basic pattern is this:
Am Em G D
These imply an A natural minor scale (ie with no G sharp). The notes sung by the vocalist sit well with this
accompaniment, but there are some faint background sounds on the recorded sample that indicate the original
backing may have had a very different harmony. A heavy reverb has been added to this sample which gives
the timbre of the sample a quite ethereal feel in this new context.
C Am C Am
F C F C
These chords all share the notes A and C, which feature predominantly in the first bar of the vocal sample. The
Am and C chords share the notes A and E, which feature predominantly in the second bar of the vocal sample.
The chords are played by the piano throughout, with other instruments supporting these harmonies. The bass
synth sticks to the root notes of the respective chords. The synthesiser string part plays gentle, high sustained
notes to fit with the chords.
At the very end there is a coda section, where all the instruments drop out and the male vocal sample is
accompanied by a synth pad sound playing sustained chords.
Rhythm
As we noted earlier, the interest in this song lies mainly in the texture and timbre: the melody and rhythm are
not the central features of the track.
The piano plays a very four-square introduction rhythmically, which continues on into the song, eventually
changing to a more vamping style. The bass part consists of chugging quavers on the root note, eventually
reinforced by longer sustained bass synth notes.
The drum machine is set to play a typical bass/snare rock rhythm, but the addition of a quiet claves part does
add an interesting rhythmic feature:
The gospel vocal samples have an improvisatory quality where the singers are freely working ahead of the beat
to give subtle syncopations. The juxtaposition of these ‘human’ sounds in an electronically very rhythmically
precise musical setting creates an interesting tension. We have the sounds of the voices, flexible in terms of
pitch and rhythm, contrasting with the more artificially digitally created and mathematically controlled backing
parts.
The structure of the song is fairly straightforward and can be mapped out as follows:
In the above table we are defining the verse as being sections using the male vocal sample and the chorus
using the female vocal sample.
From section 7, the female vocal part is ‘busier’ because the sample is triggered more frequently, with no
spaces in between.
Although the song sounds quite repetitive, the above chart indicates the ways in which Moby uses subtle
variations to maintain interest throughout.
Background
Over the course of his illustrious career, spanning several decades, Miles Davis was to change and lead the
major developments and changes in jazz music. The album Kind of Blue marks the beginning of his reaction
against the preceding bebop movement in jazz. Bebop had become increasingly complex, based around
complicated chord structures where all the soloists were playing as fast and as loud as possible. Davis was
concerned that there was less and less room for musical creativity in this style, so he reacted by devising a
post-bebop modal jazz structured around simple scales and melodic improvisation.
Davies assembled a jazz sextet comprising some of the best jazz musicians of that era. They would be given
little to go on prior to the sessions – usually just the scales they were instructed to use and a sketch of the
main theme. This approach was intended to encourage and allow the musicians to be as creative as possible.
This music was generally slower, quieter and much less cluttered, with lots of space to breathe. The use of
modes brought some refreshing new melodic ideas and harmonies to jazz, which had up to this point been
dominated by the use of the familiar-sounding major and minor scales.
This album, recorded in 1959, was enormously influential. It was to shape the direction of jazz for many years
to come and was an important recording for musicians working in other genres. For example, Pink Floyd’s
keyboard player Richard Wright acknowledged the influence of this album when he was working on his parts
for The Dark Side of the Moon.
Instrumentation
This is a typical jazz combo line-up for this era, comprising a rhythm section (piano/bass/drums) with trumpet
and saxophones playing the tunes and sharing the improvisation sections.
Texture
The piece begins with the rhythm section only establishing the blues riff pattern that underpins the song. The
saxophones join in, playing in harmony on the rhythm pattern set up by the bass. A few bars later the trumpet
joins in playing the tune.
After a couple of runs through the tune, the saxophones stop playing as the trumpet starts an improvised
solo. Davis now plays over a wider register, and although the playing is musically expressive, the overall feel
remains ‘cool’ or restrained. He begins by using a Harmon mute, but removes it for the second chorus as the
intensity builds. There is also more activity and variation from the piano during this section.
After a brief rhythm-section interlude, the alto saxophone plays four improvised choruses. These begin in a
highly melodic and lyrical fashion, reaching out into the high registers with some rather more energetic flurries,
but returning to base towards the end.
There follow four solo choruses from the tenor saxophone. The tone and dynamic level stay gentle, but the
improvisations are slightly more adventurous. There are now more rapid passages across the full range of the
instrument, and the improvising scale is extended to include additional tones. As for the previous solo, its ends
as it began – more calmly.
During the piano solo that follows, Bill Evans keeps up the accompanying vamp and adds melodic fragments
with the right hand. He stretches out on the chords and harmonies, while keeping to the 12-bar form.
Finally, there’s a recapitulation of the opening melody on muted trumpet, with the saxophones returning to
their original accompanying parts. The piece ends with the trumpet playing a gentle solo on one note with a
repeated rhythmic figure as the rest of the band play through the chorus one final time.
In summary, there are no big contrasts in texture. The playing is quiet and restrained throughout. The melody
instruments solo in turn against the rhythm section. The entire ensemble plays only at the beginning and end
for the ‘head’.
There is much melodic interest in this piece. Davis saw his music of this period as being essentially a return
to melody, as a reaction to much of the contemporary bebop jazz, which made more of harmonic changes at
the expense of melody. By keeping to simple, slow-moving chord changes and using modes, Davis was able
to explore melodic playing that sounded fresh. By using a modal scale, he was able to move away from the
typically major/minor playing of earlier jazz styles.
The scale that underpins this piece is G mixolydian. This can be thought of as a G major scale with a flattened
seventh note – a good choice mode for a piece that references the blues.
The solo grows slowly and organically using just the notes B and C (if we ignore the brief pickup note of D for
the moment). The rising/falling figure in bars 6 and 7 moves stepwise in an arch form, keeping close to what is
happening in the accompaniment during these bars. Note the use of a flattened 3rd in this phrase, which gives
it even more of a blues feel. This is immediately followed by a long assertive B natural.
The remaining two phrases alternate flattened and natural 7ths, which serve to highlight the importance of this
note modally. The B natural helps to give the solo a spacey, timeless, relaxed feel.
This is where the interest lies in these few bars. Long notes moving in steps over a narrow register, lingering
on the ‘interesting’ notes, form a feature of Miles Davis’s playing from this era. He makes the most out of just
a little material.
This contrasts effectively with the saxophone melodies, which are busier, playing more notes over a greater range.
G7 G7 G7 G7
Gm7 Gm7 G7 G7
D7 Eb7 G7 G7
Because the band is playing modal vamps rather than block chords, the harmony is rather more fluid. Bill Evans
tends to embellish basic chords with ‘jazz’ extensions – for example, a #9 is often added to the D and E flat chords.
During the head section, the saxophones play lines in harmony, based on this pattern:
This ostinato pattern is transposed or modified when the chords change. For example, the note B is changed
to a B flat when the harmony moves to Gm7.
Rhythm
This blues is slightly unusual in that it has a 6/4 time signature. This gives it a characteristic swing/shuffle feel,
but with two beats to the bar. The tempo is slow and holds steady through the piece.
Miles Davis tends to play slow, ‘organic’ lines, making some use of syncopation during this piece. Both
saxophones are rhythmically more active: there are flurries of fast passages and many examples of use of
short trills and grace notes. The double bass holds a steady ostinato pattern throughout. The piano reinforces
this ostinato pattern. During the piano solo, towards the end of the piece, there is more sophisticated rhythmic
improvisation and some interplay with drums. For the most part, the drums simply hold the beat, adding
interesting fills at the ends of sections.
Structure
As the chart shows, this piece is carefully and clearly structured. It begins and ends with iterations of the main
theme. In between we have four chorus solos from each of the solo instruments in turn. There is a slight build
in intensity during this time, followed by some chordal explorations from the piano.
The interlude between each section helps contribute towards the open, spacey feel of this piece.
Koko: ‘Yiri’
Background
Yiri are a group of musicians from Burkino Faso. Formerly known as Upper Volta, this is a relatively small
country in West Africa.
Instrumentation
In Koko, the instrumental musicians also provide all the vocal elements. A soloist and chorus work together in
call-and-response-type exchanges.
Texture
The majority of the piece has a layered texture, but the introduction has a monophonic texture. Occasional
heterophonic textures are created, for example when the two balafons play different versions of the same tune
simultaneously. There is very little variation in dynamics in ‘Yiri’.
The texture is monophonic at the beginning, where a single balafon plays a semi-improvised introduction.
When the player plays the initial theme, he is joined by another balafon, playing an octave lower. They move
on to playing different versions of the same tune, producing a heterophonic texture.
Following this, the drums and bell enter, and from this point onwards the layered, polyrhythmic texture remains
fairly constant, with little in the way of dynamic variation.
During the vocal section the balafons drop back, playing short fills in between the vocal lines. The first few
vocal sections are sung in unison. Later on, there is a call-and-response section where a solo voice sings
a verse, followed by a short vocal response from the other singers. This is followed, once again, by unison
singing.
The melodic lines are played on balafons, tuned to a hexatonic scale based on the note F sharp. The notes
of the scale are F sharp, G sharp, A sharp, B, C sharp and D sharp. This can be thought of as a major scale,
lacking the 7th note.
At the beginning, the melodies are more pentatonic in nature. In other words, the note B does not feature
significantly.
The piece begins with a solo balafon playing short, rapid, scale-based patterns ending in rapid tremolos on a
single note. He ends the section by playing the dominant note of C sharp a few times to cue in a balafon duet
section, where the first balafon is joined by another player and they play the main theme. The second balafon
plays the theme an octave lower. The tune is melodically straightforward, but the phrasing is asymmetrical and
highly syncopated.
The vocal melodies are much simpler rhythmically, and are mostly based on descending scale-like passages.
Here is a transcription of the first chorus passage:
Let’s look at the way the melody ‘develops’ over this section:
The first one-bar phrase fall from the tonic F sharp to the dominant C sharp.
The second phrase adds a small variation and extends the length of the phrase slightly.
The third phrase is also a variation on the first phrase.
The fourth phrase is lower, starting and finishing on the dominant C sharp.
The fifth phrase moves everything lower still, with a longer phrase moving downwards from the dominant
to the tonic.
The final phrase shown here is a variation on the previous one.
The solo vocal part moves in a similar way, although it is sung in a higher register and is rhythmically more
sophisticated. The chorus echoes the final line. Most of the melodic material comprises notes of short duration.
The balafons are not capable of sustaining longer notes, although a rapid tremolo is sometimes employed to
create this effect. The vocal parts also keep to short notes, although the soloist does employ some attention-
grabbing longer notes. His first vocal entry, for example, goes like this:
The piece remains firmly in the key of F sharp, and there is no real harmonic movement. The balafons do not
play during the vocal sections, apart from very short fills between vocal lines.
Rhythm
The piece is in 4/4, apart from two or three instances, where a bar of 3/4 time is played to indicate the start of
a new section. The music is played at a steady tempo of about 192 bpm, after a fairly free introduction from
the solo balafon.
Once the drums enter, they maintain a steady beat throughout, essentially mapping out this basic ostinato
rhythm:
The other percussion instrument, the bell, has a supporting role in this piece, playing a quiet but distinctive
pattern:
There is considerable rhythmic sophistication in this music, especially in the solo vocal and improvised balafon
parts. Musicians make much use of highly syncopated patterns, and the singers will frequently play triplets,
as shown in the examples above.
The vocal sections are the same length (six bars)each time. The two solo vocal sections occur midway through
the piece and are exactly twice as long. The balafon sections get longer towards the end of the piece.