identify a score of pop music

• Aug 29, 2021 - 03:26

query.
I have a piece of score that has vocals, piano Treble and Bass, Bass guitar. I need to identify why this is a piece of pop music, it has no audio. the bass guitar score has a walking bass, Piano has two minor chords, Am and Bm. 4/4 timing in G, The treble piano is chordal, The Bass clef is made up of quarter, dotted quarter, quavers and an ending of a half note. The vocals are all quavers. beat is 80bpm, has moderately loud and crescendo and diminuendo, and soft P, Chords appear to be G Am, C D Bm Am, D G

Some of the answers to choose are: Powerchords,
Backbeat groove, {is this drums as there is no drum]
scalic melody, [perhaps this is the vocal score]
walking bassline, [the quavers are broken notes gggg aaae cccc dddd bbbb aaaa dddd g*]
eighth notes on root notes, [they're all broken so how can they be on root notes?}
Triads in quarter notes. [these are piano treble.

I need to find 3 features in the score that are commonly found in this style.
I can't see there'd be a powerchord when a rhythm guitar is not used.
How would I know a backbeat groove - is this a drum as their is none.
vocal staff may have scalic melody as the quavers go up and down [mostly 2nds] on the scale.
gaba ga edba ab a bcdc b a bagg gg

The piano treble uses triad chords as quarter notes throughout.

Pop songs use


Comments

Sounds like homework for some specific course that presumably has provided videos or written handouts to study? Are those terms all defined in the course materials? If so, and you still have trouble identifying them, feel free to post the actual score so people can help you with this, but probably better to use the whatever discussion facility the course itself provides. You might also consistent the Mastering MuseScore community - https://community.masteringmusescore.com. That's a good place for discussing general musical questions like this.

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