New
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Lesson 5 of 5
  • Year 10
  • Edexcel

Developing a leitmotif

I can develop a leitmotif through motivic transformation.

Lesson 5 of 5
New
New
  • Year 10
  • Edexcel

Developing a leitmotif

I can develop a leitmotif through motivic transformation.

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Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. Developing a leitmotif to reflect changes in the story is called motivic transformation.
  2. Composers do this in many different ways, including extending or combining leitmotifs.
  3. Reharmonising leitmotifs by changing the harmony but keeping the melody the same is an effective technique.
  4. Changing features of the leitmotif such as rhythm, dynamics, articulation and tonality is also common.
  5. Key to motivic transformation is keeping the leitmotif recognisable and matching the mood of the moment in the story.

Keywords

  • Leitmotif - a musical idea that represents a specific character, place or idea

  • Motivic transformation - when a motif is changed to represent a change in a story or character

  • Reharmonisation - when a composer keeps a melody the same but changes the harmony

Common misconception

To create a contrasting version of a leitmotif, you should change lots of features of it.

You must be careful to not change it too much. If you do, it becomes unrecognisable and will just sound like a different leitmotif. A leitmotif represents a character, place, or idea, so we need to be able to recognise it to link it to that thing.


To help you plan your year 10 music lesson on: Developing a leitmotif, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...

A good extension for these tasks is to take famous leitmotifs or themes and to develop them using the same techniques. Consider getting students to develop the Jaws motif, or Darth Vader motif to represent different moods.
Teacher tip

Equipment

DAW, keyboard or other suitable instrument as a composition tool.

Licence

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2025), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).

Lesson video

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Prior knowledge starter quiz

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6 Questions

Q1.
What is melodic shape?

Correct answer: The overall direction of a melody.
The instruments used to play a melody.
The harmony underneath a melody.
The speed of a melody.

Q2.
An interval is the __________.

Correct answer: distance between two notes
speed of a melody
mood created by a piece
number of instruments playing

Q3.
Which word describes a melody that moves by large leaps?

Correct answer: disjunct
conjunct
chromatic
stepwise

Q4.
Which melodic shape could create a sad or depressing feeling?

Correct answer: descending
ascending
repeated
chromatic

Q5.
Which mood is often created by an ascending melodic shape?

Correct answer: hopeful
sad
angry
dark

Q6.
A melody that keeps returning to the tonic can create a feeling of .

Correct Answer: stability, predictability

Assessment exit quiz

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6 Questions

Q1.
A leitmotif is a musical idea that represents a character, place, or __________

Correct answer: idea
instrument
prop
setting

Q2.
Motivic is when a leitmotif is developed.

Correct Answer: transformation

Q3.
In films and opera, motivic transformation should __________.

replace the leitmotif completely
stay exactly the same always
Correct answer: reflect changes in the story
ignore the mood of the scene

Q4.
Which of these is not a method of motivic transformation?

reharmonising
extending
changing articulation
Correct answer: deleting the leitmoti

Q5.
Match each technique with its description.

Correct Answer:reharmonisation,changing the harmony while keeping the melody

changing the harmony while keeping the melody

Correct Answer:extension,making the motif longer

making the motif longer

Correct Answer:combination,blending two motifs together

blending two motifs together

Correct Answer:variation,changing rhythm, tonality, or articulation

changing rhythm, tonality, or articulation

Q6.
Which of these are key to motivic transformation?

Correct answer: keeping the leitmotif recognisable
Correct answer: matching the mood of the story
changing as many features as possible
Removing the leitmotif completely