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25 April, 00:35

Read the following lyrics to a familiar song and answer the question below:

I've got a gal in Baltimore. Little Liza Jane!

Tulips grow around her door. Little Liza Jane!

Oh, Eliza, little Liza Jane.

Oh, Eliza, little Liza Jane.

I got a gal and you got none. Little Liza Jane!

I got a gal that calls me "Hon." Little Liza Jane!

Oh, Eliza, little Liza Jane.

Oh, Eliza, little Liza Jane.

What kind of structure do these lyrics show?

A. Call-and-response

B. Verse and chorus

C. Both call-and-response and verse and chorus.

D. Neither call-and-response nor verse and chorus.

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Answers (1)
  1. 25 April, 02:14
    0
    The kind of structure these lyrics show are: C. Both call-and-response and verse and chorus.

    The Verse and chorus are written as one verse and one chorus and sometimes repeated within the song or poem. Whilst, Call and response is a succession of two noticeable phrases mostly written in various parts of the music, wherein the second phrase is heard as a straight up commentary on or in response to the first one.
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