A step-by-step frame for the IB Music component Exploring music in context. Choose diverse music from different times, places and cultures, analyse the elements of music, and link your exploration to your own creating and performing — with the assessment expectations and the portfolio method built in.
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This is roughly how your exported DOCX / PDF will read. Use it to rehearse a coherent portfolio that explores diverse music in context and links it to your own creating and performing.
Exploring music in context is one of the assessment components of the IB Music course (first assessment 2022): you research and engage with diverse musical material from different times, places and cultures, demonstrate your understanding through written analysis of the elements of music, and link that exploration to your own practical work — creating and performing related material — submitting it all as a portfolio of written commentary supported by musical evidence. This examiner-written frame walks you through the method step by step — choose genuinely contrasting pieces across the IB areas of inquiry, set out the time, place and culture of each and the elements of music you will analyse, plan the portfolio, then analyse how rhythm, pitch, harmony, timbre, texture and form work in the material, link that analysis to your own creating and performing, and reflect on what the exploration taught you. Each step is paired with the assessment expectations, worked good-and-bad examples and the traps that cost marks, and your portfolio commentary exports to DOCX or PDF.
Exploring music in context is judged on the quality of the exploration: the diversity of the material you choose and how perceptively you engage with it, the accuracy and depth of your analysis of the elements of music in their context, and the strength of the link between that exploration and your own creating and performing. Top-mark portfolios choose genuinely diverse material, analyse how the music is made rather than describing it or giving biography, support every claim with precise musical evidence, and show the practical work growing directly out of the analysis.
The portfolio is built around the IB areas of inquiry and the elements of music — rhythm, pitch, melody, harmony, timbre, texture, dynamics and form. Treat each piece as a deliberate musical construct in its time, place and culture: analyse how it is made, not just what it sounds like, and ground every argument in precise musical evidence — a timing, a bar, a notated figure. Then make the link to your own creating and performing concrete, naming the specific musical idea you have borrowed or reworked and pointing to the musical evidence in your portfolio.
The frame and its guidance are written by experienced IB educators. It is free to start: the planning sections are free, and the later sections are a one-time unlock per tool. Sign in to save your work and sync it across devices.