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Art music
- Art music is a style of music characterized by sophistication and complexity. Its structure and theoretical considerations are more advanced than those of most music. Many people refer to art music as thoughtfully cultivated. Due to this complexity, art music is an acquired taste.
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Aug 1, 2013 · The term “learned style” (gelehrte Schreibart) itself was not used by eighteenth-century German-speaking musicians. Rather, they used a panoply of adjectives to denote various inherited styles: strict, church, a cappella, bound, antique, grave, fugal, elaborate, artful/artificial, and so forth.
Baroque music, a style of music that prevailed during the period from about 1600 to about 1750, known for its grandiose, dramatic, and energetic spirit but also for its stylistic diversity. One of the most dramatic turning points in the history of music occurred at the beginning of the 17th.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Eighteenth-century writers on music recognized a spectrum of learned styles. These included not only the imitative counterpoint characteristic of the fugue and the species counterpoint associated with a cappella polyphony, but also a broad range of other styles, such as strict style, church style, or stile antico, transmitted from specialist to ...
- Keith Chapin
- Publication
- 2014
- Book Section
Oct 1, 2024 · Renaissance art, painting, sculpture, architecture, music, and literature produced during the 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries in Europe under the combined influences of an increased awareness of nature, a revival of classical learning, and a more individualistic view of man.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Nov 6, 2014 · Eighteenth-century writers on music recognized a spectrum of learned styles. These included not only the imitative counterpoint characteristic of the fugue and the species counterpoint associated with a cappella polyphony, but also a broad range of other styles, such as strict style, church style, or stile antico, transmitted from specialist to ...
Apr 17, 2023 · Solmization involves the use of vocalized syllables— ut (later do), re, mi, fa, sol, la —for each note of the hexachord, the six-note scale that Medieval singers found useful in teaching how to sing plainchant from the four-line staves then prevalent. (The seventh syllable—si or ti—came only later.)
6 days ago · Romanticism, attitude or intellectual orientation that characterized many works of literature, painting, music, architecture, criticism, and historiography in Western civilization over a period from the late 18th to the mid-19th century.