Music History Between 1600-1820
Music began to change form the style of the Renaissance to a more complicated form around 1750. The period following the Renaissance is called the Baroque. "Music of any period reflects, in its own way, some of the same influences, tendencies, and generative impulses, that are found in the other arts of that time. Thus the word "baroque," usually used despairingly by eighteenth-century art critics to describe the art and architecture of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, came to be applied also to the music of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries." "The term has in the past, and to some extent in the present, carried implications of absurdity, grotesqueness, or abnormality. But as applied to the music of the period of 1600-1750 the term "baroque" has no such pejorative connotations, for much of the music of this time is of the finest quality." The Baroque style is easiest seen in the Baroque churches in Europe. It is obvious in the ceiling and altar paintings, the ornate carvings and metal work, and in the highly expressive sculpture. In music, aspects of the Baroque can are flamboyance, spectacle, and emotionalism in Italian Operas. Also, the use of dramatic in religious music and the massin
Some topics in this essay:
Sebastian Bach, Venetian School, Baroque Music, Amedeus Mozart, Medici Opera, England Originally, Camerata Florentine, Italian Operas, Catholic Church, , chamber music, instrumental music, wrote operas, seventeenth eighteenth centuries, music period, baroque music, figured bass, baroque seen, classical period, voice instrument, symphonies concertos,
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Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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