| Rock Music |
Rock music emerged
during the mid-1950s to become the major popular
musical form of young audiences in
the United States and |
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| Rococo Music |
The musical manifestations
of the rococo style (early and mid-18th century)
developed most conspicuously in France
and Germany |
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| Romanticism Music |
Frederic Chopin
(1810-1849), a Polish-born composer, created dance
and lyric compositions of great virtuosity. Written |
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| Russian music |
The roots of Russian
church music stem from the end of the 10th century
when the newly Christianized Slavs imported the
Byzantine |
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| Scale Music |
A musical scale
(Latin: scala, "staircase") is a determinate
series of related tones within an OCTAVE, providing
an inventory of pitches |
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| Scandinavian Music |
The Scandinavian
nations (Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland)
developed their musical life in direct proportion
to their closeness to |
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| Sequence Music |
In music, the term
sequence has two unrelated meanings. The first
is the repetition of a melodic phrase, usually
by steps of a tone |
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| Serial Music |
Serial music is
any music based on the repetition and manipulation
of a series of musical elements--such as pitches,
rhythmic |
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| Soul Music |
A successful popular
music style, soul music is derived from black
GOSPEL MUSIC, with its highly decorated, emotional
singing style, |
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| Spanish Music |
Spain comprises
many regions with their own historical and cultural
characteristics, including a variety of languages
(Castilian, |
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| Triangle Music |
The percussion
instrument called the triangle is made from a
steel rod bent into a triangle with one corner
open. It is suspended from a |
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