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Question
A pause in the score of a concerto, preceding a cadenza, is indicated by a ______.
A. signal from the soloist
B. signal from the concertmaster
C. signal from the conductor
D. fermata
Answer
This answer is hidden. It contains 148 characters.
Related questions
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Which of the following statements is not true? A. Typical of expressionist composers, Berg scored his opera Wozzeck for a small chamber orchestra. B. The vocal line in Berg's opera Wozzeck includes speaking, shrieking, Sprechstimme, distorted folk songs, and melodies with wide leaps that are difficult to sing. C. Though written in the early 1830s, Georg Bchner's play Woyzeck is amazingly modern in its starkly realistic dialogue and disconnected scenes. D. A novel feature of Berg's opera Wozzeck is that the music for each scene is a self-contained composition with a particular form or of a definite type.
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91. Which of the following statements is not true? A. Twentieth-century musical expressionism grows out of the emotional turbulence in the works of late romantics like Wagner, Richard Strauss, and Gustav Mahler. B. Expressionist artists favored pleasant subjects, delicate pastel colors, and shimmering surfaces. C. A stress on harsh dissonance, an exploitation of extreme registers, fragmentation, and unusual instrumental effects are all characteristics of expressionistic compositions. D. Expressionist painters reacted against French impressionism; they often used jarring colors and grotesquely distorted shapes to explore the subconscious.
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The twentieth-century artistic movement that stressed intense, subjective emotion was called ______. A. impressionism B. primitivism C. expressionism D. neoclassicism
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At the Paris International Exhibition of 1889 Debussy was strongly influenced by ______.
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Which of the following statements is not true?
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A piano is often used in twentieth-century orchestral music to ______.
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The glissando, a technique widely used in the twentieth century, is ______. A. the combination of two traditional chords sounding together B. a rapid slide up or down a scale C. a motive or phrase that is repeated persistently at the same pitch throughout a section D. a chord made up of tones only a half step or a whole step apart
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The most famous riot in music history occurred in Paris in 1913 at the first performance of ______. A. Arnold Schoenberg's Gurrelieder B. Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring C. Richard Wagner's Siegfried D. Igor Stravinsky's Les Noces
Q:
Which of the following statements is not true?
A. The "emancipation of the dissonance" does not prevent composers from differentiating between chords of greater or lesser tension.
B. By the early twentieth century, the traditional distinction between consonance and dissonance was abandoned in much music.
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142. Which of the following statements is not true? A. One of Brahms's musical trademarks is his exotic orchestration. B. When he was thirteen, Brahms studied piano, music theory, and composition during the day, and played dance music for prostitutes and their clients in waterfront bars at night. C. Brahms was a romantic who breathed new life into classical forms. D. As conductor of a Viennese musical society, Brahms introduced many forgotten works of Bach, Handel, and Mozart.
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In Vienna, Johannes Brahms ______.
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Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky ______.
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B. preferred his government position to music
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