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Baroque
Baroque is a period and style of Western art music spanning roughly 1600–1750. It is characterized by the birth of functional tonality, the widespread use of basso continuo (figured bass), and a love of contrast—between soloist and ensemble, loud and soft, and different timbres. Hallmark genres and forms of the era include opera, cantata, oratorio, concerto (especially the concerto grosso), dance suite, sonata, and fugue. Textures range from expressive monody to intricate counterpoint, and melodies are richly ornamented with trills, mordents, and appoggiaturas. Baroque music flourished in churches, courts, and theaters across Europe, with regional styles (Italian, French, German, English) shaping distinctive approaches to rhythm, dance, harmony, and ornamentation.
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Classical
Classical music is the notated art-music tradition of Europe and its global descendants, characterized by durable forms, carefully codified harmony and counterpoint, and a literate score-based practice. The term “classical” can refer broadly to the entire Western art-music lineage from the Medieval era to today, not just the Classical period (c. 1750s–1820s). It privileges long-form structures (such as symphonies, sonatas, concertos, masses, and operas), functional or modal harmony, thematic development, and timbral nuance across ensembles ranging from solo instruments to full orchestras and choirs. Across centuries, the style evolved from chant and modal polyphony to tonal harmony, and later to post-tonal idioms, while maintaining a shared emphasis on written notation, performance practice, and craft.
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Classical Period
The Classical period in Western art music (c. 1750–1820) is defined by clarity of form, balance of phrase, and transparent textures. Composers favored singable melodies, symmetrical four- and eight-bar phrases, and functional harmony that modulates to closely related keys. Hallmark forms such as the symphony, string quartet, sonata, and classical concerto were standardized, often using sonata form, theme-and-variations, minuet and trio, and rondo designs. Orchestras expanded beyond strings to include standardized pairs of woodwinds and horns, with trumpets and timpani for ceremonial weight, while the fortepiano gradually replaced the harpsichord. The style pivoted away from the dense counterpoint of the late Baroque toward a more galant, conversational musical rhetoric. It culminated in the Viennese masters—Haydn, Mozart, and the early Beethoven—whose works crystallized the era’s ideals and prepared the way for Romanticism.
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Concerto
A concerto is a large-scale composition that sets one or more solo instruments in dynamic dialogue with an orchestra. Its core idea is contrast—between soloist and tutti—and the dramatic negotiation of power, color, and thematic responsibility. While Baroque concertos often relied on ritornello form, the Classical era standardized a three-movement plan (fast–slow–fast) with sonata principles in the opening movement. The Romantic period emphasized virtuosity and expressive foregrounding of the soloist, and the 20th–21st centuries broadened the palette with new instruments, harmonies, and formats. Across eras, the concerto remains a showcase for instrumental character, technical brilliance, and the art of orchestral conversation.
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Contemporary Classical
Contemporary classical is the broad field of Western art music created after World War II. It embraces an array of aesthetics—from serialism and indeterminacy to minimalism, spectralism, electroacoustic practices, and post‑tonal lyricism—while retaining a concern for notated composition and timbral innovation. Unlike the unified styles of earlier eras, contemporary classical is pluralistic. Composers freely mix acoustic and electronic sound, expand instrumental techniques, adopt non‑Western tuning and rhythm, and explore new forms, from process-based structures to open and graphic scores. The result is a music that can be rigorously complex or radically simple, technologically experimental or intimately acoustic, yet consistently focused on extending how musical time, timbre, and form can be shaped.
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Folk
Folk is a song-centered acoustic tradition rooted in community storytelling, everyday life, and social history. It emphasizes clear melodies, simple harmonies, and lyrics that foreground narrative, protest, and personal testimony. As a modern recorded genre, folk coalesced in the early-to-mid 20th century in the United States out of older ballad, work song, and rural dance traditions. It typically features acoustic instruments (guitar, banjo, fiddle, mandolin, harmonica), strophic song forms, and participatory singing (choruses, call-and-response).
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Opera
Opera is a large-scale theatrical genre that combines music, drama, and visual spectacle, in which the story is primarily conveyed through singing accompanied by an orchestra. It unites solo voices, ensembles, and chorus with staging, costumes, and often dance to create a total artwork. Emerging in late Renaissance Italy and flourishing in the Baroque era, opera developed signature forms such as recitative (speech-like singing that advances the plot) and aria (lyrical numbers that explore character and emotion). Over the centuries it evolved diverse national styles—Italian bel canto, French grand opéra, German music drama—while continually experimenting with orchestration, harmony, narrative structure, and stagecraft.
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Oratorio
An oratorio is a large‑scale, multi‑movement work for voices and orchestra, typically on a sacred narrative subject, performed without staging, costumes, or scenery. It combines solo recitatives and arias with powerful choruses and instrumental movements, using a dramatic arc similar to opera but presented as a concert work. Languages and styles vary by era and region (Italian and Latin in early Roman oratorios, German for Lutheran works such as Bach’s, and English for Handel’s). While most are sacred, secular oratorios also exist. Across the Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and modern eras, the oratorio evolved from intimate devotional storytelling to monumental public concert pieces, often intended for festivals and large choirs.
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Pop
Pop is a broad, hook-driven style of popular music designed for wide appeal. It emphasizes memorable melodies, concise song structures, polished vocals, and production intended for radio, charts, and mass media. While pop continually absorbs elements from other styles, its core remains singable choruses, accessible harmonies, and rhythmic clarity. Typical forms include verse–pre-chorus–chorus, frequent use of bridges and middle-eights, and ear-catching intros and outros. Pop is not defined by a single instrumentation. It flexibly incorporates acoustic and electric instruments, drum machines, synthesizers, and increasingly digital production techniques, always in service of the song and the hook.
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Romantic Classical
Romantic classical is the 19th‑century phase of Western art music that prioritizes individual expression, expanded harmony, poetic narrative, and coloristic orchestration. Compared with the balance and restraint of the Classical period, Romantic music embraces chromaticism, adventurous modulation, extreme dynamics, and richer timbres. It elevates subjectivity and imagination, often through programmatic works that depict stories, landscapes, or emotions, and through intimate forms such as the Lied and character piece. The orchestra grows dramatically (trombones, tuba, expanded winds, harp, larger percussion), the piano becomes a virtuoso vehicle, and new concepts like thematic transformation and leitmotif link music to literary and dramatic ideas.
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Sonata
A sonata is a multi-movement work for one or a few instruments that developed as a principal vehicle of instrumental expression in European art music. In the Baroque era it referred broadly to “music to be sounded” (as opposed to “cantata,” music to be sung) and commonly appeared as the trio sonata (two treble instruments plus basso continuo) in church (sonata da chiesa) or chamber (sonata da camera) contexts. In the Classical era the term narrowed to denote a cyclical, architecturally unified piece for solo keyboard or for a solo melody instrument with keyboard, typically in three or four movements with the first movement in sonata form (exposition–development–recapitulation). Across the 18th–20th centuries, composers used the sonata as a laboratory for harmonic drama, motivic development, and contrasting characters—ranging from the poised clarity of Haydn and Mozart to the structural expansiveness and psychological depth of Beethoven and Romantic successors.
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Theme And Variations
Theme and variations is a classical musical form in which a clearly stated theme is followed by a sequence of self-contained variations that transform the theme’s melody, harmony, rhythm, texture, register, mode, meter, or orchestration. Although used across many eras, the form crystallized during the late Renaissance and Baroque periods through keyboard and lute traditions, then became a structural mainstay in the Classical and Romantic eras. In performance, the listener recognizes the original idea through its continuities—often the harmonic plan or characteristic contour—while enjoying the inventive contrasts that each variation brings.
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Western Classical
Western classical is the notated art-music tradition that developed in Europe from medieval Christian chant into the large-scale secular and sacred forms of the Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and modern eras. It is characterized by staff notation, evolving systems of modality and tonality, and forms such as symphony, sonata, concerto, mass, opera, and chamber music. Across its history, Western classical established an extensive theory of harmony and counterpoint, refined orchestration across strings, winds, brass, and percussion, and cultivated performance practices from a cappella chant to full symphonic and operatic forces. Its repertoire, pedagogy, and institutions (conservatories, orchestras, opera houses) made it a global reference point for compositional craft and instrumental technique.
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Chamber Music
Chamber music is a tradition of composed music for small ensembles—typically one player per part—intended for intimate spaces such as courts, salons, and private rooms rather than large public halls. Its aesthetic emphasizes clarity of texture, conversational interplay among parts, and balance without a conductor. Hallmark formations include the string quartet, piano trio, wind quintet, string quintet, and various mixed ensembles. Multi‑movement cycles (often in sonata form) and finely wrought counterpoint are common, ranging from Baroque trio sonatas to Classical string quartets and modern works with expanded timbres and techniques. Because of its scale and transparency, chamber music has long been a proving ground for compositional craft and ensemble musicianship, shaping the core of Western art music from the Baroque through the present.
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Choral
Choral refers to music written for and performed by a choir—an ensemble of voices organized into sections such as soprano, alto, tenor, and bass (SATB), or same-voice groupings (SSA, TTBB). It encompasses both sacred and secular repertoire and may be sung a cappella or with accompaniment by organ, piano, or full orchestra. Stylistically, choral music ranges from chant-like monophony to intricate polyphony and rich homophonic textures. Texts are drawn from liturgy, scripture, poetry, and vernacular sources, and are set in many languages. Performance contexts include church services, concert halls, and community events, making choral one of the most socially embedded and widely practiced forms of ensemble music. Across history, choral music has served as a laboratory for vocal counterpoint, word painting, and text-driven form, while functioning as a cultural bridge among religious rites, national traditions, and contemporary concert practice.
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Artists
Various Artists
Handel, George Frideric
Anonymous
Szell, George
Liszt, Franz
Fleisher, Leon
Grieg
Schumann
Nederlands Kamerorkest
Vivaldi
Beethoven, Ludwig van
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Debussy
Moussorgsky
Stravinsky
Collins, Judy
Bach, Johann Sebastian
Brahms, Johannes
Ravel
Schubert, Franz
Tchaikovsky
Bloch
Prokofiev
Mahler, Gustav
Orff, Carl
London Symphony Orchestra
Ambrosian Singers
Rachmaninov
Telemann, Georg Philipp
Haydn, Joseph
Monteverdi
Ericson, Eric
Bartók
Milhaud, Darius
Scarlatti, Domenico
Purcell
Varèse
Chopin
[no artist]
Stokowsky
Marriner, Neville, Sir
Zweden, Jaap van
Fahey, John
Staatsoper, Orchester der Wiener
English Chamber Orchestra
Copland, Aaron
Philharmonia Orchestra
Weill, Kurt
Barber
Utah Symphony
Gould, Morton
Tallis, Thomas
Forrester, Maureen
Berlioz, Hector
Demus, Jörg
Mihalovici
Shostakovich, Dmitri Dmitrievich
Reger, Max
Karloff, Boris
Schneider, Alexander
Stevens, Denis
Comissiona, Sergiu
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
Horszowski, Mieczysław
Ives, Charles
Cooper, Kenneth
Rzewski, Frederic
Mackerras, Charles
Respighi
Satie
List, Eugene
Fistoulari, Anatole
Stich‐Randall, Teresa
Murray, Ann
Shirley‐Quirk, John
Harper, Heather
Chor der Wiener Staatsoper
Canteloube, Joseph
Entremont, Philippe
Golschmann, Vladimir
Robison, Paula
Kohaut
Anderson, Leroy
American Symphony Orchestra
Zagrebački solisti
Díaz, Justino
Doeselaar, Leo van
Jordans, Wyneke
Combattimento Consort Amsterdam
Schlick, Barbara
Gabrieli, Giovanni
Price, Margaret
Honegger
Brendel, Alfred
Lugansky, Nikolai
Somary, Johannes
Musica Antiqua Köln
Wild, Earl
Boyce, William
Tilney, Colin
Blow
Lewis, Richard
Harnoncourt, Nikolaus
Concentus Musicus Wien
Leonhardt, Gustav
Egmond, Max van
Deller, Alfred
Rippon, Michael
Sargent, Malcolm
Nes, Jard van
Malcolm, George
Oppens, Ursula
Gluck, Christoph Willibald
Castelnuovo‐Tedesco, Mario
Schulhoff, Erwin
Stubbs, Stephen
Bornkamp, Arno
Janssen, Ivo
Goebel, Reinhard
Abravanel, Maurice
Kunz, Erich
Adler, F. Charles
Jenkins
Locke
Fondamento, Il
Novaes, Guiomar
Watts
Young
Cantelo, April
Suk, Josef
Helling, Hilke
Струнный квартет имени Бетховена
Milhaud, Madeleine
Bevan, Maurice
Dupré, Desmond
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Every Noise at Once
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