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Wednesday, 25 December 2019

What's "Italian Style" in Classical music?

answers1: To answer your question about French style, it has mostly
dotted rhythms.
answers2: There actually is a French and German style of classical music. <br>
<br>
I'm not exactly sure how you can tell them apart other than by
composer or by school (for example, the "New German School" was a term
used to discribe trends in German music in 1860) <br>
<br>
Basically, the styles contain aspects most associated with the
contemporary composers of said countries. "Italian" is generaly
melodious, "French" is flowy, and "German" is bold.
answers3: In an Italian Baroque concerto, louder orchestral passages
alternate with softer solo passages. <br>
The orchestral passages are usually based on a melody. <br>
In a German Baroque concerto, there is usually motive play. <br>
I don't know what a French Baroque concerto is like.

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