The twelve symphonies written for the concert manager j. p. salomon for performance at his public concerts are also known as the london symphonies, for the city in which they were first.
Haydn's Symphony No. 94 (The Surprise Symphony) was one of Haydn's twelve London symphonies. There are numerous musical jokes and surprises sprinkled throughout the work but the most famous surprise appears in the second movement.
The second movement opens with a quiet violin section, with eight bars played piano (quiet) followed by eight more bars played pianissimo (very quiet). Suddenly, at the end of the 16 bars, the rest of the orchestra joins in for one single G-major chord played fortissimo (very loud). This surprise only occurs once in the piece and is not repeated.
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A parody is a style of commenting upon an original work with deliberate exaggeration employed for the desire of comic effect. Parody can be found in literature, plays and art. This would mean that (A) Mock-epic is the answer. A mock-epic is a specific type of parody which satirizes which mock stereotypes of heroes in epic literature.
Well A and d are obviously wrong and based on context clues I’d go with B