The tunes of the baroque music were grandiose and larger than life with polyphonic harmonization using strings, wind instruments and less bass and fewer beat instruments.
Explanation:
Baroque music is grandiose, larger than life, and very energetic.
The instruments used for the music were primarily string instruments, which were to be in sync and loud enough to be able to be heard in long distances.
The style was to be polyphonic inn the harmony, with multiple octaves laid over each other and contrasting according to the fifths of the root notes.
The strings were used as front of the ensemble while the deep base was relegated. The flutes and lyres were reserved for interludes or used in the front for melodies.
I really don't know the answer, I just don't know what language you're using, I'm so sorry
Answer:
Hard Bop
Explanation:
Hard Bop was birthed as an opposition to cool jazz of 1950s and was played mostly by urban musicians (from Philadelphia and Detroit) reflecting an East Coast, extroverted response to urban life.
While cool jazz preferred a light timbre, hard bop preferred a sound that was heavy, dark and impassioned. The saxophone of choice was tenor which replaced the alto and drummers played in a more assertive style.
The last bit would be Broadway
Answer: I would contend that the right answer is the A) <em>Liberty Leading The People</em>.
Explanation: Just to elaborate a little on the answer, it can be added that this work by Eugène Delacroix, which he completed in 1830, is a very significant work within the context of the Romantic era, since it depicts a modern subject—specifically a civic uprising that took place in the streets of Paris in the summer of 1830 and that led to the coronation of a new king, the so-called Citizen King, Louis Philippe I—and it aims at eliciting an emotional response from the viewer through the use of color, brushwork, and composition. Delacroix witnessed this event and he felt compelled to record it visually as a way to contribute to his country.