Answer:
If you are on a woodwind instrument:
The notes at the top represent one instrument's part and the notes at the bottom represent another one of the same instrument's part. if the two instruments play in unison, there should be a nice harmonic sound.
For example, if you had two trumpets playing this piece, one would play the higher octave and the other would play the lower octave.
If you are on a Piano:
You can play these notes at the same time.
Count carefully and look at the time signature, key signature, rests, and articulation!
Good luck!
It would be option C! Hope that helps
Instrumental music throughout the Renaissance was closely associated with vocal music. Only at the Sistine Chapel in Rome, and at a few other chapels with choirs of competent singers, was polyphonic church music consistently sung unaccompanied. Elsewhere the organ, lute, viols, or other instruments accompanied, doubled, or substituted for voices, and organists developed a huge repertory of music for use in church services, including preludes, interludes, and arrangements of liturgical melodies. In secular music, the lute remained popular both for solos and in ensembles; clavier instruments were coming into wider use, and hundreds of pieces were written for chamber music ensembles.
Explanation:
thats all that i know i hope it will help