Pottery from Jōmon
period in Japan (Jōmon doki, <span>c. 14,500 - c. 300 BCE) is a type
of ancient earthenware pottery. The main characteristic of pottery decoration
was rope pressed patterns into clay, hence the name "Jōmon" which means
"rope-patterned". The pottery crafts from Jōmon period are the oldest
potteries in Japan and among the oldest in the world. The example above belongs
to the pottery made in Middle Jōmon period (Umataka Kaen) from Hokuriku region,
which is called 'fire-flame' for its 3D type decorations which resemble flames.
Pottery in this period is characteristic for thick walls, flamboyant decorations
and patterns (flame like) and molds with ropes, human faces, snakes and other
animal motifs.</span>
<span>The woodwind family of instruments includes, from the highest sounding instruments to the lowest, the piccolo, flute, oboe, English horn, clarinet, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon and contrabassoon. The contrabasson is therefore the lowest woodwind instrument in an orchestra.</span>
Answer:
tecnically, your statement would be true, BUT
Explanation:
Rhythm is not unsteady. it is supposed to follow the beat so your answer is false
"pre-jazz"
late 1800s-early 1900s
first truly American type of music
dance based
syncopated and light hearted
wasn't improvised - written down which made it classical in a sense
problem = cannot be changed (like classical music)
restricted, it all sounded the same
piano, AABBCCDD style
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