Answer: it written in malayo
Explanation:
Hello~
Q1. What period does Japanese music date back too?
A1. Nara (710 to 794) and Heian (794 to 1185) periods
Q2. Why is music important in Japan?
A2. Songs are mainly related to spiritual rituals and daily work.
Q3. The piano was considered a prestigious instrument in the mid-20th century in Japan? True or False?
A3. True
Q4. The order in which the instruments enter is always the same in named compositions such as Etenraku.
A4. True
Q5. Syakuhati masters take seriously humankind’s connection with nature, using the music as a means to enlightenment.
A5. Ture
Q6. Where could one learn Western music around the first two decades of the 20th century in Japan?
A6. Primary Schools
Q7. What brought much of the Chinese culture to Japan?
A7. Buddhism
Q8. The largest ensemble in all of Japanese traditional music is:
A8. Gagaku
Q9. Enka songs:
A9. are generally slow to medium speed
, can be traced largely to 1930s theme songs
, comprised the earliest repertory of karaoke, and express despairing sadness and self-sacrificing sentiment
Q10. Karaoke was born in Japan in the:
A10. 1970s
Hope this helps~ Good luck!
Ary~
The overwhelming emotion comes from its large size are almost 11 feet tall and 22 feet wide. There are so many different animals and people in the painting. If you look on the back wall there is a sketch of something that looks like a human/animal sort of thing.
<span>There have always been groups of musicians playing together.
</span>The word "orchestra" is Greek in origins, and originally meant the place where Greek chorus sang and danced.
<span>In the Baroque orchestra (1600-1760), the strings and winds played the same sort of music melodically and rhythmically and there were from 10 to 30 players.
</span>After the Baroque, developed was the Classical orchestra (1750-1830). It used 30 to 60 players and had developed into a flexible and colourful instrument to which composers could entrust their most powerful and dramatic musical conceptions.<span>
</span><span>Romantic orchestras (1815-1910) had as many as 100 players or more, and featured greater use of brass and piano.</span>
The modern present symphony orchestra varies in size, but typically has a strength of about 100 and <span>comprises some 16 first and second violins, 14 violas, 14 cellos and 8 - 10 double basses. </span>