Hello, as a singer-songwriter major myself, I think I can help.
The profession of a "Troubadour" started in the late 1000's and lasted through the mid 1300's.
Troubadours were different from the classical artist, in the sense that they were highly lyrical and poetic, rather than being focused on the composition of the music itself. They were very melodic and most were metaphysical/intellectual.
They sang about love, loss, and even some humorous/vulgar stuff.
Near the peak of their prevalence, there was even the option to go to school to be a Troubadour.
Like the troubadour, a singer-songwriter is less classical in their music. It is hard, no doubt, to get into school to major in that field with out some understanding of music theory and composition.
Usually singer songwriters play one or more instruments to accompany them, but some just have others play for them. Most songs written in modern days, deal with the same stuff that the troubadours went through: death, loss, love, and life.
I would say that they are most similar in the way that they seek creativity and how they use music as an outlet. Another similarity is that not many troubadours were respected in their profession, and from experience I know that this mentality is the same today; being a musician is not looked at seriously in the business world.
The biggest difference, I would assume, is the resources. The troubadours mainly played on the streets and they might have gotten gigs, but not likely. Now, we have bars, and people who want musicians to come play. It is also much easier to get your music out there now, thanks to social media and iTunes.
I hope I could be of help! I go to a preforming arts school, and I gig weekly at a bar called "The Carousel Lounge" in Austin, Texas!
Answer: B. The key signature contains one flat, and the E in the scale is marked flat.
Explanation:
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<em>Dante had adored Beatrice from far off since adolescence and she turned into his dream after she had kicked the bucket youthful. Tommaso Portinari was a relative of a similar family.</em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
The <em>Portinari Altarpiece</em> was made for the congregation of San Egidio in the medical clinic of Santa Maria Nuova in Florence and it is presently in the <em>Uffizi Gallery. </em>
He finished altarpieces, pictures, court commissions, and metro ventures. Maybe a couple of his unique works have endure, in any case, we have <em>numerous duplicates of his works.</em>
1940’s America was a cruel place for blacks. Segregation was imbedded in the code of law as well as the everyday fabric of life.
Defying caricature, White saw the people with whom he shared a culture as much more than marginalized and dimensionless.
Throughout capturing African Americans in a chronicle way, White's works not only represent an epitome of unfair discrimination which has been morally justified, but also speaking for the lower class of color people at them time, their strength to fight, and their shine in eyes will not surrender to this desperate, frustrating reality.