1) Grand opera is focused on spectacular production elements, sometimes at the expense of music or plot. It a gene of opera that appeared in 19 century. This genre is usually characterized by its special structure, large-scale casts and orchestras, spectacular design with lots of stage effects. The term "Grand opera" is actually came from French names of certain productions of the Paris Opéra of the previous century.
2) <span>A leitmotif is a theme created by a series of slow moving chord progressions. This term is often defined as 'short musical phrase' because it is usually appears as a short melody, and either as a chord progression or a simple rhythm. It helps composers to bind a work together into a coherent whole, so that the story will be clearly understood and perceived without any words.
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3) <span>A series of songs that tells a story is known as a song cycle. A son cycle is a set of related songs which are connected one with another by a common storyline. They are meant to tell a story, divided in pieces where each one plays a big role in compiling the whole story. One of the earliest series of songs appeared in <span>13th-century, and if you are quite progressive in modern music, you can find out that many nowadays' musicians still record albums in that way.
4) </span></span><span> Wagner believed that music was the most important element of opera. Actually, he thought that any composition or performance must follow the concept of Gesamtkunstwerk and the technique of leitmotiv, but it is obvious that all that is impossible without musical series. 'Music seeps through people's minds, makes their hearts beat quicker or slower, it shapes the perception of aesthetics, First goes music, then a setting and a chorus etc'.- Wagner was sure.
5) A s</span>ymphonic poem includes only one movement. A symphonic poem is<span> a piece of </span>orchestral<span> music that usually appears as a single continuous </span><span>movement, so it is sort of independant part of the whole composition that plays one of the biggest role in the whole musical work.</span>
Answer:Ans1.Discuss the difference between "Appropriation" and "Memeification" in the article from I Care If You Listen.
2.Read the article from Variety and explain how Erroll Garner's lawsuit was an important first step for black artists.
3.Read the New York Times article and discuss some of the ways that black music has been presented through non-black artists. Describe the example of a BLACK performer performing in "blackface". Describe Nat King Cole's experience in performing on TV.
4.Discuss the nature of the pushback that Elvis Pressley experienced by some white listeners. Give some examples of the appreciation he had with some black listeners.
5.Watch the Grapevie video and discuss five different viewpoints about Bruno Mars' cultural and musical appropriation.
Explanation:
Bruno Mars found himself caught in a heated debate about cultural appropriation over the weekend after an activist accused the "24K Magic" star of being a culture vulture profiting off of traditionally black music.
"Cultural appropriation," according to the Cambridge Dictionary, is "the act of taking or using things from a culture that is not your own, especially without showing that you understand or respect this culture."
Bruno Mars' mother is Filipina and his father is Puerto Rican and Jewish
But the Grammy-winning star is known for blending elements of funk, soul, R&B, regg
Explanation:
I'd say that the type of context clue that helps you understand the meaning of the word repining is B. restatement.
If the word is in the middle of the poem, you wouldn't want an explanation or an example, but its synonym in order to understand what that particular word means. At least that is what I believe, I'm sorry if you get this answer wrong. :/
If you are referring to during the time of slavery, up north there was no slavery and they were free. If you are referring to during the civil Rights movement, African Americans faced less discrimination up north and no Jim Crow laws.
Answer:
Adjusting the number of servings of a recipe is called scaling, and broadly speaking, it involves multiplying (to increase) or dividing (to decrease) the quantities of the individual ingredients in the recipe.
Explanation:
More often, though, you're not making exponentially bigger recipes, you're simply looking to double, or quadruple, or maybe halve, a recipe. And the recipes that best lend themselves to this kind of manipulation are soups, sauces, and stews. With that said, multiplying seasonings can also prove tricky. If you're making a quadruple batch of spaghetti sauce, you might not need four times the salt; start with twice the salt and taste as you go.
Dont know if it helps