In the regular "music textbook" usage of the terms, yes - Baroque preceded classical.
No. Classical music sprung from the art movement, while rock and pop from entertainment. That said, these days there is some crossover.
It is very engaging because you can gte into the music
Beethoven's music connected the Classical and Romantic eras through stylish innovations such as the harmonic terms and structure used.
If you're referring to Classical music (the period in European classical music from about 1750-1830) then yes. If it's classical music as in the generalised art music then no. If your referring to Classical Civilisation then yes. The first and third are proper nouns as they refer to specific historical movement and eras respectively; the second is just a generalised term. Also, Classicism would usuallly be capitalised it was a specific artistic movement in the Eighteenth Century.
It is a classical music!!
Some common classical music chord progressions used in compositions include the I-IV-V, ii-V-I, and vi-IV-V progressions. These progressions are often used to create harmonic movement and structure in classical music pieces.
Theme and variation was an entire form of classical music, consisting of its own movements.
Classical Music
Beethoven Piano Concerto 5 -- 2nd movement
Most music scholars would scoff at such a question. The classical period is far too complex to be distilled into categories of best and worst. In terms of the Classical Period, Mozart and Beethoven are regarded as the best of the best, yet take that with a grain of salt for there is no true best.In terms of the overall Classical music, J.S. Bach is a true unparalelled composer who we have never seen since and will likely never see again. Hats off to Bach. In my mind, he is the greatest composer who ever lived and the pinnacle of Classical music entirely.
Classical music didn't come from the United States. Classical music was formulated in Europe.