I Honestly have no clue when you asked this question, so I hope the answer finds you, the piece you are looking for is called Il Silencio
Like in the classical times, a salon.
Supercalafragalisticexpealadocous
In the mid 18th century, Europe (the heart of art and music) moved into a new "formally elegant" style called Classicism. Classicism actually originated during the Renaissance, but took on a more ordered, formal and contrasting style during the 17th century. The term "classicism" was retained, but came to mean a different style.
The noun Beethoven is a word for a person.
In the 19th century, people began to distinguish "classical music" (Bach through say, Schubert) from the "new music", which we now call Romantic. Every period has something called the New Music. Mozart's friends called Bach the Old Music, and Stamitz/Haydn/Mozart were the New Music. Beethoven was a separate creature, considered a wild, uncontrollable element tolerated only because he had an enormous amount of talent. Romantic Music was, to oversimplify, taking up where Beethoven had left out, exploring new levels of harmony and rhythm, especially in the areas of narrative-type music, music which tells stories or evokes pictorial description. Post-Romantic music went through a kind of bubble-and-crash, except around 1908 instead of 2008. Inventiveness itself became a Value. Entire new forms of music were developed (classical music stemmed, ultimately, from traditional dance and vocal forms). These we tend to lump together as "20th-Century music", relegating everything previous to "Classical." Today we continue the lumping process, and label anything by dead composers or musicians that are more interested in making music ultimately musically interesting (as opposed to monetarily lucrative) as "Classical", as opposed to "Pop." However, the Boston Pops perform lots of music that younger folk today would call Classical. Composers such as Gershwin or Duke Ellington, who used folk, ethnic and urban music and rhythms, are increasingly considered classical, as is the entire Jazz movement. Generally - if they teach it in a course in college, it's "Classical." To confound this further, there is a period generally called "The Classic Period", which describes Haydnmozartbeethoven. (My professor, Karl Geiringer, used this as one word, pronouncing Haydn with a powerful "khhhh" at the start).
"The type of music Anne loves is classical music." Okay
The word 'classical', when applied to music, has two different meanings, a narrow one and a much broader one. In the narrow sense of the word the classical period in music extended roughly from the middle of the eighteenth century to the early nineteenth century. Classical music in the broader sense of the expression includes the 'serious music' or 'art music' of the last four centuries (or perhaps longer), continuing today.
Like in the classical times, a salon.
un amateur de musique, un audiophile (for classical music)
Violin is a music word. It begins with the letter v.
Soft classical music is pleasant to many people.
motet
this tens tans taps tats tots toss tops tons tins
My plants seemed to flourish when I started playing classical music for them.
Supercalafragalisticexpealadocous
Isn't Mozart a wonderful composer of classical music?Hansel and Gretel is a classical example of the work of the brothers Grimm.Spanish guitar differs from classical guitar, but they sound the same to me.
There are many synonyms for the word music. They include melody, harmony, instrumental. swing, rock and roll, classical, hymn, and tune.