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The tuba became part of the orchestra in the mid to late 19th century. It wasn't invented until the 1840s.
In the 11th century the first orchestras were made up of small group musicians performing for festivals, but the true modern orchestras didn't start until the late 16th century. The growth of the orchestra was based largely upon works written by composers, which continued to increase in scope as time went by, requiring new members of the orchestra to play the works. Notbale "expanders" of the orchestra would be Beethoven, who brought the piccolo into the orchestra with his fifth symphony, Wagner, who greatly expanded the brass section, Berlioz, who made more extensive use of the harp in the orchestra than anyone before him, and so on. Today, a standard symphony orchestra is anywhere from 90-105 players.
The first radio control planes were made in the late nineteenth century where they were flown as a musical hall act around the auditorium for the customers during the show.
Assuming you mean music from the Romantic Era, it seems to have originated in Europe around the late 18th or early 19th century. It dominated the Romantic movement in Germany.
True
In the late nineteenth century America cities: The middle and upper classes lived in the newer suburbs
To get an accurate value on a quarter from the late nineteenth century, the type, date, mint mark, and condition of the coin will have to be known.
1. How did the surge in population in the United States in the late nineteenth century contribute to the development of the computer?
1617 to as late as the early nineteenth century.
1617 to as late as the early nineteenth century.
Hawaii's tobacco industry grew in the late nineteenth century. This and the American desire for more tobacco strengthened ties between the two.
the Oklahoma shooting!!
Mid to late nineteenth century.
100,000
True! :)
Chicago, Illinois
A favorite target of Christian missionaries in the late nineteenth century was Africa, particularly countries in West Africa due to the perceived lack of Christian presence and the opportunity for expansion of their faith. Missionaries sought to convert the indigenous populations to Christianity and establish churches and schools in these regions.