Impossible to say, because this question didn't include a list of potential answers.
True
True
False.Beethoven was a famous composer of classical music.
Frederic Chopin wrote classical music and most of his music was composed for the piano. He was from Poland and considered one of the classical greats.
Now you stated "Classical Period" so I'm making the distinction as the era between Baroque and Romantic. There were mainly 3 influential ones. These composers made up the 1st Viennese School. They are: Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. Schubert is questionable when it comes to his true nature of Romantic vs Classical therefore I am omitting him. The members of the Manheim school were also very influential during this timeIf you are refering to Classical music in general, the most famous composers are J.S. Bach, Vivaldi, Monteverdi, Mozart, Beethoven, Debussy and Chopin
yes
True
True
False.Beethoven was a famous composer of classical music.
Frederic Chopin wrote classical music and most of his music was composed for the piano. He was from Poland and considered one of the classical greats.
Now you stated "Classical Period" so I'm making the distinction as the era between Baroque and Romantic. There were mainly 3 influential ones. These composers made up the 1st Viennese School. They are: Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. Schubert is questionable when it comes to his true nature of Romantic vs Classical therefore I am omitting him. The members of the Manheim school were also very influential during this timeIf you are refering to Classical music in general, the most famous composers are J.S. Bach, Vivaldi, Monteverdi, Mozart, Beethoven, Debussy and Chopin
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.
This song is an absolute classic! I had this on vinyl in my teenage years!The game was a true classic final, a true nail-biter.I have one weakness it's true - classic cars.That's classic of him, he's always causing some sort of trouble!
The Viennese Waltz is a fast-paced ballroom dance, set to 3/4 music, with a 1-2-3 1-2-3 lilt to it. Like its name reveals, it comes from Vienna, Austria, and many classical Viennese waltz numbers were composed by Austrian musicians. In standardised ballroom dance competitions, the Viennese waltz is set to music speeds of about 58-60 bars per minute.Though very fluid and graceful when performed properly, it is actually a fast dance, and is the fastest of the International Style Standard dances. A true Viennese Waltz contains only turns and changes, and moves around the ballroom in an anti-clockwise fashion continuously, i.e.The Natural TurnThe Reverse TurnThe Closed Change ForwardThe Closed Change BackwardStandardisation by International Style ballroom teachers has added a move called the Fleckerl, which essentially spins the couple together as one unit on one spot, and the Contra Check, which is a very quick move that puts the woman into a rather steep backward dip (Note: This is an inadequate description, see the first few seconds of the video).For a video demonstration of International Style Viennese Waltz, see:www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwdWE-X2vRI
Mozart was a true Classical composer, and his style can be defined as simple, harmonious and melodious.
True, and Mozart, and Haydn were very active in the city during this time
the chamber name came from the beginning of the classical period the name was given to music that is suitable for perfromce in a chamber or room even though composers had been writing music for small groups of musicians for hundreds of years