It was around the 17th century when composers started marking their scores with instructions about dynamics. It was during the Baroque period.
Composers started marking their scores with instructions about dynamics well into the 17th century
It was around the 17th century when composers started marking their scores with instructions about dynamics. It was during the Baroque period.
Because of new instruments :)
Because Beethoven is one of the greatest composers and musicians that ever lived and because his scores were among the best of that time that he lived in and they are still remembered today as old classics.
The answer is false.Original scores previously written or composed are protected by copyright laws and cannot be utilized in any form by another. There are also ethics concerns, too. Although certain passages of a new composition make seem like it was a previously written piece, they are in fact, not the same.
Piano exam scores are scores depending on how well you played in your exam the perfect score is around 137.
It was around the 17th century when composers started marking their scores with instructions about dynamics. It was during the Baroque period.
Because of new instruments :)
17th century, beginning with the influential Italian composers of the age.
true
cos they do
While there is not absolute certainty on the matter, one of the first composers to specify dynamics on scores was Giovanni Gabrieli. Until the 18th Century though, when Bach popularized their use, they were used sparingly.
Charles Ives
Full scores allow composers, conductors, and musicians to see all of the parts
New instruments allowed for more dynamic ranges and contrast
Richard Wagner
Josef Charles Holbrooke has written: 'The Pickwick club, a humoreske in two parts' -- subject(s): String quartets, Scores 'The children of Don' -- subject(s): Operas, Vocal scores with piano 'Contemporary British composers' -- subject(s): Biography, Composers, Musicians
He was a composer who inspired many young American composers. He wrote songs with ballet and orchestral music to choral music and movie scores.