The texture is:- -The harmony during the classical era was mainly pleasant. -Most harmonies were diatonic and very rarely chromatic. -It was less structure but still used primary chords such as tonic, dominant and sub-dominant. -It primarily uses basic triad with very little use if any of unexpected clashing harmony.
Yes.
Homophonic
There are a number of features of music in the classical period. Some of the main ones include having a light and clearer texture and it was also less complicated unlike Baroque music.
The texture of a piece of music is it's 'thickness'. For example, a music played by only a flute wouldn't be as textured as a piece of music played by an orchestra.
It is a classical music!!
Yes.
Homophonic
There are a number of features of music in the classical period. Some of the main ones include having a light and clearer texture and it was also less complicated unlike Baroque music.
The texture of a piece of music is it's 'thickness'. For example, a music played by only a flute wouldn't be as textured as a piece of music played by an orchestra.
It is a classical music!!
It refers to the texture, when it consists of multiple parts moving in harmony rather than against each other. Think Classical era (1750-1800)
Classical Music
Classical music didn't come from the United States. Classical music was formulated in Europe.
Your question is as vague as it is unanswerable. There is no singular melody that classical music adheres to. Bach used lively rhythms, fast 16th notes and polyphonic texture. His melodies became the style of the Baroque period. Meanwhile, Beethoven would use cyclical forms and recurring motives alongside contrasted themes and generally homo-phonic texture as was the norm in the Classical period (classical era and classical genre are two very different things). Each composer creates new melodies for each of his/her works. If there was a singular one, music would get boring and repetitive.
No, opera is considered classical music.
it didn't impact classical music at all.
The selection of classical music stations in Kentucky is very wide. The classical music stations are as following: Classic Country (1290AM, 95.7FM), Classical (88.5FM, 90.9FM, 88.9FM), Classical Music (91.3FM, 102.1FM, 90.5FM).