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  1. May 22, 2024 · Music, art concerned with combining vocal or instrumental sounds for beauty of form or emotional expression, usually according to cultural standards of rhythm, melody, and, in most Western music, harmony. Learn about the history of music and about theories of musical meaning since the 19th century.

  2. Late Romantic nationalism spilled over into British and American music of the early twentieth century. Composers such as Ralph Vaughan Williams, and Aaron Copland collected folk songs and used folk themes in many of their major compositions. In the 1950s, aleatoric music was popularized by composers like John Cage. Composers of this area sought ...

  3. 20th Century Music. For many, the 20th century was seen as "America's century." It was a century in which the United States' influence would be felt around the globe. Nowhere is this more true ...

  4. The Arnold Schönberg Estate is one of the most important and largest collections of the Austrian composer as well as of a 20th century composer. It attests to cultural and intellectual history of the first half of the 20th century, one of the most challenging eras of western classical music.

  5. Jul 10, 2023 · Musical Impressionism is the name given to a movement in European classical music that arose in the late 19th century and continued into the middle of the 20th century. Originating in France, musical Impressionism is characterized by suggestion and atmosphere, and eschews the emotional excesses of the Romantic era.

  6. Dec 3, 2018 · 20th Century: 1900–present . Classical music didn't die in the 20th century so much as reinvent itself. No one trend or style in particular dominates, and composers ranged from the relatively traditional, like Shostakovich and Schuman, to the outrageously experimental, like Karlheinz Stockhausen.

  7. He is regarded as one of the major composers of the 20th century. The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw the third wave of Russian classical composers, including Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915), Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953), Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) and Igor Stravinsky (1882- 1971). They were experimental in style and musical language ...