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  1. Chamber music, music composed for small ensembles of instrumentalists. It often permits no more than one player to a part and usually dispenses with a conductor. Chamber music can be a combination of stringed or wind instruments, often with a keyboard, and music for voices with or without accompaniment.

  2. Chamber music is a form of classical music that is composed for a small group of instruments—traditionally a group that could fit in a palace chamber or a large room.

  3. Chamber music is music for a small ensemble of solo instruments that is sophisticated and performed in an intimate setting. This excludes almost all vocal music, unaccompanied solo music, symphonic music, and music that is primarily virtuosic.

  4. Jun 11, 2018 · World Encyclopedia. *chamber music (It. musica da camera, Ger. Kammermusik).* A term orig. intended (as Burney puts it c.1805) to cover such mus. as was not intended ‘for the church, the theatre, or a public concert room’. As now used it has lost any implication as to place of perf.

  5. Sep 23, 2022 · Chamber Music. As described the Chapter 2.3, Chamber music refers to smaller ensembles performing together. The word "chamber" is in contrast to the "concert hall," because chamber music was often performed traditionally in smaller venues (someone's private chambers ).

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  7. Feb 1, 2006 · In the mid-eighteenth century, chamber music without a keyboard was a comparatively modern idea and was epitomized by the rapid growth of the string quartet. Many such works were quite simple, or composed in a concertante style for a lively first violin accompanied by the other players.

  8. chamber music, Music composed for small instrumental ensembles and performed without a conductor. Traditionally intended for performance in a room or reception hall, often solely for the performers’ own pleasure, chamber music is now often heard in concert halls.

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