People & Creators
Orchestra instruments
Concepts & Styles
Opera & Works
100

He invented the saxophone in 1845.

Adolphe Sax

100

This keyboard percussion instrument has a metallic and 'celestial' sound.

Celesta

100

An expressive and very demanding Italian style of singing that emphasized melodic beauty.

Bel canto

100

A type of comic opera developed by Offenbach that included fashionable dances like the can-can.

Operetta

200

This group of five self-taught Russian composers rescued the traditional melodies of their country.

The Five

200

It's the brass instrument with the lowest register in the entire orchestra.


Tuba

200

The movement in which composers defended the musical traditions of their own countries.

Musical Nationalism

200

This famous opera by Georges Bizet has a tragic plot with spoken text and is set in Spain.

Carmen

300

This Italian composer was famous for his beautiful melodies and the large choruses in his operas.

Giuseppe Verdi

300

Although it already existed, technical advances made this the most important instrument of the Romantic period.

Piano

300

Instrumental music that aims to describe a story, a landscape, or a poem without following a fixed structure.

Programme music

300

A short, intimate piece for piano, whose name means "of the night."

Nocturne

400

He created the symphonic poem and was a key figure in programme music.

Franz Liszt

400

This woodwind instrument, derived from the oboe, has a distinctive pear-shaped bell.

English horn

400

Wagner's technique of using a recurring musical idea associated with a specific character, object, or situation.

Leitmotiv

400

This work by Hector Berlioz is a great example of a Programme Symphony.

Symphonie Fantastique

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