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2007-02-25 00:47:30 · 3 answers · asked by trixie 2 in Entertainment & Music Music

3 answers

These orchestras are designed to play music between 1700 and 1750. They use older instruments and contain a harpsichor. They consist of viols, wooden flutes, oboes, and sometimes an organ. Some baroque composers include Bach and Handel.

2007-02-25 01:28:16 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Baroque Orchestra is the earliest example of a true orchestra which came into existence in the mid-late 1600s. Its origins were in France where Jean-Baptiste Lully added the newly re-designed hautboy and transverse flutes to his vingt-quatre violons du Roy. As well as violins and woodwinds, the baroque orchestra would have still contained continuo instruments such as the theorbo and harpsichord. The baroque orchestra was reasonably small with the maximum of thirty people. The new-fangled instrumentation and orchestration soon spread to the rest of Europe and soon became the standard solo instrumental grouping.

The term 'baroque orchestra' is also commonly used to refer to contemporary chamber orchestras giving historically informed performances of baroque, classical, or even romantic music, using original instruments (or copies therof). Many groups can be found that perform early music in the manner it would have been performed at the time, using the same instruments and the same performance practices.

2007-02-25 09:28:45 · answer #2 · answered by yehaa yahoo 2 · 0 0

It's music from a certain time. there are no certain similarities in the music. it just all got written during the same years.

2007-02-25 08:58:03 · answer #3 · answered by wendy_da_goodlil_witch 7 · 0 0

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