Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - What are the schools of Western classical music?

What are the schools of Western classical music?

The main schools are:

Romantic Music (Romantical Music) is one of the music schools, also known as the "Romantic Music School" or "Romantic Music". It generally refers to a new style of music that began in Germany and Austria at the end of the 18th century and spread throughout Europe at the beginning of the 19th century. This new style was also reflected in other fields of literature and art, and most of its contents expressed the profound contradictions between ideals and reality. And through life and death, loneliness and love, love of nature and other lyrical subjects, expressed the dissatisfaction of the intellectual class with the reality of life, the yearning and thirst for freedom and happiness. Romantic musicians generally favor fantasy themes and focus on expressing subjective inner feelings, and thus lyrical classical school of certain forms of restriction, so that music creation has been a new progress.

The National Music School (NMS) is also known as the "National Music School". It refers to the folk music as the material, combined with Western European compositional techniques, to create the country, the spirit of the nation and the artistic characteristics of the school of music. National school of music in Russia, with Glinka as the pioneer, followed by Balakirev, Guy, Borodin, etc.; national school of music in Eastern Europe, the Czech Smetana and Dvorak; in the middle of the nineteenth century, the national school of music in the northern Europe, the representative of the Norwegian Grieg, Finland's Sibelius; in addition, Hungary's Bartok, Romania's George Ainescu and so on, all for the famous national school of music musicians.