Salon music

Salon music was a popular music genre in Europe during the 19th century. It was usually written for solo piano in the romantic style, and often performed by the composer at events known as "Salons". Salon compositions are usually fairly short and often focus on virtuoso pianistic display or emotional expression of a sentimental character. Common subgenres of salon music are the operatic paraphrase or fantasia, in which multiple themes from a popular opera are the basis of the composition, and the musical character-piece, which portrays in music a particular situation or narrative.

Salon composers

Many popular composers wrote at least a few pieces which fall into the category of salon music. Some pianists composed only salon music, but many of these specialists have become highly obscure. The following is a list of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century composers in whose work salon music was predominant.

Well known performers

gollark: See, you should have given a copy to me so I could "safely" store it.
gollark: Windows, underscore in real reality.
gollark: It has docs, you just don't like them.
gollark: https://esolangs.org/wiki/Macron
gollark: ```pythonimport fileinputout_js = ""i = 0for line in fileinput.input(): for char in line: if char in "><+-.,[]": out_js += f"function macro{i}() {{}}\n" i += 1print(out_js)```It compiles Macron to JS.

References

  1. Copyright entry 1 August 1925: Uila: Valse Francaise, Rudolph G. Kopp (Palma Music Publishers, Chicago, Illinois).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.