Posts Tagged ‘Style Of Music’
There are many people in the world who will tell you that for soul tingling music you should listen to the songs of R&B performers. This style of music is catchy and has the ability of soothing you at the same time that it energizes your soul. You will find this popular form of music is the shortened form of rhythm and blues. It originated during the 1940s from a number of popular African American musical styles. The roots of R&B can be traced to gospel music, traditional pop music, Jazz music, and the blues music genre. In this final style you will find that jump and electric blues music more than the others had a huge influence on the development of the R&B music scene.
With the passage of time you can see how R&B has changed. During the early days the term rhythm and blues was used as the name given to all blues records. Then in the 1950s you could find that R&B included musical styles which incorporated rock and roll, soul music, electric blues and gospel music as well. As the 1970s rolled around the term R&B became the blanket name for all styles and forms of soul and funk music. In the 1980s with the emergence of a new style of R&B, the title of contemporary R&B was born.
Different combinations of musicians are given different names, based mostly on personnel, instrumentation, and the style of music played.
An orchestra, traditionally, is made up of the following: strings (violins, violas, cellos, bass), brass (trumpets, trombones, french horns), woodwinds (clarinet, oboe, bassoon, flutes, piccolos), and percussion (snare drum, bass drum, cymbals, misc. percussion instruments). Although there are exceptions, an orchestra plays mostly symphonic music (Mozart, Bach, Beethoven, etc.) and most often performs in a concert setting. Most orchestras are seated the same way with the violins and violas on the conductor’s left, cellos to his right, woodwinds behind the strings, brass in back to the conductor’s right, and percussion, back center. Its quite common that a piano is included to the conductor’s immediate left. A soloist usually takes this position as well. The average size of an orchestra is 75 to 100 players. Smaller groups of 50 or less are often called chamber orchestras.
The word orchestra is sometimes used in a less informal way such as the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain. The Boston Pops orchestra is known for playing popular songs of the day.