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  2. 20th-century classical music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/20th-century_classical_music

    Musical style diverged during the 20th century as it never had previously, so this century was without a dominant style. Modernism , impressionism , and post-romanticism can all be traced to the decades before the turn of the 20th century, but can be included because they evolved beyond the musical boundaries of the 19th-century styles that ...

  3. Modernism (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modernism_(music)

    In music, modernism is an aesthetic stance underlying the period of change and development in musical language that occurred around the turn of the 20th century, a period of diverse reactions in challenging and reinterpreting older categories of music, innovations that led to new ways of organizing and approaching harmonic, melodic, sonic, and rhythmic aspects of music, and changes in ...

  4. 20th-century music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/20th-century_music

    The following Wikipedia articles deal with 20th-century music. Western art music. Main articles. 20th-century classical music; ...

  5. Impressionism in music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impressionism_in_music

    Impressionism in music was a movement among various composers in Western classical music (mainly during the late 19th and early 20th centuries) whose music focuses on mood and atmosphere, "conveying the moods and emotions aroused by the subject rather than a detailed tone‐picture". [1] "

  6. Fantasia (musical form) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasia_(musical_form)

    Walter Willson Cobbett, in the opening decades of the 20th century, attempted to revive the fantasia style via a competition, to which works like the Phantasie trios and quartets by William Hurlstone, Armstrong Gibbs, John Ireland, Herbert Howells and Frank Bridge owe their existence, [3] as does Benjamin Britten's Phantasy in F minor for ...

  7. Neoclassicism (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoclassicism_(music)

    Igor Stravinsky, one of the most important and influential composers of the twentieth century. Neoclassicism in music was a twentieth-century trend, particularly current in the interwar period, in which composers sought to return to aesthetic precepts associated with the broadly defined concept of "classicism", namely order, balance, clarity, economy, and emotional restraint.

  8. Avant-garde music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avant-garde_music

    Avant-garde music may be distinguished from experimental music by the way it adopts an extreme position within a certain tradition, whereas experimental music lies outside tradition. [2] In a historical sense, some musicologists use the term "avant-garde music" for the radical compositions that succeeded the death of Anton Webern in 1945, [ 3 ...

  9. Neoromanticism (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoromanticism_(music)

    In Western classical music, neoromanticism is a return to the emotional expression associated with nineteenth-century Romanticism. Throughout the 20th and into the 21st century, numerous composers have created works which rejected or ignored emerging styles such as Modernism and Postmodernism.