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orchestra |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.02 sec. |
orchestraInstrumental ensemble of varying size and composition. Today the term orchestra usually refers to the traditional large Western ensemble of bowed stringed instruments with brass, woodwind, and percussion instruments, with several players to each string part. The development of the orchestra coincides with the early history of opera. A major antecedent of the modern orchestra was that of the mid-17th-century French court, especially as employed by Jean-Baptiste Lully; it was dominated by 24 bowed strings but also often included woodwind instruments. Trumpets, horns, and timpani were often added in the early 18th century and were standard by the time of Franz Joseph Haydn. During the 19th century there was a considerable expansion, particularly in the number and variety of wind and percussion instruments; some works called for well over 100 musicians. The symphony orchestra changed little in the 20th century. See also orchestration.orchestra 1. a large group of musicians, esp one whose members play a variety of different instruments 2. a group of musicians, each playing the same type of instrument 3. the space reserved for musicians in a theatre, immediately in front of or under the stage 4. Chiefly US and Canadian the stalls in a theatre 5. (in the ancient Greek theatre) the semicircular space in front of the stage How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| Luciano Pavarotti, Italy's greatest living cultural icon, put an exclamation mark on the Turin Olympics' opening ceremony with an orchestrally backed rendition of Puccini's Nessun Dorma on Friday night. Lash rightly insists that for an adequate interpretation of Beethoven it is not enough to be able to read the notes, play the instruments with technical accuracy, know in what circumstances the music was composed, or know how the score has been interpreted orchestrally in the past. Prominent people don't always grasp that the thoughts buzzing orchestrally in their brains are not uniformly brilliant. |
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