Twentieth Century

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    Claude Debussy

    French composer who invented impressionism
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    Jean Sibelius

    Modern Finnish Composer
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    Arnold Schoenberg

    The father of the 12-tone music, teacher of Webern and Berg
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    Maurice Ravel

    French composer and innovator in pianistic styles
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    Igor Stravinsky

    Wrote The Rite of Spring, produced jazz, rock, and classical styles.
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    Anton von Webern

    Student of Schoenberg, known for musical brevity and clarity of texture.
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    Louis Durey

    French Composer part of Les Six
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    Sergei Prokofiev

    Russian composer influential in western culture
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    Arthur Honegger

    French Composer a part of Les Six who admired Bach
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    Darius Milhaud

    Friends with Satie; used polytonality
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    Germaine Tailleferre

    French composer a part of les six
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    George Gershwin

    Influential American composer and conductor who worked in Hollywood
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    Georges Auric

    French composer who by age 15 had composed over 200 works
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    Francis Poulenc

    French composer a part of Les Six
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    Twentieth Century Music

    Not dominated by one style. Began with drastic rebellions against past traditions and ended with going back to traditions. Polytonality, polyrhythms, polymers, polychords, and polyphonic techniques.
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    Neo-tonality

    Music that was hard to understand, often included dissonance.
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    Impressionism

    Introduced by Debussy. Ignored traditional rules of chords and all chords are treated as equal.
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    Expressionism

    Introduced by Schoenberg. All tweaked notes are treated equal and tonality was abandoned.
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    Aleatoric

    Composition that was left up to chance and was never the same twice.
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    Elektronische Musik

    Fusion of technology and acoustic music
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    Non-tonal music

    Focused on musical elements other than pitch
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    World War I

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    World War II

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    Musique Concrete

    Taking a natural sound, such a water dripping, and mixing it with other natural sounds.
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    The Cold War

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    Minimalism

    Repetitive music that only uses small units of music.
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    Postmodernism

    Focused on uniting past forms of music into an eclectic type.