{"id":95659,"url":"https://api.musopen.org/v2/scores/95659/","number":2,"title":"Violins I","edition":null,"piece":{"id":42002,"url":"https://api.musopen.org/v2/pieces/42002/","slug":"suite-for-string-orchestra","title":"Suite for String Orchestra","description":"","movements":"","composer":{"id":4395,"url":"https://api.musopen.org/v2/composers/4395/","slug":"christopher-wilson","first_name":"Christopher","last_name":"Wilson","date_of_birth":"October 1874","place_of_birth":"England","date_of_death":"1919","description":"","image":null,"is_featured":false,"is_bookmarked":false},"form":{"id":16,"url":"https://api.musopen.org/v2/forms/16/","slug":"suite","name":"Suite","description":"In music, the terms 'suite' refers to a set of instrumental pieces, written for either a soloist. or a group of players (chamber orchestra, band, symphonic orchestra). The first suites date from the 14th century, and were often a simple set of ordered dances. By the Baroque period, though, the suite had become an important musical form, with a tonal relation between pieces. Terms that were often interchangeably used with 'suite' were 'ordre', 'partita', and sometimes 'overture'.\r\nDuring the Classical and early Romantic periods, the Suite fell out of use, with the symphony being a much more popular -and structurally coherent- type of multi movement work. The form was later revived in a slightly different form, no longer incorporating dances but simply many movements, or extracts from Operas and Ballets, or incidental music.","is_bookmarked":false},"period":{"id":4,"url":"https://api.musopen.org/v2/periods/4/","slug":"romantic","name":"Romantic","description":"The term 'Romantic music' denotes a period of Western academic music that lasted throughout most of the 19th century, framing itself in Romanticism, the European artistic and literary movement. Romantic music is often characterized as being a reaction to the contained elegance and purity of the Classical period, though the reality is far more complex. Romantic composers were often fascinated with several -often contradictory- subjects: Nature and man's constant struggle against it, everything supernatural and fabulous, the mythical past, the autobiographical and the heroic, the isolated genius, the future of mankind. Improvements in instrumental design and technique, and the growth of orchestras, expanded the possibilities for composers. The rise of the middle class and the emancipation of musicians from courts and patrons represented a change in the way music reached the society. Some of the Romantic composers took an interest in nationalistic music, expressing the state of turmoil that Europe suffered. Musical forms continued to develop: while symphonies became longer and more complex, short musical forms blossomed (such as Chopin's nocturnes). Interest in preservation of the music of the past grew, as well as the will to develop music beyond its current state in terms of form, harmony, counterpoint, etc. ","is_bookmarked":false},"instruments":[{"id":48,"url":"https://api.musopen.org/v2/instruments/48/","slug":"string-orchestra","name":"String Orchestra","description":"The string orchestra is an ensemble consisting solely of the string section of a regular orchestra. As in regular orchestra, their size and set-up may vary: they can be chamber orchestras (with as little as 12 performers in a 4.3.2.2.1 arrangement) or 60-piece orchestras, mainly used for big scale works (such as film music or pop arrangements). Music written for quartet, quintet, or sextets may be arranged for string orchestra, as well as pieces originally conceived for ensembles employing woodwind instruments.","image":"https://s.musopen.org/media/images/instruments/FHM-Orchestra-mk2006-03.jpg","is_bookmarked":false}],"key":null,"licenses":[],"avg_duration":null,"practice_difficulty":null,"rcm_difficulty_level":"","rating":0.0,"hits":4527,"is_bookmarked":false},"key":null,"instruments":[],"rating":0.0,"fileurl":"https://dl.musopen.org/sheetmusic/5c2097cb-2923-4f06-b9eb-5e92bb666129.pdf?filename=Violins%20I.pdf","is_bookmarked":false}