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Mannheim School
noun
- a group of musicians of the mid-18th century in Mannheim, Germany, notable for developing a style of orchestral composition and performance directly antecedent to and influential on the classical style of Haydn and Mozart.
Mannheim School
/ ˈæԳɪ /
noun
- music a group of musicians and composers connected with the court orchestra at Mannheim during the mid-18th century, who evolved the controlled orchestral crescendo as well as a largely homophonic musical style
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Example Sentences
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Richter’s representation pointed to the Mannheim School, a group of composers in 18th-century Germany who established the stylistic principles that ushered in music’s Classical era.
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In the autumn there was appointed the first woman lecturer in a higher institution of learning,—this taking place in the Mannheim School of Commerce.
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