Poonam Agrawal wrote: ↑Thu May 06, 2021 2:09 pm
Hi crispycrispr!
To really understand the difference between answer choice (B) and answer choice (C), it is imperative to understand lines 47-56 in the passage.
The author of the passage explains that in the past, the early movements of the symphony were played faster than the last movement of the symphony. This was because the audience would clap at the end of each movement.
Now, audiences clap only at the end of the entire symphony (not after each movement), which forces musicians to put in extra brilliance in the last movement and not use the standard slow last movement approach. Therefore, the author suggests that the final movements of the symphonies would be played more slowly today if audiences went back to clapping at the end of each movement, and not just at the end of the entire symphony. This is answer choice (B).
I don't quite understand your explanation ... I'm re-reading the passage, but it doesn't compare between symphonies and movements. It just says that symphonies before are played faster than today, and final movements before are played slower than today. I get that this is because audience applauded at the end of each movement. So, my understanding is: to have slower final movements played, it's just simply re-enact what happened in the old days when slower movements were played--audience applauding at the end of each movement.
Your explanation makes me wonder: Are symphonies "the entire work"? It seems like symphonies aren't what's relevant to this question, so even if I don't know what symphonies are, I could still get this question right just by focusing on "slower final movements" ...?