- Fri Nov 29, 2019 7:45 pm
#72348
Hi Lola! This question asks about the structure of the last paragraph. So before examining the answer choices, it's helpful to take a second to look at the last paragraph and Pre-Phrase what a good summary of the structure is. The paragraph starts with a general critique of early music advocates (specifically: they divorce music and performance from the life of which they were a part - which, since you asked, basically means that they just follow the sheet music while ignoring the context of the era). The rest of the paragraph is then dedicated to two illustrations of this critique. The first illustration is that of how the piano was simply used to beat time because no better method was around back then (everything from "The discovery that Haydn's..." to "...beat time was found"). The second illustration is about how tempo was related to audience applause etiquette (structurally, this illustration covers everything from the end of the first illustration through the end of the paragraph). So a strong Pre-Phrase would be: a critique of a movement is made, and then supported by two illustrations.
Answer Choice (B) matches that Pre-Phrase perfectly. Answer Choice (E) has the correct component parts more or less, but they are backwards! The general critique comes first, and then the examples. Not vice versa. Hope that helps!