I find support for the idea of natural progression in a few places, ataraxia10. First, at lines 22-25:
This is true of the three different musical styles through which Schoenberg’s music evolved
"Evolved" sounds like it was a natural progression, as opposed to something unnatural or revolutionary. Here, the author refers to all three styles, not just the first two.
Then, this at lines 33-35:
He did this in part because in his view it was the next inevitable step in the historical development of music
"Inevitable" sounds like it was natural, too. These are Schoenberg's views, of course, but our author seems to be in complete agreement with him. He certainly admires and approves of Schoenberg, right?
Third, lines 39-41:
Finally, he developed the 12-tone technique as a means of bringing a new system of order to nontonal music and stabilizing it.
To me, "stabilizing" something sounds like a natural step, as opposed to a radical or unnatural one. The author presents these steps as being evolutionary, which is natural. It all makes sense to the author, and each style flows from the one before it in an orderly fashion without any sudden shifts and departures (compared to, say, the passage about Miles Davis from the October 1996 test, where Miles made several radical shifts in his style over his long career, zig-zagging from one style to the next).
Looking at the lines you cited now for a moment:
As his career progressed, his music became more condensed, more violent in its contrasts, and therefore more difficult to follow.
Even here, the author refers to Schoenberg's music as a progression. It got difficult to follow, sure, but did it do so naturally, or in some revolutionary, disorganized and unexpected way? To me, this sounds a lot like the natural progression of a child into a teenager! We might not like it, but it's still "natural."
Tough passage, and tough question, but if you look for it you can find the evidence for the right answer. To support answer C, we would need some evidence that the change to the third style was "inexplicable". Not just a description of what that style was, but words to indicate why the author found the change surprising, unexpected, or unnatural. I'm not finding anything like that here, are you?
Give it another look and see if that all makes sense now. Keep up the good work!
Adam M. Tyson
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