Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many people call Schoenberg’s music loud, messy, and hard to understand, but similar complaints were once made about Beethoven. Both composers changed how music expresses feelings, and Beethoven only became widely liked after recordings made repeated listening possible. Schoenberg’s style moved in three stages: starting with a late‑Romantic sound like Brahms, then abandoning traditional keys to express intense feelings, and finally creating a twelve‑tone system to organize atonal music. His work is highly skilled but grew denser and harder to follow; he matters because he made music show new, sometimes unsettling emotions, not simply because it sounds noisy.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the concluding paragraph where the author explicitly states what "makes Schoenberg's music essential"; choose the option that matches that stated attribute.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.Which one of the following aspects of Schoenberg's music does the author appear to value most highly?
Correct Answer
D
The author directly identifies the decisive quality: "But the real issue for any piece of music is not how it is made, but what it has to say." He then states: "What makes Schoenberg's music essential is that he precisely delineated recognizable and sometimes disquieting emotional states that music had not recorded before." The author reinforces this point: some works are "disturbing... because [they] unflinchingly face difficult truths." These explicit statements show the author values Schoenberg's depiction of previously unrecorded emotional states above technical or structural features.
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