Library/PT 144/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Approach: Look for language that indicates whether the author views Schoenberg's stylistic changes as continuations or abrupt breaks. Key supporting sentences: 'Like Beethoven, Schoenberg worked in a constantly changing and evolving musical style' and 'three different musical styles through which Schoenberg's music evolved.' Also note: 'it was the next inevitable step in the historical development of music' and 'he developed the 12‑tone technique as a means of bringing a new system of order to nontonal music and stabilizing it.'

Passage Stimulus

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6.

It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about the relationships between the three styles in which Schoenberg wrote?

Correct Answer
A
The passage frames Schoenberg's three styles as successive stages of development. The author calls his work an 'evolving musical style' and explicitly refers to 'three different musical styles through which Schoenberg's music evolved.' The second stage is described as something he 'pushed ... until they no longer had a tonal basis' because it was 'the next inevitable step in the historical development of music.' The third stage is described as what he 'developed ... as a means of bringing a new system of order to nontonal music and stabilizing it.' Those phrases indicate each style naturally progresses from the previous one, so A is correct.
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