Respuesta :
Answer:
false
Explanation:
The Elizabethan period in England is what comprises the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558-1603), considered the golden age of English history. It is the height of the renaissance in that country, with the greatest highlights for literature and poetry.
During the sixteenth century, composers became increasingly interested in writing music for instruments - not just dances, but pieces meant to be simply played and played. The instruments were divided into two large groups: the bas ("low" or "soft") instruments, intended for home music, and the haut ("loud"), to be played in churches, large halls or in the open. A few belonged to both categories. Certain instruments, such as charamels, flutes, and some types of medieval bugles, remained popular; others have been modified and perfected; and many were invented: Lute, Violas, Cromorne, Cervelato, Sacabuxa, Trumpet and Percussion Instruments.
The Elizabethans designated a group of instruments playing together by consort (meaning word similar to "covenant"). When the instruments were from the same family, there was a whole consort, and when they were from different families, a broken consort, since the uniformity of the sounds was "broken".