Romantic music can most succinctly be characterized as an exploration of extremes. Tempo fluctuation, dynamics, instrument range, orchestral size, instrumental variety, and harmonic complexity. It was a growth from and rebuke of the constraints of the Classical period, which was itself a rebuke of the excesses of the Baroque. Answer from BirdBruce on reddit.com
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Classic FM
classicfm.com › discover-music › periods-genres › romantic
Romantic - Periods & Genres - Discover Music - Classic FM
Liszt was one of the greatest of his time, and wrote demanding piano music to show off his own brilliance. Chopin is also among the outstanding composer-performers from this time. In the world of opera, cue the entrance of Verdi in the middle of the Romantic era.
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Music Theory Academy
musictheoryacademy.com › home › romantic period music
Romantic Period Music - Music Theory Academy
January 24, 2019 - Beethoven, Liszt and Debussy also wrote programme music. For example, in Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony, the woodwind instruments are used to imitate the sound of birds. Vocal music maintained its popularity in the Romantic period.
Discussions

theory - What is the difference between the Romantic and post-romantic periods? - Music: Practice & Theory Stack Exchange
And I don't quite understand what ... that the Romantic period contains 'elaboration(s) of linear tonal syntax'. ... If you open the linked file and you search for the terms you've quoted you'll find the answers. Do you want me to copy-paste them here for you? Anyway, thank you for this link and grace to your question I have also found and downloaded this book file: www.ssoar.info Music of the twentieth ... More on music.stackexchange.com
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January 4, 2020
What are your top 10 favorite Romantic era pieces?
Wagner - Tristan & Isolde Strauss - Elektra Mahler 5 Brahms 1 Liszt - B minor sonata Nielsen 1 Schumann - Fantasy in C Chopin - Piano Sonata no. 3 Sibelius 6 Schönberg - Verklärte Nacht Very German, and that's with me excluding Beethoven and Schubert (op. 109 and String Quintet). More on reddit.com
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May 24, 2021
What makes romantic era music so romantic?
Contrapuntally voicelead chromatic extended harmonies. (actually I have no idea and I'm not sure there's an answer to your question) More on reddit.com
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August 18, 2022
OPINION: The Romantic Period could be split into 2 seperate periods.
Hate to tell you this but the terms "Early Romantic" and "Late Romantic" are already in common use. More on reddit.com
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March 13, 2024
Romantic music can most succinctly be characterized as an exploration of extremes. Tempo fluctuation, dynamics, instrument range, orchestral size, instrumental variety, and harmonic complexity. It was a growth from and rebuke of the constraints of the Classical period, which was itself a rebuke of the excesses of the Baroque. Answer from BirdBruce on reddit.com
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Stringovation
blogs.stringovation.com › the-romantic-period-of-music
The Romantic Period of Music
September 4, 2025 - Romantic music didn’t break completely with Classical tradition—it expanded its vocabulary. For example, Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony defies traditional phrasing structures, and Mahler’s Symphony No.
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Romantic_music
Romantic music - Wikipedia
2 weeks ago - Important examples include Tristan und Isolde by Richard Wagner and Bagatelle sans tonalité by Franz Liszt. This limit was finally reached during the Late Romantic period where progressive tonality is demonstrated in the works of composers ...
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Practising the Piano
practisingthepiano.com › home › learning pieces › playing piano music from the romantic period
Playing Piano Music from the Romantic Period - Practising the Piano
November 22, 2023 - Theme and variation was one of the few forms to survive from the Baroque period. Virtuosity: Pianos (and orchestras) were getting bigger, and the music became more and more difficult to play. This gave rise to the professional musician, the virtuoso as “Romantic Hero”, who trained in the newly founded conservatories, spending hours a day practising specially composed studies and exercises designed to build up their technique.
Find elsewhere
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Musicgcse
musicgcse.co.uk › concerto-through-time › romantic
GCSE Music Revision - Romantic
Large parts of the Romantic concerto were still diatonic, but composers would experiment with chords and notes from outside of the key. These are called chromatic notes and chords. This would add dissonance to the music. Dissonance is when notes clash with one another. This was sometimes done on purpose to add a sense of expression and drama to the music. ... We know that concertos in the Baroque and Classical periods modulated to related keys, so modulation is not a new feature to the Romantic period.
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MasterClass
masterclass.com › articles › romantic-period-music-guide
Romantic Period Music Guide: 5 Iconic Romantic Composers - 2025 - MasterClass
Programmatic music—where instrumental music tells a story—was popular from Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique (a symphonic poem) all the way to twentieth-century composers like the German master Richard Strauss, whose Symphonia Domestica is a hallmark of programmatic music. Influence on opera: Opera, with its innate emotional heft, became an obvious match for the Romantic period.
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Hoffman Academy
hoffmanacademy.com › blog › romantic-period-music-composers-characteristics-sheet-music
Romantic Period Music: Composers, History & Sheet Music
Learn about Romantic period music, including romantic era composers, musical characteristics, & sheet music for famous pieces.
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Fiveable
fiveable.me › all study guides › intro to humanities › unit 6 – music evolution through time study guides › topic: 6.5
Romantic period music | Intro to Humanities Class Notes | Fiveable
August 22, 2025 - Review 6.5 Romantic period music for your test on Unit 6 – Music Evolution Through Time. For students taking Intro to Humanities
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Scribd
scribd.com › doc › 272951475 › Characteristics-of-Romantic-Period
Characteristics of Romantic Period | PDF
Romantic music placed a strong emphasis on emotional expression and individual style. It featured more lyrical melodies accompanied by rich harmonies that sometimes used dissonance. Composers also explored darker tones and wider ranges of dynamics. The orchestra grew larger during this period as composers made use of a more developed brass section.
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The Main Characteristics of Romantic Music

https://www.rpfuller.com/gcse/music/romantic.html

  • Freedom of form and design. It was more personal and emotional.

  • Song-like melodies (lyrical), as well as many chromatic harmonies and discords.

  • Dramatic contrasts of dynamics and pitch.

  • Big orchestras, due mainly to brass and the invention of the valve.

  • Wide variety of pieces (i.e. songs up to five hour Wagner operas)

  • Programme music (music that tells a story)

  • Shape was brought to work through the use of recurring themes.

  • Great technical virtuosity.

  • Nationalism (a reaction against German influence)

    Postromantic (Blair Allen Johnston - the dissertation of your link)

  • Deformation and Structural Tension

  • Hyperdissonance: Definition and Initial Analytic Applications

  • Formalizing the Model: Tension Arcs

  • Exaggeration of Tonal Premises

  • Distortion of Tonal Premises

  • A Parenthesis: Neutralization of Tonal Premises

I don't fully understand what he's saying, in terms of chromatic expansion, elaborations of linear tonal syntax, exaggeration and fragmentation of tonal syntax and the superimposition of conventional functional tonal structures and intense chromatic and modal structures.

Let's assume that if someone will be able to find and read this dissertation he will know or understand what is meant by chromatic extension.*1)

So let's pick another example...

Blair quotes:

However, the Encyclopædia Britannica provides a starting point: [A] musical style typical of the last decades of the 19th century and first decades of the 20th century and characterized by exaggeration of certain elements of the musical Romanticism of the 19th century. Postromanticism exhibits extreme largeness of scope and design, a mixture of various musical forms (e.g., opera and symphony), and heightened contrapuntal complexity (i.e., a long or vast array, or both, of simultaneous but independent musical lines or events). Often Postromanticism also embraces vivid religious or mystical fervour, a sense of longing, and a sense of the grim and the grotesque.

Exaggeration and fragmentation of tonal syntax

“Exaggeration” and “vast array…of simultaneous but independent musical lines or events” are particularly telling. From them, I offer a more specific observation: if the Romantic is characterized by chromatic expansion and the development of striking elaborations of linear tonal syntax, then the Postromantic is characterized by exaggeration and ultimately fragmentation of tonal syntax, and the juxtaposition or superimposition of conventional functional tonal structures and intense chromatic and/or modal structures that challenge and even deform the functional tonal basis. In my view, complex interaction of variegated melodic-harmonic components is one source of the continuing fascination Postromantic music holds. A basic claim in the present document is that Rachmaninoff was a Postromantic composer, not an anachronistic Romantic composer.

*1)

To describe the development of harmony from basic chords to diminished seventh chords, mediant, neapolitan 6th, Italian-, French- and German-Sixth until the Tristan chord would be a theme too vast to answer the chromatic extensions. The best advice would be to listen to the music of Rachmaninoff and analyze his chords and progressions. (Just the intro of his Piano concerto will provide us a full range of interesting harmony!)

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Let me try to unpack the quotation a bit.

Romantic characteristics:

  • "Chromatic expansion": more possibilities for use of chromaticism, in context, I think this refers mostly to harmonic patterns (like chromatic chord progressions you wouldn't generally find in Bach or Mozart, for example)
  • "Development of striking elaborations of linear tonal syntax": "linear tonal syntax" here is likely a reference to Schenkerian theory, one of whose focuses is on trying to isolate so-called underlying "linear" voice-leading structures (e.g., simple descending lines) that are supposedly elaborated with lots of other "surface-level" notes, in a manner similar to baroque-style diminution and embellishment

The "striking elaborations" he's referring to are probably places where these "linear" structures become quite chromatic and/or incorporate extensive chromatic digressions in romantic period music.

Postromantic characteristics:

  • "Exaggeration and ultimately fragmentation of tonal syntax": in other words, traditional tonal progressions get used in both exaggerated ways (e.g., lots of repetitive tonal progressions) and fragmented (e.g., rather than getting full phrases of tonal harmonic progressions, you merely get fragments -- small parts of chord progressions that sound sort of like what Mozart would do, but then deviate off in an unexpected manner or get interrupted by other harmonies)
  • "Juxtaposition or superimposition of conventional functional tonal structures and intense chromatic and/or modal structures": this could be a reference to a lot of things, but generally it's referencing the idea that you might have something that sounds simple and harmonically straightforward (similar to Mozart) and then suddenly an intense chromatic passage follows or inserts itself, or rather than following "tonal" progressions, the music veers off into a mode "modal" harmony
  • "Challenge and even deform the functional tonal basis": in other words, at some points you may not know where the harmony is leading anymore, you may not end up in the key you expect; in general, the harmony becomes unpredictable compared to what you'd expect in Mozart
  • "Complex interaction of variegated melodic-harmonic components": more varied harmony (as noted in the points above), combined with melodic/contrapuntal driving forces that are also more varied than the typical Schenkerian reductive patterns that are often used to analyze romantic period music

(I use "Mozart" above as just an example of traditional "tonal" music that usually has very clearly defined functional harmony, with very predictable progressions and phrases, etc.)

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Lumen Learning
courses.lumenlearning.com › suny-musicapp-medieval-modern › chapter › romantic-music
Romantic Music | Music 101
Characteristics often attributed to Romanticism, including musical Romanticism, are: ... Such lists, however, proliferated over time, resulting in a “chaos of antithetical phenomena,” criticized for their superficiality and for signifying so many different things that there came to be no central meaning. The attributes have also been criticized for being too vague. For example, features of the “ghostly and supernatural” could apply equally to Mozart’s Don Giovanni from 1787 and Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress from 1951.
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Quora
quora.com › What-do-you-find-interesting-about-Romantic-period-music
What do you find interesting about Romantic period music? - Quora
Answer (1 of 3): Thanks for the A2A. What do you find interesting about Romantic period music? For me, it’s emotionalism. Mozart was a great psychologist in his operas, as was Monteverdi. Yet the way they depict the emotions the characters are experiencing is still objective, partly because th...
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Musical U
musical-u.com › musical u › ear training › genres › an intro to the romantic era
An Intro to the Romantic Era - Musical U
February 14, 2017 - Easily the most well-known composer from the period, Chopin (pronounced Sho-PAN) represents an interesting figure because his success relied solely on smaller musical forms. For example, he didn’t write even a single symphony, which were the dominant form at the time. Nevertheless, Chopin has among the highest number of works that are still used in modern classical repertoires. Franz Liszt. The Romantic ...
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Britannica
britannica.com › entertainment & pop culture › music theory & compositions
Romanticism - Emotion, Expression, Imagination | Britannica
1 month ago - The possibilities for dramatic expressiveness in music were augmented both by the expansion and perfection of the instrumental repertoire and by the creation of new musical forms, such as the lied, nocturne, intermezzo, capriccio, prelude, and mazurka. The Romantic spirit often found inspiration in poetic texts, legends, and folk tales, and the linking of words and music either programmatically or through such forms as the concert overture and incidental music is another distinguishing feature of Romantic music.
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BBC
bbc.co.uk › bitesize › guides › zw3nrwx › revision › 4
Romantic - Musical periods and styles - National 5 Music Revision - BBC Bitesize
October 22, 2024 - Music was used to evoke stories, places or events. Nature was a particularly popular subject. For example Mendelssohn's "Hebrides Overture" was inspired by the composer's trip to the island of Staffa.
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Jeanmichelserres
jeanmichelserres.com › home › text › note / memorandum / remark › notes on late romantic music (c1880-1910): history, characteristics and composers
Notes on Late Romantic Music (c1880-1910): History, Characteristics and Composers | Jean-Michel Serres, Composer-pianist (Apfel Café Music): Website
August 9, 2025 - This helped to establish distinct national musical identities and expressed a sense of national pride. Composers like Antonín Dvořák and Jean Sibelius are notable examples of this trend. ... Several composers are central to the Late Romantic period, each contributing to its unique sound and characteristics.
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Tina Christie Flute
tinachristieflute.com › home › music eras for flutists › romantic era (1800-1900) › characteristics of romantic music
Characteristics of Romantic Music - Tina Christie Flute
March 11, 2022 - Ornamentation: Romantic composers became more exact in writing ornaments than what occurred in the Baroque and Classical eras. This meant that performers became less responsible for adding ornamentation and shifted to reading what the composer wrote. The gruppetto, or turn, became widely used in the Romantic period.
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Art Sphere Inc.
artsphere.org › home › curriculum › art & music history › introduction to the romantic period of classical music
Introduction to the Romantic Period of Classical Music | Art Sphere Inc.
July 14, 2022 - There are quite a few notable composers of the Romantic period. Liszt is known for his piano compositions, as is Chopin. Chopin also composed operas, and Verdi composed operas, too. Verdi’s operas are unique in that he introduced themes besides art and literature in his works—he also included political, social, and national themes. Wagner is another notable opera composer, and he created sweeping music where the characters and themes are given motif melodies, known as leitmotifs.