New
New
Lesson 2 of 5
  • Year 10
  • AQA

The orchestra

I can identify the instruments of the orchestra and can explain how the orchestra developed through the Baroque, Classical and Romantic periods.

Lesson 2 of 5
New
New
  • Year 10
  • AQA

The orchestra

I can identify the instruments of the orchestra and can explain how the orchestra developed through the Baroque, Classical and Romantic periods.

These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.

Switch to our new teaching resources now - designed by teachers and leading subject experts, and tested in classrooms.

These resources were created for remote use during the pandemic and are not designed for classroom teaching.

Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. Between 1600 and 1910 the number of players and variety of instruments in the orchestra increased dramatically.
  2. The Baroque orchestra was mostly strings with a few woodwind or brass instruments and a harpsichord.
  3. The Classical orchestra was larger, with more woodwind, brass and percussion and no harpsichord.
  4. The huge Romantic orchestra had large woodwind, brass and percussion sections, giving composers many timbres to exploit.
  5. As the orchestra increased in size, woodwind, brass and percussion took on more important roles.

Keywords

  • Orchestra - a large ensemble that is central to the Western Classical Tradition, consisting of strings, woodwind, brass and percussion instruments

  • Strings - instruments with strings that are normally played with a bow, including the violin, viola, cello and double bass

  • Woodwind - instruments that produce sound through blown air, including the flute, clarinet, oboe and bassoon

  • Brass - metal instruments with valves or slides that produce sound with air, including the trumpet, trombone, French horn and tuba

  • Percussion - instruments that produce sound by being struck or hit, including drums, cymbals, xylophones and many others

Common misconception

The orchestra has only grown through the adding of more of the same instruments.

The number of players has increased, but the variety of instruments has also increased. Many different instruments have been added to the orchestra since the 1600s, including brass, woodwind, percussion and keyboard instruments.


To help you plan your year 10 music lesson on: The orchestra, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...

Ideally pupils should deepen learning by seeing a performance (recorded or live) of an orchestra. This will put this lesson into context and give them a greater sense of what an orchestral performance looks like. Consider showing pupils clips (or more) of an orchestral performance to achieve this.
Teacher tip

Equipment

Licence

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2025), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).

Lesson video

Loading...

Prior knowledge starter quiz

Download quiz pdf

6 Questions

Q1.
What is an orchestra?

a small jazz band
Correct answer: a large ensemble of strings, woodwind, brass, and percussion
a group of singers
a rock band

Q2.
Which family of instruments includes violin, viola, cello, and double bass?

brass
woodwind
Correct answer: strings
percussion

Q3.
Which family of instruments produces sound by blown air, such as flute, clarinet, oboe, and bassoon?

strings
Correct answer: woodwind
brass
percussion

Q4.
Which instrument family includes trumpet, trombone, French horn, and tuba?

percussion
Correct answer: brass
woodwind
strings

Q5.
Which instrument family includes drums, cymbals, and xylophones?

Correct answer: percussion
woodwind
brass
strings

Q6.
Which instrument was central to the Baroque orchestra but disappeared in the Classical period?

piano
Correct answer: harpsichord
trumpet
violin

Assessment exit quiz

Download quiz pdf

6 Questions

Q1.
Which best describes the Baroque orchestra?

very large, with many brass and percussion
Correct answer: mostly strings, with a few woodwind or brass, plus harpsichord
no string instruments
only percussion

Q2.
Which best describes the Classical orchestra?

small, with harpsichord
Correct answer: larger, with more woodwind, brass, percussion, but no harpsichord
very large with expanded sections
only strings

Q3.
Which best describes the Romantic orchestra?

small, with harpsichord
piano and voice only
Correct answer: huge, with large woodwind, brass, percussion sections and dramatic variety
simple, with only strings

Q4.
Match the period to the orchestra:

Correct Answer:Baroque,small, mostly strings with harpsichord

small, mostly strings with harpsichord

Correct Answer:Classical,larger, more woodwind, brass, percussion, no harpsichord

larger, more woodwind, brass, percussion, no harpsichord

Correct Answer:Romantic,huge, dramatic, wide variety of instruments

huge, dramatic, wide variety of instruments

Q5.
Which instrument family took on more important roles as the orchestra grew?

strings only
Correct answer: woodwind, brass, and percussion
just percussion
only brass

Q6.
Which is the correct order of the three periods?

Romantic → Classical → Baroque
Correct answer: Baroque → Classical → Romantic
Classical → Baroque → Romantic
Baroque → Romantic → Classical