Answer:
Baroque music differs from Medieval and Renaissance music with the profusion of simultaneous sounds as a means of achieving the beautiful.
Step-by-step explanation:
No musical school has such clear analogies with the fine arts as the Baroque: there is the cult of ornament, of the arabesque - notes that adorn the melody. From Monteverdi to Johann Sebastian Bach, music discovers the profusion of simultaneous sounds as a means of achieving beauty. Against the background of the instruments that take turns in the melodic narration comes the continuous bass (usually the harpsichord). The tonal language stands as a support of polyphony. New music genres emerge: oratory, cantata, keyboard sonata.