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A "there are no slopes without music" is a new complete clause. It does not make sense to put at the end of the phrase, specially after a coma.
B "Because...., there are no..." is not a reasonable conclusion. Because they can chose there are no slopes without music? What about: "Because the antennas are installed through all the resorts, there are no slopes without music." That makes more sense.
C The "However" indicates that a contrast will come. But "skiers can choose among hard rock,..." is not a contrast
D CORRECT. A contrast is not needed to make sense with the whole phrase; however, when it adds "although", then a clear contrast follows the clause. Although you can chose among a lot of styles, you can not ski without hearing some music.
E "but no slopes without music " does not make a parallel comparison with the previous clause.

Well, here is my attempt to explain SC questions. As you can see in my punctuation Verbal is not my strong.

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IMO D. It took me 3 min to reach at D.

If you have noticed that we have ;. So we need next part of the sentence not dependent on the introductory part.
In D, we have a clear contrast b/w different slopes and no slopes without music. Let's see what others have:

Most North Carolina ski resorts broadcast music onto the slopes; skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are no slopes without music.

(A) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are
(B) because skiers can choose hard rock, soft pop, or “beautiful music,” there are [there seems many examples and subclauses here separated by a comma. This is sentence framentation. Incorrect]
(C) however, skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music,” and [This is close contender but in the end, it fails to maintain ||sm on adjective (hard, soft,..., no slopes). Incorrect]
(D) although skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are [Correct. We have a contrast introdued by Although and all parts are in sync]
(E) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music” slopes, but [The subclause introduced by BUT is awkward and misleads. Incorrect]
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The 2nd part of the question is referring to slopes with music and slopes without music. Skiers have the option of choosing slopes with music however they don't have the option of choosing one with out music. Hence D :-D

(A) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are So? Improper conclusion
(B) because skiers can choose hard rock, soft pop, or “beautiful music,” there are - Causal effect is not proper
(C) however, skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music,” and - Categorizing slopes with no music along with various music options
(D) although skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are - :-D
(E) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music” slopes, but - does not refer to the skier's option
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D for me for using the right construction of an independent but related sentence after a semicolon, for selecting the preposition among because there are more than two choices and for employing the conjunction and to indicate that the series of the choices is coming to an end
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The 2nd part of the question is referring to slopes with music and slopes without music. Skiers have the option of choosing slopes with music however they don't have the option of choosing one with out music. Hence D :-D

(A) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are So? Improper conclusion
(B) because skiers can choose hard rock, soft pop, or “beautiful music,” there are - Causal effect is not proper
(C) however, skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music,” and - Categorizing slopes with no music along with various music options
(D) although skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are - :-D
(E) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music” slopes, but - does not refer to the skier's option
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Most North Carolina ski resorts broadcast music onto the slopes; skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are no slopes without music.

(A) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are
Incorrect. Run-on sentence. "There are no slopes" is not introduced by any conjunction.
(B) because skiers can choose hard rock, soft pop, or “beautiful music,” there are
Incorrect. Meaning change. It is not because they can choose the type of song that slopes without songs exist.
(C) however, skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music,” and
Incorrect. Meaning change.
(D) although skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are
Correct.
(E) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music” slopes, but
Incorrect. Awkward.
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Most North Carolina ski resorts broadcast music onto the slopes; skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are no slopes without music.

A) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes, there are
The conjunction contrasting “skiers can choose…” and “there are…” is missing, leaving the second sentence unfinished.
B) because skiers can choose hard rock, soft pop, or “beautiful music”, there are
The causal relationship is ambiguous and illogical.
Skiers cannot choose the type of music, but the type of slope.

C) however, skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music,” and
How can skiers choose among various types of music and “no slopes without music”? The last option is not logical in relation with the previous options.
Skiers cannot choose the type of music, but the type of slope.

E) skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, “beautiful music” slopes, but
An "and” or an "or" is missing. “Skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop and/or “beautiful music” slopes,…”.
The second part “but no slopes without music” is awkward and should be rephrased.
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Hi all, I have small doubt, even in option D, "there are.." is IC and is not separated by any FANBOY, so why is that correct?
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Sadharm12
Hi all, I have small doubt, even in option D, "there are.." is IC and is not separated by any FANBOY, so why is that correct?

Hello Sadharm12,

We hope this finds you well.

To answer your query, the use of a comma is appropriate here because the clause preceding "there are..." - "although skiers can choose among hard rock, soft pop, and “beautiful music” slopes" - is a dependent clause; remember, commas are used to join independent clauses with dependent clauses.

We hope this helps.
All the best!
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