The exposition is played again with minor alterations
Recapitulation.
The three sections of sonata form are as follows. The EXPOSITION This is where the melody that the sonata is based on starts. The DEVELOPMENT This is where the melody is changed, usually becoming unrecogniseable from the original motif The RECAPITULATION is where the original melody is compared to the melody that it has been changed to. This sums up the sonata and concludes what has happened to the motif
recapitulation: emergence during embryonic development of various characters or structures that appeared during the evolutionary history of the strain or species; (music) the section of a composition or movement (especially in sonata form) in which musical themes that were introduced earlier are repeated; a summary at the end that repeats the substance of a longer discussion; (music) the repetition of themes introduced earlier (especially when one is composing the final part of a movement)
Sonata-allegro form is a form with three main divisions: exposition, development and recapitulation (a coda is frequently added). It is not same as binary or ternary forms. The sonata form is a form itself.
Yes, but it's unusual in that the development and recapitulation sections are repeated instead of the usual exposition.
Yes, the last part
Sonata form is a musical structure used in the 18th century. The three movements of sonata form are exposition, development, and recapitulation.
Recapitulation.
Exposition (often repeated), development, recapitulation, coda.
The three sections of sonata form are as follows. The EXPOSITION This is where the melody that the sonata is based on starts. The DEVELOPMENT This is where the melody is changed, usually becoming unrecogniseable from the original motif The RECAPITULATION is where the original melody is compared to the melody that it has been changed to. This sums up the sonata and concludes what has happened to the motif
The recapitulation.
recapitulation: emergence during embryonic development of various characters or structures that appeared during the evolutionary history of the strain or species; (music) the section of a composition or movement (especially in sonata form) in which musical themes that were introduced earlier are repeated; a summary at the end that repeats the substance of a longer discussion; (music) the repetition of themes introduced earlier (especially when one is composing the final part of a movement)
Sonata-allegro form is a form with three main divisions: exposition, development and recapitulation (a coda is frequently added). It is not same as binary or ternary forms. The sonata form is a form itself.
Yes, but it's unusual in that the development and recapitulation sections are repeated instead of the usual exposition.
The psychological climax of the sonata-allegro form is said to occur when the tonic key returns later in the piece of music, almost inevitably at the recapitulation.
A sonata is a three-movement piece for solo piano or any solo instrument with or without piano accompaniment. Sonata-allegro refers to a particular form originally used in one-movement pieces, later incorporated in the three-movement sonata which was named for the form. A typical sonata-allegro form is I first theme, expansion II second theme, expansion III development of the opening theme or themes IV recapitulation of the themes V coda Sonata-allegro originally included tonal relationships between the first and second themes, tonal freedom during the development, and tonal unity of the recapitulation and coda.
A type of sonata form used in classical concertos in which there are two expositions; one for the orchestra and one for the soloist followed by a development section and a recapitulation section.