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Sonata form

Sonata form is a musical form, a way of organising the various themes within a piece. It has been very widely used by classical composers since the 18th century. It was the standard form for the first movement of a symphony, concerto, sonata or other works based on them, like string quartets. For this reason, it is sometimes called first movement form, although this is somewhat of a misnomer, as it has been used in other movements of pieces. It is also sometimes known as compound binary form.

The classical sonata form movement consists of the following sections:

This is the classical sonata form, but it may be varied in a number of ways. The key of the second subject may be something other than the dominant or the relative major - for example, the piano quintet by Johannes Brahms has the first subject in F minor, but the second subject in C sharp minor, a tritone higher. The keys in the recapitulation may also be altered - in the same piece, the second subject in the recapitulation is in F sharp minor, rather than the F minor of the first subject. The recapitulation may also be significantly different from the exposition. In some of Joseph Haydn's pieces, the second subject is exactly the same as the first, the only distinguishing factor being that they are in different keys. So long as the general shape remains the same, the movement can still be said to be in sonata form. The first movements of several symphonies by Gustav Mahler, for example, are described as being in sonata form, although they diverge from the above scheme quite dramatically.

Sonata form shares characteristics with both binary form and ternary form. It terms of key relationships, it is very like binary form, with a first half moving from the home key to the dominant and the second half moving back again (this is why sonata form is sometimes known as compound binary form); in other ways it is very like ternary form, being divided into three sections, the first (exposition) of a particular character, the second (development) in contrast to it, the third section (recapitulation) the same as the first.

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