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Sonata form

Sonata form or sonata-allegro 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.

Table of contents
1 Outline of sonata form
2 The function of sonata form
3 Variation in sonata form
4 Sonata form in the postclassical era
5 Sonata form and other musical forms
6 Resources

Outline of sonata form

The classical sonata form movement in its simplest version consists of the following sections:

(It should be noted that the above terminology is not universally used: some writers speak of the first and second subjects rather than groups, others speak of the pricipal or main theme and the subordinate theme.)

The function of sonata form

Theorists have long sought to understand why the arrangements of keys and themes used in sonata form have held such importance for classical composers and their listeners. One influential view is that of Charles Rosen, who conceives the sonata form movement as a kind of dramatic journey through the system of musical keys. Modulations that move upward in the circle of fifths (in the direction of the sharp keys) increase musical tension, and modulations that move downward reduce it. Sonata form first increases tension through the move to the dominant (the crucial musical event of the exposition), then increases tension further in the development through the exploration of remote keys. The recapitulation resolves all this tension by returning everything to the tonic.

The use of the circle of fifths makes sense of a number of observations about the deployment of keys in sonata form:

Variation in sonata form

The classical sonata form may be varied in a number of ways.

Codas

Quite often, a sonata form movement includes an additional section, the coda, which follows the end of the recapitulation. The coda rounds the movement off with a perfect cadence in the home key. Codas may be quite brief tailpieces, or they may be so lengthy as to be almost another development section.

Introductions

Less often, the entire movement is preceded by a slow introduction. The introduction increases the weight of the movement, and also permits the composer to begin the exposition with a theme that would be too light to start on its own, as in Haydn's Drumroll Symphony. Usually, but not always, the introduction is excluded from the exposition repeat.

Occasionally the material of introduction reappears (in its original tempo) later in the movement. Often, this occurs in the coda, as in Mozart's string quintet K. 593, the Drumroll Symphony, or Beethoven's Pathetique piano sonata Op. 13.

Monothematic expositions

It is not necessarily that case that the move to the dominant key in the exposition is marked by a new theme. Haydn in particular was fond of simply repeating the opening theme, often in a truncated or otherwise altered form. Mozart, despite his prodigious ability to create melody, also occasionally wrote such expositions, for instance in the piano sonata K. 570 or the string quintet K. 593. Such expositions are often called monothematic. This term is usually a misnomer when applied to a sonata form movement, since "monothematic" expositions often include other themes later on in the second subject group. Only on occasion (for example, in Haydn's string quartet Op. 50 no. 1) did composers perform the tour de force of writing a complete sonata exposition with just one theme.

The monothematic exposition illustrates a general point made by Rosen about the Classical sonata form: the crucial element of the exposition is that the move to the dominant be dramatized in some way. Using a new theme was a very common way to achieve this effect, but other resources (changes in texture, salient cadences, etc.) were also available.

Modulation to keys other than the dominant

The key of the second subject may be something other than the dominant or the relative major. About halfway through his career, Ludwig van Beethoven began to experiment with new keys for the second subject group. These keys likewise move upward along the circle of fifths, but three or four fifths instead of just one. Thus,the second subject of the Waldstein sonata for piano is in E major, fourth fifths higher (C --> G --> D --> A --> E) than the tonic key of C. The Hammerklavier sonata Op. 106 moves three fifths higher (Bb --> F --> C --> G).

It is a open question why Beethoven never modulated just two fifths higher, a major second; possibly this is because it might be perceived as a crude stepwise modulation. (For a modern criticism of such modulations, see the discussion of the "truck driver's gear change" in Modulation (music).)

Modulations within the first subject group

The first subject group need not be entirely in the tonic key. In the more complex sonata expositions there can be brief modulations to fairly remote keys, followed by reassertion of the tonic. A vivid example is Mozart's String quintet in C, K. 515, which visits c minor, Db major, and D major before finally moving to the dominant of G major.

The three-key exposition

In the early part of Beethoven's career, he favored for his grander works a kind of exposition in which the exposition dwells on a third key before finally moving to the dominant. For example, in the early major-key piano sonatas this intermediate key is the dominant minor (Op. 2, no. 2), the supertonic minor (Op. 2, no. 3), and the relative minor (Op. 10, no. 3). Later, Beethoven used the supertonic major (Op. 14, no. 1, Op. 22), which is only a mild sort of three-key exposition, since the supertonic major is simply is the dominant of the dominant, and commonly arises in any event as part of modulation.

Beethoven ultimately abandoned the three-key principle, as he came to adopt a tighter conception of sonata form.

Sonata form in the postclassical era

In the Romantic era, modulation and use of remote keys extended beyond the norms of the Classical period. This was, in a certain sense, an appropriate time to abandon sonata form. Classical sonatas required a certain sense of key stability in order to define a musical journey among keys, with the contours of increased, then resolved, tension outlined above. When the use of modulation became freer and more coloristic in purpose, it was no longer possible to use the sequence of keys as an element of drama.

However, the work of the Classical era, especially that of Beethoven, was very prestigious among the composers of the nineteenth century, and they commonly felt that ability to write a sonata was a mark of depth and significance in a composer's work. Sonata form thus became a conventionalized method for creating a large scale work. As such, it was often surprisingly successful, for instance in the work of Robert Schumann, Frederic Chopin, and Felix Mendelssohn.

Sonata form was an especially congenial mold for Johannes Brahms, who as a second-generation Romantic composer felt a strong affinity with the composers of the Classical era. Brahms adopted and extended Beethoven's practice of modulating to more remote keys in the exposition. For example, his piano quintet has the first subject in F minor, but the second subject in C sharp minor, a tritone higher. In the same work, the keys of the recapitulation is also altered - the second subject in the recapitulation is in F sharp minor, rather than the F minor of the first subject.

The first movements of several symphonies by Gustav Mahler, in the late Romantic era, are described as being in sonata form, although they diverge from the above scheme quite dramatically.

Sonata form and other musical forms

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.

Resources

Links:

Books:

Two works by Charles Rosen have helped define the modern conception of sonata form: The Classical Style: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven (2nd ed. 1997; New York: Norton) and Sonata Forms (1982; New York: Norton).