(isim) sonat

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sonata
A musical composition for one or a few instruments, one of which is frequently a piano, in three or four movements that vary in key and tempo
an instrumental composition
An extended instrumental composition, generally in three or four movements
A chamber music piece in several movements, typically for three instruments plus continuo in the Baroque period, and for only one or two instruments in all periods since then
An instrumental piece, often in several movements
Early sonatas were compositions written for solo instruments, but after about 1750, the form was used for a solo instrument accompanied by another
A piece for a solo, or accompanied, instrument, usually in 3 or 4 movements
Two meanings: 1, A popular kind of instrumental chamber genre, for either one solo instrument or a solo instrument plus piano accompaniment Created during the baroque era, sonatas became very popular in the classical era and are still being composed today Piano sonatas are among the most famous 2 See sonata form
(it ) - A composition for one or two instruments with several movements, each following specific forms and charachteristics [back]
A sonata is a piece of classical music written either for a single instrument, or for one instrument and a piano. a piece of music with three or four parts that is written for a piano, or for a piano and another instrument (sonare , from ). Musical form for one or more instruments, usually consisting of three or four movements. The name, Italian for "sounded (on an instrument)," originally simply indicated nonvocal music and was used for a confusing variety of genres into the late 17th century. In the 1650s two types of ensemble sonatas began to be codified, the sonata da chiesa (church sonata) and sonata da camera (chamber sonata). The former, intended for church performance, was generally in four movements, two of them slow; the latter was usually a suite of dances. The so-called solo sonata (for soloist usually violin and continuo) and the trio sonata (for two soloists and continuo) became standard. In the 1740s solo keyboard sonatas began to be written. C.P.E. Bach established the three-movement keyboard sonata as the norm, a status it would retain through the classical era. Duo sonatas in the same form, usually for violin and keyboard, simultaneously became highly popular. Keyboard and duo sonatas have remained the standard types to the present day. From Bach's time onward, the first movement was generally in allegro tempo and in sonata form. The second movement was usually slow. The last movement was generally a minuet, rondo, or theme and variations. In a four-movement sonata, the third was usually a minuet or scherzo. In these respects the sonata paralleled genres such as the symphony and the string quartet. sonata form sonata allegro form trio sonata
{i} musical composition of three to four movements for one or two instruments
Italian for "sounded " A composition meant to demonstrate the sound and technique of a particular instrument, sometimes with piano accompaniment
a musical composition of 3 or 4 movements of contrasting forms
An extended composition for one or two instruments, consisting usually of three or four movements; as, Beethoven's sonatas for the piano, for the violin and piano, etc
a work for one or two players consisting of four movements
an instrumental work in three or four movements for solo instrument and keyboard or for solo keyboard
This is a term to denote a piece of music, usually of several movements and instrumental, designed to be performed by a soloist or a small ensemble
(isim) sonat
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