The sonata / / Thomas Schmidt-Beste [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Schmidt Thomas (Musicologist) |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xiii, 263 pages) : digital, PDF file(s) |
Disciplina | 784.18/3 |
Collana | Cambridge introductions to music |
Soggetto topico |
Sonata
Sonata form |
ISBN |
1-107-30103-3
1-107-21684-2 1-107-25354-3 1-107-30611-6 0-511-97429-9 1-107-30831-3 1-107-31386-4 1-299-27629-6 1-107-31166-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Cambridge Introductions to Music: The Sonata; Title; Copyright; Contents; Musical examples; Tables; Preface; Chapter 1 Definitions; 1.1 Sonata and canzona; 1.2 Sonata and sinfonia; 1.3 Sonata and concerto; 1.4 Sonata and suite/partita; 1.5 The sonata and free instrumental genres: toccata - ricercar - capriccio - fantasia; 1.6 Summary: instrumentation, form, texture or function?; Chapter 2 Form; 2.1 The 'free' sonata in the seventeenth century; 2.2 Corelli and his legacy; 2.2.1 The sonata da chiesa; 2.2.2 The sonata da camera; 2.2.3 Corelli's followers in the eighteenth century
2.2.4 Regional traditions2.3 Sonata cycles and 'sonata form' after 1750; 2.3.1 Fast movements: 'sonata form' and related categories; 2.3.1.1 From dance form to sonata form; 2.3.1.2 Terminology; 2.3.1.3 The exposition; 2.3.1.4 The development; 2.3.1.5 The recapitulation; 2.3.1.6 The re-entry; 2.3.1.7 The transition; 2.3.1.8 The recapitulation as a result of events in the exposition and development; 2.3.1.9 Extra options: slow introduction and coda; 2.3.2 Sonata form - bipartite or tripartite?; 2.3.3 Slow movements; 2.3.4 Minuet and scherzo; 2.3.5 Finales 2.4 Beethoven's sonatas - consummating or transcending Classical form?2.4.1 Construction of themes and their elaboration; 2.4.1.1 Types of theme; 2.4.1.2 Thematic contrast and thematic derivation; 2.4.1.3 Elaboration and transformation of themes and motives; 2.4.2 Slow introduction and coda; 2.4.3 Manipulations of the tonal process; 2.4.3.1 Major-key recapitulation in minor-key movements; 2.4.3.2 Third relations versus fifth relations; 2.4.4 New slow-movement types; 2.4.5 The upgrading of the dance movement; 2.4.6 Final movements; 2.4.7 Camouflaging the formal structure; 2.5 The cycle 2.5.1 Sequence and combination of movements2.5.2 Tonal structures; 2.5.3 Transitions; 2.5.4 Motivic unity and quotations; 2.6 The sonata after Beethoven; 2.6.1 Franz Schubert; 2.6.2 Sonata composition after c. 1830; 2.6.2.1 Motivic unity - motivic derivation - developing variation; 2.6.2.2 Quotation; 2.6.2.3 Tonal structure; 2.6.2.4 Integration on multiple levels: Schumann's Piano Sonata, Op. 11; 2.6.2.5 The amalgamation of the sonata cycle with sonata form: Franz Liszt's B minor Sonata; 2.7 Sonata composition in the twentieth century; 2.7.1 The sonata in the nineteenth-century tradition 2.7.2 The neo-classicist and historicist sonata2.7.3 The sonata as generic 'piece for instrument(s)'; 2.7.4 The eclectic sonata; Chapter 3 Functions and aesthetics; 3.1 Locations and occasions; 3.2 Target groups: professionals, connoisseurs and amateurs; 3.3 Learned style; 3.4 Virtuosity; 3.5 Sonata form as an aesthetic paradigm; 3.6 Absolute music? On meaning and programmaticism; Chapter 4 Scoring and texture; 4.1 Developments in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; 4.1.1 Number of instruments; 4.1.1.1 The ensemble sonata; 4.1.1.2 The sonata for small ensemble 4.1.2 Nature and formation of the ensemble |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910792053903321 |
Schmidt Thomas (Musicologist) | ||
Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The sonata / / Thomas Schmidt-Beste [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Schmidt Thomas (Musicologist) |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xiii, 263 pages) : digital, PDF file(s) |
Disciplina | 784.18/3 |
Collana | Cambridge introductions to music |
Soggetto topico |
Sonata
Sonata form |
ISBN |
1-107-30103-3
1-107-21684-2 1-107-25354-3 1-107-30611-6 0-511-97429-9 1-107-30831-3 1-107-31386-4 1-299-27629-6 1-107-31166-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Cambridge Introductions to Music: The Sonata; Title; Copyright; Contents; Musical examples; Tables; Preface; Chapter 1 Definitions; 1.1 Sonata and canzona; 1.2 Sonata and sinfonia; 1.3 Sonata and concerto; 1.4 Sonata and suite/partita; 1.5 The sonata and free instrumental genres: toccata - ricercar - capriccio - fantasia; 1.6 Summary: instrumentation, form, texture or function?; Chapter 2 Form; 2.1 The 'free' sonata in the seventeenth century; 2.2 Corelli and his legacy; 2.2.1 The sonata da chiesa; 2.2.2 The sonata da camera; 2.2.3 Corelli's followers in the eighteenth century
2.2.4 Regional traditions2.3 Sonata cycles and 'sonata form' after 1750; 2.3.1 Fast movements: 'sonata form' and related categories; 2.3.1.1 From dance form to sonata form; 2.3.1.2 Terminology; 2.3.1.3 The exposition; 2.3.1.4 The development; 2.3.1.5 The recapitulation; 2.3.1.6 The re-entry; 2.3.1.7 The transition; 2.3.1.8 The recapitulation as a result of events in the exposition and development; 2.3.1.9 Extra options: slow introduction and coda; 2.3.2 Sonata form - bipartite or tripartite?; 2.3.3 Slow movements; 2.3.4 Minuet and scherzo; 2.3.5 Finales 2.4 Beethoven's sonatas - consummating or transcending Classical form?2.4.1 Construction of themes and their elaboration; 2.4.1.1 Types of theme; 2.4.1.2 Thematic contrast and thematic derivation; 2.4.1.3 Elaboration and transformation of themes and motives; 2.4.2 Slow introduction and coda; 2.4.3 Manipulations of the tonal process; 2.4.3.1 Major-key recapitulation in minor-key movements; 2.4.3.2 Third relations versus fifth relations; 2.4.4 New slow-movement types; 2.4.5 The upgrading of the dance movement; 2.4.6 Final movements; 2.4.7 Camouflaging the formal structure; 2.5 The cycle 2.5.1 Sequence and combination of movements2.5.2 Tonal structures; 2.5.3 Transitions; 2.5.4 Motivic unity and quotations; 2.6 The sonata after Beethoven; 2.6.1 Franz Schubert; 2.6.2 Sonata composition after c. 1830; 2.6.2.1 Motivic unity - motivic derivation - developing variation; 2.6.2.2 Quotation; 2.6.2.3 Tonal structure; 2.6.2.4 Integration on multiple levels: Schumann's Piano Sonata, Op. 11; 2.6.2.5 The amalgamation of the sonata cycle with sonata form: Franz Liszt's B minor Sonata; 2.7 Sonata composition in the twentieth century; 2.7.1 The sonata in the nineteenth-century tradition 2.7.2 The neo-classicist and historicist sonata2.7.3 The sonata as generic 'piece for instrument(s)'; 2.7.4 The eclectic sonata; Chapter 3 Functions and aesthetics; 3.1 Locations and occasions; 3.2 Target groups: professionals, connoisseurs and amateurs; 3.3 Learned style; 3.4 Virtuosity; 3.5 Sonata form as an aesthetic paradigm; 3.6 Absolute music? On meaning and programmaticism; Chapter 4 Scoring and texture; 4.1 Developments in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; 4.1.1 Number of instruments; 4.1.1.1 The ensemble sonata; 4.1.1.2 The sonata for small ensemble 4.1.2 Nature and formation of the ensemble |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910816657203321 |
Schmidt Thomas (Musicologist) | ||
Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The sonata / / Thomas Schmidt-Beste [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Schmidt-Beste Thomas |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xiii, 263 pages) : digital, PDF file(s) |
Disciplina | 784.18/3 |
Collana | Cambridge introductions to music |
Soggetto topico |
Sonata
Sonata form |
ISBN |
1-107-30103-3
1-107-21684-2 1-107-25354-3 1-107-30611-6 0-511-97429-9 1-107-30831-3 1-107-31386-4 1-299-27629-6 1-107-31166-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Cambridge Introductions to Music: The Sonata; Title; Copyright; Contents; Musical examples; Tables; Preface; Chapter 1 Definitions; 1.1 Sonata and canzona; 1.2 Sonata and sinfonia; 1.3 Sonata and concerto; 1.4 Sonata and suite/partita; 1.5 The sonata and free instrumental genres: toccata - ricercar - capriccio - fantasia; 1.6 Summary: instrumentation, form, texture or function?; Chapter 2 Form; 2.1 The 'free' sonata in the seventeenth century; 2.2 Corelli and his legacy; 2.2.1 The sonata da chiesa; 2.2.2 The sonata da camera; 2.2.3 Corelli's followers in the eighteenth century
2.2.4 Regional traditions2.3 Sonata cycles and 'sonata form' after 1750; 2.3.1 Fast movements: 'sonata form' and related categories; 2.3.1.1 From dance form to sonata form; 2.3.1.2 Terminology; 2.3.1.3 The exposition; 2.3.1.4 The development; 2.3.1.5 The recapitulation; 2.3.1.6 The re-entry; 2.3.1.7 The transition; 2.3.1.8 The recapitulation as a result of events in the exposition and development; 2.3.1.9 Extra options: slow introduction and coda; 2.3.2 Sonata form - bipartite or tripartite?; 2.3.3 Slow movements; 2.3.4 Minuet and scherzo; 2.3.5 Finales 2.4 Beethoven's sonatas - consummating or transcending Classical form?2.4.1 Construction of themes and their elaboration; 2.4.1.1 Types of theme; 2.4.1.2 Thematic contrast and thematic derivation; 2.4.1.3 Elaboration and transformation of themes and motives; 2.4.2 Slow introduction and coda; 2.4.3 Manipulations of the tonal process; 2.4.3.1 Major-key recapitulation in minor-key movements; 2.4.3.2 Third relations versus fifth relations; 2.4.4 New slow-movement types; 2.4.5 The upgrading of the dance movement; 2.4.6 Final movements; 2.4.7 Camouflaging the formal structure; 2.5 The cycle 2.5.1 Sequence and combination of movements2.5.2 Tonal structures; 2.5.3 Transitions; 2.5.4 Motivic unity and quotations; 2.6 The sonata after Beethoven; 2.6.1 Franz Schubert; 2.6.2 Sonata composition after c. 1830; 2.6.2.1 Motivic unity - motivic derivation - developing variation; 2.6.2.2 Quotation; 2.6.2.3 Tonal structure; 2.6.2.4 Integration on multiple levels: Schumann's Piano Sonata, Op. 11; 2.6.2.5 The amalgamation of the sonata cycle with sonata form: Franz Liszt's B minor Sonata; 2.7 Sonata composition in the twentieth century; 2.7.1 The sonata in the nineteenth-century tradition 2.7.2 The neo-classicist and historicist sonata2.7.3 The sonata as generic 'piece for instrument(s)'; 2.7.4 The eclectic sonata; Chapter 3 Functions and aesthetics; 3.1 Locations and occasions; 3.2 Target groups: professionals, connoisseurs and amateurs; 3.3 Learned style; 3.4 Virtuosity; 3.5 Sonata form as an aesthetic paradigm; 3.6 Absolute music? On meaning and programmaticism; Chapter 4 Scoring and texture; 4.1 Developments in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; 4.1.1 Number of instruments; 4.1.1.1 The ensemble sonata; 4.1.1.2 The sonata for small ensemble 4.1.2 Nature and formation of the ensemble |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910465842003321 |
Schmidt-Beste Thomas | ||
Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|