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Also known as: first-movement form, sonata-allegro form
Also called:
first-movement form or sonata-allegro form

The functions of the second and third main sections in sonata form follow naturally from what has been established in the exposition. Their purpose is to discuss and resolve the conflicts of tonality and theme that the exposition has raised. The development is an area of tonal flux—it usually modulates, or changes key, frequently, and any keys it settles in are likely to be only distantly related to the keys found in the exposition. It frequently proceeds by breaking the principal themes down into smaller elements and bringing these elements into new tonal or contrapuntal relations with each other. That is, themes or fragments of themes may appear in new keys; they may be combined to form apparently new melodies; they may be played against each other as counterpoint, or countermelody. One of the finest illustrations of the methods of development used in the Classical period occurs in the first movement of Mozart’s Symphony No. 38 in D Major, K 504 (1786; Prague). Another resource of development is to seize on an apparently minor feature of the exposition and, by developing it extensively, to demonstrate its hidden importance. Yet another is to introduce entirely new material. This may provide a moment of relief in the course of a rigorous argument (as in the last movement of Mozart’s Piano Sonata in C Major, K 330 [1781–83]); or it may allow the composer to expand the scope of a large-scale movement (as in the first movement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 in E-flat Major [1803; Eroica]). Sometimes such a theme may only seem to be new. In the first movement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 4 in B-flat Major (1806), for instance, the theme in the development that is usually described as “new” is really a decorated version of a motive already heard in the exposition.

One common tactic in the Classical development section is to begin with the codetta theme that ended the exposition. The first movement of Beethoven’s Cello Sonata No. 2 in G Minor (1796) is an example. The impact of this device, and of the development section as a whole, is often obscured by the common tendency among modern performers to ignore the composer’s instruction, present in almost all sonata-form movements of the Classical period, to repeat the entire exposition. When this repetition is omitted, the thematic balance of the movement is upset and the dramatic effect of the development’s sudden departure from an established regularity can be ruined. Music is an art to which the controlled use of time is basic. The temporal structure of a movement cannot be altered without seriously changing the proportions of the whole.

Recapitulation

Like the beginning of the development section, the point at which development passes into recapitulation is one of the most important psychological moments in the entire sonata-form structure. It marks the end of the main argument and the beginning of the final synthesis for which that argument has prepared the listener’s mind. The Classical masters differ in their handling of this juncture. All usually prepare for it with a long passage of gathering tension. In Mozart the return of the tonic key and subject is managed with understated punctuality, the actual moment of recapitulation gliding in almost unnoticed. Haydn and Beethoven tend to celebrate its advent with panoply.

The recapitulation presents the principal subject matter of the movement in a new state of equilibrium. The main subjects of the exposition are heard almost always in the same order as before, but now both subjects are typically in the tonic key, whereas in the exposition the first was in the tonic, the second in the dominant key. As a result of the musical events in the development, the listener perceives the subjects in a new relationship—rather like a traveller who glimpses the constituent parts of a valley separately as he climbs a hill and then, when he reaches the summit, sees the entire landscape for the first time as a whole. The recapitulation can vary greatly in the literalness with which it repeats the elements of the exposition. Sometimes, as in the first movement of Mozart’s Sonata in B-flat Major, K 570 (1789), a tiny modification in the transition that originally led from the tonic to the dominant key is enough to effect the necessary change of key perspective and keep the second subject in the tonic key. In other cases (the first movement of Beethoven’s Eroica, for instance, and many of Haydn’s symphonic movements), far-reaching modifications and reshufflings of the original material are made in the recapitulation. As in any living manifestation of a principle of musical form, the methods differ vastly from work to work; but the effect is always to bring about the reconciliation of opposites that is essential to sonata form.

A large-scale sonata movement often creates conflicts of key and theme that cannot be completely settled even by the full process of recapitulation. In this case, the movement may be rounded off with a coda, or concluding section. Beethoven often extends the coda so greatly that it becomes almost a second development section, as in his Piano Sonata No. 23 in F Minor (1804–05; Appassionata). But this is no more an essential element of sonata form than the introduction that may precede the main movement.