Willibald Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago This is a rather short and concise exercise in writing a sonata for cembalo that is playable even for me. It started with a minuet I wrote for a wedding; some improvising on the piano generated the idea for the allegro, and then only a slow movement was missing to have a three movement sonata, a basic structure popular in the 18th century. The allegro flows happily in 6/8, composed in sonata form; the reprise is slightly shortened so it is not too tedious, but also to have a balanced feel (Exposition: 32 bars; development + reprise 36 bars). The andante (binary form) provides some contrast by starting out in d minor, modulating to a minor and going back via g minor and F Major to d minor. The concluding minuet returns to more joyful music with a lively dialogue of left and right hand. I am considering adding a fast rondo, or composing another sonata concluding with a rondo; not sure about that. MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Cembalo Sonata DMaj 1 Allegro (Willibald) Cembalo Sonata DMaj 2 Andante (Willibald) Cembalo Sonata DMaj 3 Menuetto (Willibald) > next PDF Cembalo Sonata D Major (Willibald) Quote
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