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| A melodic or harmonic progression that gives the effect of closing a section |
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| A virtuoso passage (sometimes improvised) played by the soloist in a concerto, usually without orchestral accompaniment. |
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| The italian word for "tail"; the section that brings the movement to a conclusion |
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| a work for solo instrument(s), usually with three movements, accompanied by an orchestra |
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| (1) The process of developing themes. (2) The section in sonata form featuring featuring the development of themes. |
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| the opening of fugue and sonata form |
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| a common classical period form consisting of three parts: minuet, trio, minuet |
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| a dramatic work, comedy, or tragedy, set to music |
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| the section of sonata form in which the themes from the exposition are heard again |
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| a form in which the main theme appears several times with contrasting sections between its appearances |
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| german eighteenth-century opera with spoken dialogue |
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| multimovement form for piano or piano and other solo instrument (2) a baroque piece for a small instrumental ensemble |
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| a large form consisting of an exposition section, followed by a development section and a recapitulation |
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| an extended, multimovement orchestral work |
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| form consisting of a theme followed by a group of variations on that same theme |
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| French mobs take over Tuileries Palace |
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| Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette are killed |
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