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The double variation (also known as alternating variations) is a musical form used in classical music. It is a type of theme and variations that employs two themes. In a double variation set, a first theme (to be called A here) is followed by a second theme (B), followed by a variation on A, then a variation on B, and so on with alternating A and B variations. Often there is a coda at the end. The double variation is strongly associated with the composer Joseph Haydn, who wrote many such movements during his career. ==The double variation in Haydn== The double variation first appears Haydn's work of the 1770s. Haydn may have been inspired by an earlier example of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, the sixth of that composer's ''Sonatas with Varied Reprises'', (W. 50/6, H. 140), in C minor (1760). Elaine Sisman, an authority on variations, notes "This set of sonatas was advertised in Vienna several times in the period in which Haydn wrote his first () variations."〔Sisman (1990)〕 While Haydn's double variations show considerable diversity, there are some general patterns. *Both themes have the same tonic, but in opposite modes, so that if A is major, B is minor, and vice versa. *The second theme is usually thematically reminiscent of the first, though not so close as to be an actual variation of it.〔Charles Rosen writes, "Haydn's double variations are almost never intended to sound as if they contain two distinct themes; the second melody appears as a free variation of the first, and the form is that of a monothematic rondo." Rosen (1997:331)〕 *The total number of variations is small, often just one or two for each theme. *The number of variations is (with just one exception) arranged to place the major theme last. Thus, if the first theme is major, Haydn generally uses ABABA form, but if the first theme is minor, Haydn uses ABABAB. As Haydn's career proceeded, he moved toward a very particular type of double variations, having the following additional specific characteristics. *The tempo is moderate, typically ''andante''. *The minor theme is placed first. *Each theme is divided into two sections, and each section is repeated. *The internal arrangement of both themes is often that of sonata form, with the music moving to the dominant or relative major key in the first part, to remote keys in the first half of the second part, and then to a recapitulation of the opening material in the tonic key. This observation is made by Charles Rosen (in ''The Classical Style'') concerning the double variations in the Drumroll Symphony; it holds true in several other cases as well. *While assessments of emotional content are necessarily subjective, it is reasonable to claim that the minor themes sound tense and the major themes blissful. Jean-Yves Bras, writing in program notes for a performance of the Piano Trio H:23 (Harmonia Mundi 901400), describes the minor and major themes as "somber" and "radiant", respectively. Charles Rosen, writing of the major theme from the Piano Trio H. 13, says that in it Haydn created "an emotion that was completely his own and that no other composer, not even Mozart, could duplicate – a feeling of ecstasy that is completely unsensual, almost amiable." Rosen's remark could be applied to several of the other major double variation themes. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Double variation」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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