Three-key exposition
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The three-key exposition is a particular kind of exposition used in sonata form.
Normally, a sonata form exposition has two main key areas. The first asserts the primary key of the piece, that is, the tonic. The second section moves to a different key, establishes that key firmly, arriving ultimately at a cadence in that key. For the second key, composers normally chose the dominant for major-key sonatas, and the relative major for minor-key sonatas.
The three-key exposition moves not directly to the dominant or relative major, but indirectly via a third key; hence the name.
Ludwig van Beethoven wrote a number of sonata movements during the earlier part of his career with three-key expositions. For the "third" (that is, the intermediate) key, Beethoven made various choices: the dominant minor (piano sonata Op. 2, no. 2; string quartet Op. 18 no. 5), the supertonic minor (piano sonata Op. 2, no. 3), and the relative minor (sonata Op. 10, no. 3). Later, Beethoven used the supertonic major (sonatas Op. 14, no. 1, Op. 22), which is only a mild sort of three-key exposition, since the supertonic major is the dominant of the dominant, and commonly arises in any event as part of the modulation.
As he entered his so-called "middle period," Beethoven abandoned the three-key exposition. This was part of a general change in the composer's work in which he moved closer to the older practice of Haydn, writing less discursive and more closely organized sonata movements.
Franz Schubert, who liked discursive forms for the entirety of his career, also employed the three-key expositions in many of his sonata movements.
[edit] Further reading
- The three-key exposition is discussed in Charles Rosen's book Sonata Forms (Norton, New York, 1985).