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Also, from this research, the theory of recapitulation was born.
That is, the first format in the recapitulation was the format used in Card 1, whereas the second and third were determined by the severity sequence in Card 1. Furthermore, the participants were asked which one of the five EU descriptors ("very rare",..., "very common") best described the frequency of 1 out of 40, 1 out of 4,000, 1 out of 5, 1 out of 200 and 1 out of 20,000.
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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.
Among the different kinds of deviations from recapitulation are heterochrony changes in timing and heterotopy changes in spatial position in a structure.
The recapitulation is essentially similar to the exposition, apart from the addition of a counter-melody in the strings.
The recapitulation is traditional – staying in the tonic, and emphasizing the tonic minor and the flat submediant (F major) as subdominant tonalities.
The recapitulation is once again traditional, staying in the tonic and stressing subdominant tonalities (D-flat, the lowered second degree – in the first theme).
The recapitulation is also written in three keys; the first theme is drastically shortened, and this time the second theme veers to B-flat minor, the result being that the closing section appears in the traditional tonic.
For example, the unusual placement of the cadenza before the recapitulation is reflected in the violin concertos of Tchaikovsky (where the cadenza is similarly placed) and Sibelius (where the cadenza serves to extend the development section).
In order to avoid the potential of an order effect [ 27, 28], the sequence of the three formats (total six sequences) in the recapitulation were balanced across consecutive participants.
Evolutionary-developmental ("evo-devo") biology has its origin in the comparative embryology of the nineteenth century in the work of von Baer (1828) and Haeckel (1866, 1896), whose "laws" of embryonic divergence and recapitulation were put forward as being generally indicative of phylogeny.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com