A musical form that is often the last movement of a sonata.
Musical form or character type.
Association football training drill.
1If any modification is made, take the rondo faster, say about eighty-four.
2The old practice had a rondo for the final movement of the sonata.
3This rondo in B flat is the weakest of Chopin's muse.
4Flicks and tricks and roulettes and rondo after rondo, all soft-shoed and swift.
5The rondo was no wonderful piece of intricacy, such as a professional might choose.
6The Quartet ends with a vivacious, almost reckless gypsy rondo.
7The rondo is frolicksome, tricky, genial and genuine piano music.
8Silence for the rondo, and attention to the refrain,-
9A quick movement-thefinale, sometimes a rondo, sometimes another sonata-form, sometimes a theme with variations.
10He played the first movement prestissimo, the andante allegro and the rondo prestissimo with a vengeance.
11The Finale is a rondo with propulsive dotted rhythms, sharp dynamic contrasts, and ethereal fluttering effects.
12But he is not consistent, for he uses the Tausig octaves at the close of the rondo.
13Monte, faro, rouge et noir, roulette, rondo and every gambling device are here, to lure the unwary.
14The work is in two main sections: a slower, grandiose introduction followed by a faster section in rondo form.
15But it was plain that, had there been another rondo of the duet, most would have been talking again.
16The finale is generally a bit of a romp; the structural plan is that of the first movement, or a rondo.