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